Surgical News volume 22 issue 4

Page 47

Surgical News | Volume 22 | Issue 4

Fellow profile: Dr Matthew Seeley A third generation ENT surgeon based in Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand

A career in medicine was not initially on the cards for Aotearoa New Zealand otolaryngologist Matthew Seeley. In his final years of school, Dr Seeley originally considered pursuing journalism before changing his mind and selecting sciencebased subjects. The move ultimately led him to follow in his parents’ and grandfather’s footsteps into medicine. Later, he became the third generation of his family to become an ear, nose and throat (ENT) surgeon, after his father and grandfather. Dr Seeley has often been reminded of the family connection to the specialty in his work, particularly when he was based in Hamilton, where he grew up. His new patients remembered seeing his grandfather decades ago. “It was amazing how many patients told me they’d had grommets done by my grandfather, and the nursing staff also remembered him well,” Dr Seeley said.

Dr Seeley chose the specialty due to the variety involved with ENT surgery – he liked the mix of surgical and non-surgical work and the range of ages and severity of conditions he encountered in the specialty.

Throughout his training and career, Dr Seeley has valued the support of colleagues, whether during his training or through his professional relationships with specialists, including anaesthetists, neurosurgeons and immunologists.

His family both inspired him to pursue his career pathway and provided him with a realistic understanding of the challenges involved. “My parents are both doctors and so I think I had a fairly pragmatic insight into what life as a doctor would be like,” he said.

Dr Seeley sees one great challenge of his role as giving his patients the time they need, despite the constraints of the health sector.

Dr Seeley has worked across Aotearoa New Zealand, although he completed most of his training in Wellington and Waikato. He currently works as at the Wellington Regional Hospital and has a small private practice in Wellington. One of the great challenges of the specialty is in communicating adequately with patients and colleagues and managing the time and resource constrained environment of healthcare provision with the best interests of each patient in mind. Communication and relationship building are central to Dr Seeley’s role, and he enjoys the opportunity to work closely with patients, sometimes over many years. One of the most satisfying parts of his job is problem-solving to deal with unusual conditions and achieve positive outcomes for patients. Dr Seeley continues to draw on advice he received from a mentor that surgeons could be unintentionally intimidating, and he tries to be as approachable as possible by inviting patients and staff to ask questions or raise any concerns they might have.

His advice to Trainee surgeons or medical students interested in pursuing surgery is to try to get as much surgical exposure (with instruments in hand) as possible, as it is a speciality in which opportunities to operate can be limited during training. While the career remains a challenging one, life becomes easier at a consultant level. “ENT surgery isn’t always easy but it’s never boring!” he said. Outside his job, Dr Seeley is a Francophile and loves to cycle – two interests that sit together comfortably, along with his enjoyment of craft beer and eating out . Once international borders reopen, he is looking forward to travelling to Europe.

What are you: • Reading? The Economist, Super Pumped - The Battle for Uber by Mike Isaac, and Mastery by Robert Greene • Watching? Occupied • Listening to? The National, Ben Howard and various down tempo electronic playlists while operating

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Articles inside

Thank you for your extraordinary compassion and generous support to the Foundation for Surgery in June and July.

5min
pages 66-67

In memoriam

2min
page 65

Good reads

1min
page 64

QASM Annual Seminar

1min
page 63

The Alfred Hospital Intensive Course in General Surgery 2021

4min
pages 60-61

Changes to RACS alcohol policy

2min
page 59

The influence of Jonathon Hutchinson

3min
pages 54-55

DCAS Course Award recipients share experiences of training

4min
page 51

Sir John Bland-Sutton: ‘A Great Surgeon’

6min
pages 48-49

QASM Connects

1min
page 46

ANZ Journal of Surgery: Making the shift from print to digital publishing in 2022

2min
pages 44-45

NAIDOC Week 2021

1min
page 36

Changing energy mix vital for the health sector

3min
page 35

A heartfelt thank you to Dr Berlin Kafoa

1min
page 21

A tribute to Tonga’s first ENT specialist

1min
page 20

Further commentaries on surgical fees

7min
pages 56-68

Case note review

4min
pages 52-53

The Developing a Career and skills in Academic Surgery (DCAS) Course 2021

3min
pages 50-51

Making flexible surgical training accessible for everyone

6min
pages 40-41

Fellow profile: Dr Matthew Seeley

3min
pages 47-49

Surgeons mark CrazySocks4Docs Day

2min
page 43

Reflection on Australia’s Plastic Surgery community

3min
page 42

RACS travel scholarship opens door for South Australian surgeon

3min
page 39

Advocacy at RACS

3min
pages 34-36

RACS launches program to increase number of Indigenous surgeons

2min
pages 37-38

RACS ASC 2022: Diversity in a Dispersed Workplace

2min
page 33

Tackling rural health inequity head on

7min
pages 28-32

How AI will enhance the work of surgeons

7min
pages 26-27

RACS welcomes new councillors

9min
pages 23-25

Q&A with Jenni Lillingston

5min
pages 18-22

Not just about surgery

7min
pages 16-17

Mobile audiology outreach trailer ready to hit the road in Samoa

2min
pages 11-12

A surgical future in Vanuatu

4min
pages 13-14

New chair for RACS Global Health

3min
page 15

Call for Aotearoa New Zealand-based specialist volunteers

2min
page 10

Vice president’s perspective

4min
pages 8-9

President’s perspective

4min
pages 6-7
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Surgical News volume 22 issue 4 by RACSCommunications - Issuu