Notă biografică
Suzanne
Biers
graduated
from
St.
George's
Hospital
in
London
with
a
distinction
in
surgery.
She
trained
in
Cambridge,
Oxford,
and
Wessex,
completing
a
postgraduate
research
degree
in
functional
bladder
problems
at
the
Oxford
University
Department
of
Pharmacology,
and
achieved
the
John
Blandy
Prize
for
her
work.
After
completing
a
female
urology
fellowship
in
Leicester,
she
became
a
consultant
Urological
Surgeon
at
Addenbrooke's
Hospital
in
Cambridge,
sub-specialisingin
female
and
male
lower
urinary
tract
symptoms,
incontinence,
and
reconstruction.
She
is
lead
for
the
Urology
Masters
Degree
in
Cambridge,
and
director
of
the
Cambridge
Emergency
Urology
Course,
Emergency
Surgical
Skills
Workshops,
and
Reconstructive
Techniques
in
Urology
Course.
Suzanne
remainsactive
in
teaching,
publication
and
research.Noel
Armenakas
is
a
board-certified
urologist
and
is
nationally
recognized
as
an
expert
in
lower
urinary
tract
reconstruction.
He
served
as
the
Lenox
Hill
Hospital
Urology
Residency
Program
Director
from
2009-2013.
For
the
past
20
years,
he
has
taught
the
widely
acclaimed
post-graduate
Trauma
and
Reconstruction
course
at
the
annual
American
Urological
Association
meeting
each
spring.Alastair
Lamb
is
a
Cancer
Research
UK
Clinician
Scientist,
Senior
Fellow
in
Robotic
Surgery
and
Honorary
Consultant
Urologist
at
the
Nuffield
Department
of
Surgery,
University
of
Oxford
and
Oxford
University
Hospitals
NHS
Foundation
Trust,
UK.
His
clinical
focus
is
to
deliver
excellent
and
timely
prostate
cancer
care
to
men
referred
to
his
team
from
the
Oxford
regional
area,
focusing
on
state-of-the-art
diagnostics
(multiparametric
MRI
and
targeted
transperineal
biopsies),
robtic-radicalprostatectomy
(RARP),
and
pushing
the
boundaries
of
minimal
access
surgery.Stephen
Mark
completed
urological
training
in
1992
and
undertook
a
fellowship
in
reconstructive
and
urodynamic
urology
with
George
Webster
at
Duke
University
Medical
Centre,
Durham,
USA,
and
a
paediatric
fellowship
with
David
Frank
in
Bristol
Children's
Hospital
in
Bristol,
UK,
for
one
year
each.
His
surgical
interests
are
those
of
reconstructive
and
paediatric
urology.John
Reynard
is
a
consultant
urological
surgeon
based
in
Oxford.
He
also
provides
a
specialist
neurourological
service
for
patients
with
spinal
cord
injury
at
the
National
Spinal
Injuries
Centre
at
Stoke
Mandeville
Hospital.
He
has
published
widely
in
the
field
of
neurourology.
He
teaches
medical
students
from
the
University
of
Oxford
Clinical
Medical
on
a
variety
of
topics
and
has
written
several
books
on
urological
subjects
for
both
medical
students
and
trainee
surgeons.Mark
Sullivan
is
a
Consultant
Urological
Surgeon
with
research
interests
in
the
area
of
kidney
cancer,
laparoscopy
and
robotic
surgery.
He
took
up
his
appointment
as
a
Consultant
Urologist
in
Oxford
in
April
2003.His
practice
is
based
at
the
Churchill
Hospital,
Oxford
and
the
Horton
General
Hospital,
Banbury.
He
received
his
medical
training
from
University
College
and
Middlesex
Hospital,
and
then
his
surgical
training
in
London
and
Cambridge,
before
undertaking
two
years'
full
time
research,
culminating
in
a
Doctor
of
Medicine
degree
in
1999.
He
is
the
Clinical
Lead
for
Renal
Surgery
in
Oxford,
sits
on
the
NCRI
Renal
Studies
Group
and
SPED,
the
NCRI
Screening
Committee.Professor
Kevin
Turner
is
a
Consultant
Urological
Surgeon
in
Bournemouth
and
a
Visiting
Professor
at
Bournemouth
University.
He
trained
in
Cambridge,
Oxford,
Edinburgh
and
Melbourne.
His
principal
interests
are
in
urological
cancer
and
particularly
resectional
surgery
for
pelvic
/
renal
malignancy
including
laparoscopic
and
robotic
surgery.
He
is
committed
to
training
and
developing
young
surgeons:
he
is
a
former
faculty
member
for
the
Training
the
Trainers
course
(Royal
College
of
Surgeons
ofEngland),
he
is
a
current
FRCS
Urology
oral
examiner,
and
is
an
educational
and
clinical
supervisor
to
urological
trainees.
He
is
co-editor
of
the
Oxford
Handbook
of
Urological
Surgery
(OUP),
has
published
several
book
chapters
and
numerous
original
research
papers,
abstracts,
and
review
articles.His
research
on
angiogenesis
in
renal
cancer
was
awarded
a
Royal
College
of
Surgeons
Research
Fellowship
and
the
European
Association
of
Urology
Thesis
Award.Ben
Turney
trained
in
Cambridge
and
Oxford
and
undertook
research
for
both
an
MSc
and
DPhil
in
Oxford.
He
also
obtained
a
diploma
in
university
teaching
in
2006
from
the
University
of
Oxford.
Ben
is
the
Bernard
Senior
Clinical
Researcher
in
Urology
&
an
Honorary
Consultant
Urological
Surgeon
employed
by
both
the
University
of
Oxford
and
the
Oxford
University
Hospitals
NHS
Trust.He
is
also
an
elected
member
of
the
BAUS
Section
of
Endourology
Committee,
managing
partner
of
Oxford
Urology
Associates,
and
a
co-founder
and
director
of
UroScreen
Ltd,
which
provides
urologists
and
their
patients
with
StoneScreen
technology.