The Center for Bloodless Medicine & Surgery at Pennsylvania Hospital
 

Fall 2003

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Physician Profile

Matt L. Kirkland, MD
General Surgeon

Dr. Matt L. Kirkland received the call on his day off. It was Thanksgiving Day. Was he willing to take a patient with severe internal bleeding at an Atlantic City hospital who was unwilling to accept a blood transfusion?

The patient’s family had contacted several other hospitals in the area with the same request. But, they all refused.

Dr. Kirkland said yes.

And so, Mrs. Rosa Valencia was transferred to the Center for Bloodless Medicine & Surgery (CBMS) at Pennsylvania Hospital for a risky - but successful - surgical procedure that saved her life. See feature story.

Dr. Kirkland, a general surgeon whose special interests include gastrointestinal and oncologic surgery, described the challenges regularly encountered when caring for patients who choose non-blood medicine and surgery.

“It (non-blood medicine and surgery) presents an intellectual dilemma as a physician. You must be at peace with the possible consequences of not transfusing. You have to be comfortable with not imposing your will on patients,” he said.

If a patient refuses a blood transfusion, Dr. Kirkland added, you must be able to “look them square in the eye - my question to them is, by my not giving you a blood transfusion you do understand that you may bleed to death?” Dr. Kirkland said that Jehovah’s Witnesses are probably the only group that will most likely answer yes to that question.

He said that the Center for Bloodless Medicine & Surgery at Pennsylvania Hospital brings in “a defined population of patients who will not accept transfusions, primarily Jehovah’s Witnesses. They come for surgery based on the fact that the institution meets their needs.”

Many opportunities do exist for additional types of patients to be seen at the Center, he said. For example, patients with infectious diseases or cross matching problems are possible candidates. Dr. Kirkland said his hope is that this alternative method will be expanded to patients who are not opting for non-blood surgery.

“Keeping blood loss at a minimum is also a goal due to immunodeficiencies, cost and infectious diseases,” he added.

Dr. Kirkland said that the fundamentals of surgery are to manage and control blood loss. “Even in the absence of a formal program like CBMS, a surgeon’s career or scientific goal is to minimize blood loss, to avoid transfusions and to decrease wound infections.”

“Your goal, as a surgeon, is to not use blood and to control bleeding. This keeps one focused on the historic goals of surgery. It brings us back to the roots of medicine.”

Dr. Kirkland - recognized in Philadelphia Magazine’s May 2002 Top Docs issue - received his medical degree from Jefferson Medical College. He completed his residency and fellowship in surgery at Pennsylvania Hospital. Dr. Kirkland is board-certified and a member of the American College of Surgeons.

 


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