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Surgical Ergonomics

Surgical Ergonomics

By: Geeta Lal MD
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This podcast will discuss everything relating to surgical and procedural ergonomics i.e. the people, ideas and technology that will help enhance your physical wellness and career longevity.

© 2026 Surgical Ergonomics
Hygiene & Healthy Living Physical Illness & Disease
Episodes
  • How Basic Interventions Can Improve Ergonomics With Pediatric Otolaryngologist Dr. Deborah Kacmarynski
    Jun 15 2026

    This episode of the podcast is sponsored by Sunoptic Surgical. You can learn about them and schedule a demo via https://sunopticsurgical.com/surgicalergonomics/

    Disclosure:

    Sunoptic Surgical is a paid sponsor and the affiliate link above supports the podcast at no cost to you.

    Dr. Deborah Kacmarynski, is a Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery at the University of Iowa, working at Stead Family Children’s Hospital as a pediatric otolaryngologist and a cleft and craniofacial surgeon with co-directorship for the cleft and craniofacial team. Her research focuses on biomedical collaborations with oral cleft and craniofacial surgical problems including craniofacial airway, tissue engineering solution development, outcomes research and patient-centered outcomes research collaboratives. Prior to medicine, she worked as a biomedical engineer in process and product development at 3M Company which continues to influence her approach to improving patient care, surgeries and processes.

    In this episode, Dr. Kacmarynski:

    - Shares her journey from being an engineer at 3M to becoming a pediatric otolaryngologist

    - Describes how her interest in surgical ergonomics evolved very early in training and practice due to a combination of her attention to safety as an engineer, underlying conditions and her desire to preserve her function through the rigors of surgical training

    - Shares how she ensures that her trainees understand the importance of basic interventions such as attention to changing posture, taking breaks and stretches inside and outside the OR

    - Provides her routine for good ergonomics - setting cases up differently, adopting deflection loupes, physical therapy exercises, massage therapy etc.

    - Shares how learners and surgical leaders can take the lead on driving increased attention to physical being and ergonomics in procedural workspaces

    Follow us on LinkedIn, X, Instagram and Facebook and please reach out to us if you have any suggestions regarding episode ideas and guests or if you'd like to be a guest on the show

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    41 mins
  • How Hospital Leaders and Professional Societies Can Drive Improved Ergonomics with Surgeon-Executive Dr. David Berger
    Jun 1 2026

    This episode of the podcast is sponsored by Smart Step Surgical LLC. You can learn about them and schedule a demo via https://www.smartstepsurgical.com/blogs/news/surgical-ergonomic-podcast-promotional-discount

    Disclosure:

    Smart Step Surgical is a paid sponsor and the affiliate link above supports the podcast at no cost to you. They also provide our podcast listeners with a discount (20%), so we hope that it is a win-win!

    Dr. David Berger is a physician executive and former hospital CEO turned digital health advisor — helping early-stage startups and healthcare investors navigate the complexity of building and scaling in the healthcare system. With 30+ years of leadership experience in care delivery, he now works with founders and VCs to bring clinically sound, operationally feasible innovation to market.

    In this episode Dr. Berger:

    - Shares details about his career pivots, including his journey dealing with work-related MSK issues

    - Describes how he navigated coming back to work after the multiple surgeries he needed, including altering his practice from full-scale surgical oncology to do mainly shorter cases due to ongoing symptoms

    - Discusses how hospital leaders (including Chairs of Surgery) can and should track lost days of work from MSK injury and support initiatives aimed at improving ergonomics in procedural specialties.

    - Shares why and how surgical societies, including the American College of Surgeons and the ACGME can take steps to highlight the issue of the high rates of MSK injuries among surgeons




    You can reach Dr. Berger via his Linked in profile here.


    Follow us on LinkedIn, X, Instagram and Facebook and please reach out to us if you have any suggestions regarding episode ideas and guests or if you'd like to be a guest on the show

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    36 mins
  • The Hidden Toll of Veterinary Medicine with Dr. Sara White
    May 18 2026

    This episode of the podcast is sponsored by Sunoptic Surgical. You can learn about them and schedule a demo via https://sunopticsurgical.com/surgicalergonomics/

    Disclosure:

    Sunoptic Surgical is a paid sponsor and the affiliate link above supports the podcast at no cost to you.

    Dr. Sara White is a veterinarian and has worked in mixed animal, small animal, shelter medicine and High-Quality, High-Volume Spay Neuter (HQHVSN) practices. Since 2006, Sara has operated Spay ASAP Inc, a nonprofit MASH-style mobile spay/neuter clinic. While working in spay-neuter, Sara developed an interest in ergonomics, health, wellbeing, and injury in veterinarians and staff, and completed a Masters of Science in Health Ergonomics from University of Derby in the UK. She has been named Veterinarian of the Year by the Association of Shelter Veterinarians, coauthored the Association of Shelter Veterinarians Spay Neuter Guidelines and is the editor of the textbook High-Quality, High-Volume Spay and Neuter and Other Shelter Surgeries

    In this episode, Dr. White:

    - Shares her journey into working in a high-volume spay/neuter practice and how that sparked her interest in ergonomics

    -Describes the high rate of work-related MSK injuries among veterinarians and especially those in high volume spay-neuter practices. The period prevalence of MSD was 99.1%, with 76.7% experiencing hand or wrist pain and 98.2% experiencing body pain. Further details can be found here: https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/3/1/85

    - Emphasizes that increasing career length, increasing weekly hours in surgery and decreasing job satisfaction were the work-related factors with the greatest relative risk of hand pain severity and total pain. Interestingly, gender differences were not as prominent in her study, possibly because of the lack of instrument and hand size mismatch in the veterinary population

    - Shares that there wasn't any formal ergonomics training when she trained in veterinary medicine, however, there is now some incorporation of ergonomics teaching in programs and textbooks

    - Describes her journey into coaching veterinarians about ergonomics

    You can reach Dr. White via her website ergovet.com or via LinkedIn

    Follow us on LinkedIn, X, Instagram and Facebook and please reach out to us if you have any suggestions regarding episode ideas and guests or if you'd like to be a guest on the show

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    41 mins
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