Positions
- Professor Emeritus
-
Division of Pediatric Surgery
Baylor College of Medicine
Addresses
- Texas Children's Hospital (Clinic)
-
Mark A. Wallace Tower
6701 Fannin Street
Houston, TX, 77030
United States
Phone: (832) 822-3135
Pediatric Surgery
Education
- Residency from Hospital for Sick Children
- 01/1980 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada
- M.D. from Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto
- 01/1973 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada
- Research Fellowship from Harvard University
- 01/1981 - Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States
Certifications
- Board Certified - General Surgery
- American Board of Surgery
- Board Certified - Pediatric Surgery
- American Board of Surgery
- Board Certified - General Surgery
- Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada
- Board Certified - Pediatric Surgery
- Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada
Honors & Awards
- Best Doctors in America
- 2011
- Texas Super Doctors
- 2006
- 2000 Millennium Commitment Award
- American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma
- Master Clinician Award for Excellence in Patient Care
- Baylor College of Medicine
- Michael E. DeBakey Distinguished Service Award
- Baylor College of Medicine
Professional Interests
- Pediatric trauma care
- Minimally invasive thoracic and abdominal surgery.
- Inflammatory bowel disease
- Hirschsprung’s disease
- Biliary atresia
- Thyroid diseases
Professional Statement
Dr. David E. Wesson is a strong believer in patient and family sensory care based on the best available evidence and more than 30 years of clinical practice experience. He also believes in full honest and open communication with the patient's family's and referring doctors. His practice includes minimally invasive thoracic and abdominal surgery. He has a strong interest and considerable experience in treating inflammatory bowel disease, Hirschsprung’s disease, biliary atresia, and thyroid diseases in children.
Dr. Wesson has been interested in research relating to pediatric trauma and pediatric injury prevention for over 30 years. For example, he participated in some of the earliest definitive studies on the non-operative treatment of solid organ injuries in children. This research helped to define the indications for operation in children with splenic trauma. This approach was very controversial when first described but it has since become the standard of care for children around the world, and more recently in all age groups.
Dr. Wesson’s interest in pediatric injury prevention grew out of his experience in pediatric trauma care. This led to his research in the promotion of bike helmet use and the subsequent impact on the incidence of fatal bicycling injuries in a defined population of children. Dr. Wesson also played a role in the development of the trauma system in the City of Toronto and the Province of Ontario, Canada. His research into the incidence of preventable trauma deaths among children in Ontario documented a significant overall reduction in the incidence of fatal injuries and in the proportion of preventable deaths over the period from the late 1980’s to the early 2000’s. His research supported the hypothesis that these improvements were attributable to improvements in the system of care.
Dr. Wesson has a variety of other research interests particularly in gastrointestinal disorders in children. He published one of the earliest studies of the results of restorative proctocolectomy in children with ulcerative colitis and familial polyposis. He also has a strong interest in the treatment of biliary atresia and enters all of his patients with this disease into NIH funded studies of this problem by the Biliary Atresia Research Consortium (BARC).
Websites
Dr. Wesson's Care Centers
Texas Children's Hospital
Dr. Wesson's Research
VIICTR Research Database
Selected Publications
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Wesson D, Spence L, Hu X, Parkin P. " Trends in bicycling-related head injuries in children after implementation of a community-based bike helmet campaign. " J. Pediatr. Surg.. 2000 May ; 35 (5) : 688-9.
Pubmed PMID: 10813324. -
Macarthur C, Hu X, Wesson DE, Parkin PC. " Risk factors for severe injuries associated with falls from playground equipment. " Accid Anal Prev. 2000 May ; 32 (3) : 377-82.
Pubmed PMID: 10776854. -
Cass DL, Brandt ML, Patel DL, Nuchtern JG, Minifee PK, Wesson DE. " Peritoneal drainage as definitive treatment for neonates with isolated intestinal perforation. " J. Pediatr. Surg.. 2000 Nov ; 35 (11) : 1531-6.
Pubmed PMID: 11083416. -
Dilley A, Wesson D, Munden M, Hicks J, Brandt M, Minifee P, Nuchtern J. " The impact of ultrasound examinations on the management of children with suspected appendicitis: a 3-year analysis. " J. Pediatr. Surg.. 2001 Feb ; 36 (2) : 303-8.
Pubmed PMID: 11172421.
Memberships
- American College of Surgeons
- Fellow
- American Academy of Pediatrics
- Fellow
- American Pediatric Surgical Association
- American Surgical Association
- American Association for the Surgery of Trauma
- Society of University Surgeons
- Texas Surgical Society
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