NYU Langone鈥檚 Kirk A. Campbell, MD, knew from the time he was a 7-year-old in his native Jamaica that he wanted to be a doctor. Even then, he says in this episode of Vital Signs, 鈥淚 really enjoyed helping people.鈥
A few years later he moved to Springfield, Massachusetts, to live with his father and take advantage of educational opportunities. There, young Dr. Campbell discovered a second passion鈥攕ports, specifically basketball. The game also became a great motivator: 鈥淢y mother instilled in me the importance of education. If my homework was not completed, if my grades were not maintained, then there was no basketball. That really drove me to excel in school.鈥
Dr. Campbell never wavered from his goal to become a doctor. But it was a minor injury he experienced as a member of the high school varsity basketball team that cemented his future specialty. 鈥淚 saw a sports medicine physician, and our interaction was phenomenal. I could not believe that people actually got paid to do sports medicine,鈥 he says.
Today, as a sports orthopedic surgeon at 嘿嘿视频, Dr. Campbell remains passionate about helping people, both through advocating for diversity in medicine and working to limit the use of narcotic medications in orthopedic surgery whenever possible. A critical element of that is explaining clearly to patients what to expect after surgery.
Says Dr. Campbell, 鈥淥rthopedic injuries hurt. Surgery unfortunately also hurts. I tell my patients, 鈥榃e will do an outstanding job of managing your pain, but you鈥檙e not going to have zero pain. You are going to be uncomfortable, and it鈥檚 OK to be uncomfortable.鈥欌
Dr. Campbell and his team work to limit the amount of pain patients experience. 鈥淲e鈥檝e adopted a multimodal pain management strategy for postsurgical pain,鈥 says Dr. Campbell. 鈥淭hat may involve anti-inflammatory medicines, as well as cold therapy. And we鈥檙e able to definitively show that patients do not require a significant amount of narcotic medications with a lot of the procedures that we perform.鈥