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Freeman welcomes Surgeon Dr. Kevin Christian

Jan. 21—When he was a football player at the University of Southern Florida, Dr. Kevin Christian, of Freeman General & Vascular Surgery, had several encounters with orthopedic surgeons, steering his interest in medicine toward surgical specialties.

"Growing up, I idolized my pediatrician, and that first got me interested in medicine," Christian said in a Freeman Health System release. "As a football player, I had my knee scoped and both shoulders scoped. Then while in medical school in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, I fell in love with general surgery because of the breadth of things they dealt with. It's not just one organ system."

Christian completed his general surgery residency at TriHealth/Good Samaritan Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio.

"The thing I enjoy the most with general surgery," said Christian, "is the person, for example, who has terrible nausea and pain for years and years and we figure out it's their gallbladder. We take it out and all of a sudden they feel like a new person, and they're so thankful for that."

During his surgery residency, Christian experienced trauma surgery and decided to stay in Ohio to complete a surgical critical care/trauma fellowship at the University of Cincinnati. He has worked the last six years doing a combination of general and trauma surgery.

"It's having someone on death's door and through God's grace, you have the ability to keep them around longer," he said. "So, trauma can be very rewarding. The biggest challenge is not being able to fix everybody."

Christian also has experience with robotic surgery and says he is excited about the continued expansion of minimally invasive surgery.

"Even from when I was an intern, procedures you wouldn't imagine doing are now requiring smaller and smaller incisions with faster recoveries," he said. "What was once held true as the absolute way of doing a surgery, we now realize we can do in ways that are minimally invasive and better for the patient."

He believes surgery is a team approach with the patient being actively involved in their care plan.

"The optimization of a patient for surgery is getting them in the best physical, nutritional and mental state," Christian said. "Data shows the benefits in outcomes. We work on this together to put you, the patient, in the best position to be successful."

His wife, Gretchen, is an internal medicine hospitalist who will join Freeman in August.

Details: Christian is accepting new patients. A referral is required. To make an appointment, call Freeman General & Vascular Surgery at 417-3470-7272.