Providence Healthcare
St. Paul's Hospital Cardiologists
Dr. Jason Andrade
Clinical Associate Professor
Dr. Jason Andrade is a Cardiac Electrophysiologist at Vancouver General Hospital (VGH), with a joint appointment at St Paul’s Hospital and the Montreal Heart Institute. He is an Associate Professor of Medicine at the University of British Columbia (UBC), and an Adjunct Professor at the Université de Montréal. Dr. Andrade is the Director of the Electrophysiology Program at VGH, as well as Head of the Atrial Fibrillation Clinic at VGH. He also serves as co-chair of the Canadian Cardiovascular Society Atrial Fibrillation Guidelines committee and serves as the medical lead for the atrial fibrillation care in the province of British Columbia. He previously served as chair of the education committee for the Canadian Heart Rhythm Society.
Dr. Andrade is the principal investigator of two ongoing multicenter clinical trials on cryoablation (the CIRCA-DOSE study and the EARLY-AF program). He has authored or co-authored over 130 scientific publications, predominantly in the domain of atrial fibrillation. He is also the author of a handbook of cardiac electrophysiology, a handbook of electrocardiogram interpretation, and several chapters related to atrial fibrillation ablation and cardiac cryoablation. He serves on the editorial board of the Heart Rhythm journal and the Journal of Atrial Fibrillation.
Dr. Andrade is a graduate of McMaster University (BSc; Summa Cum Laude) and the University of Ottawa (MD, Magna Cum Laude). He completed his Internal Medicine residency and Cardiology fellowship training at the University of British Columbia and a clinical and research fellowship in Cardiac Electrophysiology at the Montreal Heart Institute.
Dr. Eve Aymong
Clinical Associate Professor
Dr. Eve Aymong, MD, MSc, is a Clinical Associate Professor in the UBC Division of Cardiology. She works as a general cardiologist and interventional cardiologist primarily based at St. Paul’s Hospital with a cross appointment at Vancouver Acute. She is a graduate of University of Toronto medical school and received specialty training at the Universities of Toronto and Calgary. She also has a Masters of Science from Columbia University with a focus on patient oriented research and biostatistics.
Currently, she is the President of the specialty section of the BC Medical Association Society of Cardiology. Her responsibilities at St. Paul’s Hospital include chairing the quality assurance activities of the Morbidity and Mortality rounds of the Heart Centre. She is an active participant on the Research Ethics Board for Providence Health Care as well as a member on several committees of Cardiac Services BC.
Dr. Amanda Barlow
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr Barlow grew up in Adelaide South Australia. She trained in general pediatrics in Adelaide and pediatric cardiology in Adelaide (Adelaide Children’s Hospital) and Melbourne (Royal Children’s hospital) including a year in cardiac transplantation. She moved to Vancouver in 1994 and completed additional training in fetal echocardiography and electrophysiology.
She is a clinical assistant professor at the University of British Columbia and a member of the division of cardiology at St Paul’s hospital and the division of pediatrics at Royal Columbian hospital. She is also a visiting cardiologist at BC Women’s hospital. She is currently the director of the Heritable aortpathy clinic at SPH.
She divides her clinical time between the adult congenital heart, cardiac obstetric and heritable aortopathy clinics at SPH and her pediatric cardiology and fetal diagnostic clinics at RCH and BC Women’s.
Research interests include genetics and management of heritable aortopathies, diagnosis and management of congenital heart disease in the fetus.
Dr. Matthew Bennett
Clinical Associate Professor
DHCC 9th Floor
2775 Laurel St
Vancouver, BC V5Z 1M9
Dr. Richard Bennett
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Robert Boone
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Boone is an Interventional Cardiologist based at St. Paul’s Hospital in Vancouver having trained in Vancouver, Toronto, Calgary and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. He has an active interest in minimally invasive techniques for heart valve intervention, and has led the establishment of a MitraClip program in British Columbia.
He has a keen interest in renal denervation for refractory hypertension and is working with colleagues in Internal Medicine, Nephrology, and Interventional Radiology to bring this emerging technology to patients in BC. He is involved in new stent technology and imaging for coronary artery disease including the emerging area of bioresorbable platforms.
In addition to his interventional practice he maintains a general cardiology clinic in Vancouver, an outreach clinic in Whitehorse, and active clinical role in the Cardiac Intensive Care Unit. His academic interests centre around epidemiology and outcomes research related to new technologies. In addition he is collaborating with investigators looking at ethnic variations in cardiac outcomes, and the influence of HIV on coronary artery disease outcomes, the etiology and outcomes of stent thrombosis and the role of FFR in routine interventional practice.
Dr. Liam Brunham
Associate Professor
Liam Brunham is an Associate Professor in the Department of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine, and an Associate Member of the Division of Cardiology at the University of British Columbia. He is a Canada Research Chair in Precision Cardiovascular Disease Prevention. He is the Physician Lead of the Healthy Heart Program Prevention clinic at St. Paul’s Hospital, one of the largest speciality lipid clinics in Canada. Dr. Brunham completed the MD/PhD program, residency in Internal Medicine, and a fellowship in General Internal Medicine at UBC, followed by pursuing the Clinician Investigator Program in Singapore. He is a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Canada, and is certified by the American Boards of Internal Medicine and Clinical Lipidology. He leads a research team at the UBC Centre for Heart Lung Innovation that focuses on the role of genetics in metabolic and cardiovascular disease and the response to medications. He has been recognized with a Canadian Institutes of Health Research New Investigator Award, a Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research Scholar award, a Heart & Stroke Foundation National New Investigator award, and in 2017 was recognized as one of Canada’s Top 40 under 40.
Dr. Ronald Carere
Clinical Professor
Dr. Carere received his MD degree from the University of Ottawa (1984). He did postgraduate training at the University of Toronto receiving his Fellowship in Internal Medicine1988 and Cardiology in 1990. He did a Fellowship in Interventional Cardiology and Research at Toronto General Hospital in 1989-91.
He joined the Division of Cardiology at St Paul’s in 1991. His clinical practice focuses on Cardiac Interventions with a special interest in structural congenital heart disease including ASD/PFO and PDA closure, co-arctation stenting, transcatheter pulmonary valve replacement, and alcohol ablation of HOCM.
Dr. Carere has served in a number of medical leadership positions including Associate Head of the Division of Cardiology (1998 to 2001), Physician Program Director of the Heart Centre (2001-2010), Regional Medical Director of the Cardiac Sciences Program for Vancouver Coastal Health (2004-2010). He became Chair of the Medical Advisory Committee for Providence Health Care (2006-2010). His administrative roles evolved to Acting Vice President of Medical Affairs for Providence Health Care in May of 2010, a role he formally assumed in April of 2011.
Dr. Carere is a Clinical Professor of Medicine at the University of British Columbia and maintains active clinical research interests including work with the BC Cardiac Registry database and in structural heart disease. In 2000 he received the Martin M. Hoffman Award for Excellence in Research from the St Paul’s Hospital Department of Medicine and in 2013 an award of Merit for contributions to the St Paul’s Hospital Department of Medicine.
Office:Rm. 543 - 1081 Burrard St., Vancouver, BC, V6Z1Y6
Dr. Shanta Chakrabarti
Member-at-Large, Division Health & Wellness,
Clinical Associate Professor
After graduating from the University of Calcutta, Dr. Chakrabarti obtained his training in Congenital Cardiology in the United Kingdom (Southampton and Bristol) with further Electrophysiology training at the University of British Columbia.
His focus of interest includes arrhythmia management of Congenital Heart Disease, complex ablations with 3D mapping and advanced device therapy (ICD and cardiac resynchronization therapy).
Research interests include arrhythmias with Congenital Heart Disease, Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy, and Genetic Arrhythmias.
Dr. Chakrabarti is a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, the Royal College of Physicians in Edinburgh, and the American College of Cardiology and Heart Rhythm Society.
He is the Director of the Electrophysiology Fellowship Program of the University of British Columbia and the Lead Physician for Device Services and Congenital Heart Disease Arrhythmia Services at St. Paul’s Hospital in Vancouver.
Dr. Sammy Chan
Clinical Associate Professor
Dr. Sammy Chan completed his undergraduate medical training at the University of British Columbia. He has also additional postgraduate cardiology training at the University of Alberta, echocardiography training at the University of Alberta, research nuclear cardiology at University of California, Los Angeles.
He is currently a clinical cardiologist and the medical director of the Healthy Heart Program at St. Paul’s Hospital. He is a Clinical Associate Professor at the University of British Columbia.
His current clinical and research interests include primary and secondary cardiac prevention, exercise training methodology, alternative dietary approaches, stress management, determinants of lifestyle modification, endothelial function, subclinical atherosclerosis, refractory angina and molecular approaches to diagnosis and management of coronary atherosclerosis.
Dr. Annie Chou
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Annie Chou, MD, FRCPC is the director of General Cardiology at St. Paul’s Hospital and also sees patients in the Cardiac Obstetrics Clinic, the Atrial Fibrillation Clinic, and on the wards at St. Paul’s Hospital. She is a member of the Divisions of Cardiology at St Paul’s Hospital and Vancouver General Hospital. She is also a Clinical Assistant Professor in the Division of Cardiology at the University of British Columbia. Dr. Chou grew up in North Vancouver, starting her medical career as a Candy-striper at Lions Gate Hospital. She completed her undergraduate studies in Honours Physiology at the University of British Columbia, followed by her Doctor of Medicine Degree, Internal Medicine Residency, and Cardiology Fellowship, also at the University of British Columbia. Dr. Chou then worked at Lions Gate Hospital and the North Shore Heart Centre for 3 years, where she started the Rapid Access to Cardiac Expertise Clinic and helped advocate for Cardiac Intensive Care Beds. She was then recruited back to St. Paul’s Hospital as the Director of General Cardiology and is working towards creating and expanding General Cardiology. Dr. Chou was previously active in clinical research but is currently focussing her attention on clinical care. Her clinical interests are in all aspects of General Cardiology, including investigating cardiac symptoms and managing arrhythmias, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, valvular abnormalities, heart failure, and women with heart disease.
Dr. Rudy Chow
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Rudy Chow is a UBC clinical assistant professor and a member of the UBC Division of Cardiology and Geriatrics. He has a position as the first geriatric cardiologist in BC, working at Mount St. Joseph’s Hospital (MSJH). MSJH in Vancouver is a leader in the field of Eldercare. Since 2011, the hospital has developed and improved cardiac treatment for the elderly patients and residents in our care, establishing a new university-affiliated outpatient cardiac clinic. Rudy will provide a unique service to the elderly in East Vancouver. For the first time, geriatric patients will have a treatment plan charted that integrates expertise from both the cardiology and geriatric fields.
Rudy has an education focus and will be offering clinical electives to residents and fellows in the growing field of geriatric-cardiology. Topic areas of importance include frailty in cardiovascular disease, risk stratification in the elderly, interactions of comorbid illness on cardiovascular care, cardiac interventions in the elderly, and barriers to cardiovascular care in the elderly.
Dr. Brian Clarke
Clinical Associate Professor
Dr. Brian Clarke is a heart failure cardiologist with specialization in cardiac transplantation & mechanical circulatory support. He has experience and interest across the spectrum of heart failure and cardiomyopathy with an additional area of focus in cardiooncology. He is clinical associate professor in the department of medicine, division of cardiology at the University of British Columbia with academic interests and experience in education, outcomes research, and clinical program innovation. Dr. Clarke obtained his medical degree and completed internal medicine and cardiology residences at Dalhousie University in Halifax NS, moving on to Stanford University to complete subspecialty training in advanced heart failure, cardiac transplantation, and mechanical circulatory support. He returned to Halifax as active medical staff before being recruited to the University of Calgary and Libin Cardiovascular Institute, where he became the medical director of the cardiac transplant and MCS programs and program director of the heart failure training program in 2018. He launched an invasive heart failure monitoring program in 2018. Dr. Clarke joined the division of cardiology at UBC and St. Paul’s Hospital/Vancouver General Hospital in October 2021. Dr. Clarke is active in education and has won teaching awards for resident education. He has been a member of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada adult cardiology subspecialty committee, chair of the AFC in advanced heart failure and cardiac transplantation, and the adult cardiology exam board. Dr. Clarke is the current president of the Canadian Cardiac Transplant Network, an official affiliate of the Canadian Cardiovascular Society, and is senior advisor to Canadian Blood Services, Health Canada, and CIHI on matters of transplantation.
Dr. Simone Cowan
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Margot Davis
Member-at-Large, EDI,
Clinical Associate Professor
Margot Davis is a cardiologist at VGH and SPH and the Director of the UBC Cardiology-Oncology Program. She obtained her Bachelor of Science in Physiology at McGill University before attending medical school at the University of British Columbia. She stayed at UBC for her Internal Medicine residency and Cardiology fellowship and served as Chief Resident for both Medicine and Cardiology. She then completed fellowships in Advanced Heart Failure & Transplant Cardiology and Cardio-Oncology & Cardiac Amyloidosis at Stanford University School of Medicine. She is also a candidate for a Masters of Science in clinical epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health.
Her research interests are focused on the prevention, diagnosis, and management of cardiotoxicity related to cancer therapy and the epidemiology of heart disease in cancer survivors. She also has interests in cardiac amyloidosis and advanced heart failure. She is a co-PI on the Canadian Cancer Society-funded ELEVATE trial of eplerenone for the prevention of anthracycline cardiotoxicity in breast cancer patients.
Dr. Marc Deyell
Clinical Professor
Marc is a native of Calgary, Alberta, Canada and received his Medical Doctorate from the University of Alberta. He completed a residency in Internal Medicine and Masters of Epidemiology at the University of Calgary and his Cardiology and Electrophysiology training at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. Following this, he undertook an advanced fellowship in Electrophysiology (Heart Rhythm Management) at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, focusing on complex ablation.
He joined the Heart Rhythm team at St. Paul’s and Vancouver General Hospitals of the University of British Columbia in February 2012. He is an Associate Professor at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. He is currently the Director of Heart Rhythm Research and the Director of the Electrophysiology Laboratory at St. Paul’s.
His clinical and research interests center around the epidemiology, health outcomes and ablation of complex arrhythmias. He is an active researcher, holding current funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Heart and Stroke Foundation, and the Canadian Cardiovascular Society. He is the recipient of a career investigator award from the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research.
Office:#211, 1033 Davie Street, Vancouver, BC, V6E1M7
Dr. Jasmine Grewal
Head, UBC Division of Cardiology,
Clinical Professor
Dr. Jasmine Grewal MD FRCPC, is a clinical professor at the University of British Columbia and a member of the Divisions of Cardiology at St Paul’s Hospital and Vancouver General Hospital. With fellowship training in Adult Congenital Heart Disease/Pregnancy and Heart Disease (Toronto General Hospital) and Echocardiography (Mayo Clinic, Rochester MN), Dr. Grewal is actively involved in clinical and research activities in these fields. Dr. Grewal focuses her clinical time in the Pacific Adult Congenital Heart Disease and Cardiac Obstetrics Programs at St.Paul’s Hospital. Additionally, Dr. Grewal is an Echocardiographer and also works in the cardiac intensive care unit at St Paul’s Hospital. She is actively engaged in clinical research and currently involved as a primary and co-investigator in numerous single center and multi-center research studies in the areas of congenital heart disease and pregnancy and heart disease. Dr. Grewal is a recipient of the St Paul’s Hospital Physician Scholar Award (2010-2012).
Dr. Nat Hawkins
Head, UBC Cardiology Research,
Clinical Associate Professor
Dr Hawkins is Clinical Associate Professor at UBC and holder of the Dr. Charles Kerr Distinguished Scholar in Heart Rhythm Management. He holds dual certification in Heart Function and Heart Rhythm management, providing an innovative perspective on integration of technology with chronic disease management. He is the Physician Lead for the Vancouver Coastal Health Regional Heart Failure Program, and Director of the Heart Function Clinic at St. Paul’s Hospital, the Inherited Cardiomyopathy Clinic at Vancouver General Hospital, and the Regional Heart Failure Audit. He is Co-Chair at the Centre for Cardiovascular Innovation for Investigator Initiated Studies (https://cci-cic.org/).
His research examines cardiovascular outcomes, health services, and comorbidities in patients with heart failure and arrhythmia, and investigates patient management using cardiac implantable devices, remote monitoring, and digital health solutions. He has published in leading journals including Circulation, Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC), and European Heart Journal. He has 97 peer-reviewed publications, h-index 30.
Education
- Medical degree: MBChB, University of Edinburgh
- Research degree: MD, Doctorate of Medicine, University of Glasgow
- Research degree: MPH, University of Liverpool
- Residency: University of Edinburgh
- Fellowship: Heart Failure and Devices, University of Liverpool
- Fellowship: Heart Failure and Devices, University of British Columbia
Dr. Brett Heilbron
Clinical Associate Professor
Dr. Heilbron completed his undergraduate degree at the University of Cape Town (South Africa), and then practiced as a rural family physician in Newfoundland and Manitoba for 4 years. He completed Internal Medicine and Cardiology training at the University of British Columbia in 1995. He has Level 3 Certification in Cardiac Computed Tomography and is a Diplomate of the Certification Board in Cardiac Computed Tomography and a Fellow of the Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography.
He is currently a Clinical and Invasive Diagnostic Cardiologist and Co-Director of the Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program at St. Pauls’ Hospital / Providence Heart + Lung Institute, and a Clinical Associate Professor at the University of British Columbia.
His interests include noninvasive cardiac imaging and information technology.
Sample list of recent key publications:
Heilbron B and Leipsic J. Submillisievert coronary computed tomography angiography using adaptive statistical reconstruction: A new reality. Can J Cardiol 26(1): 35-36, January 2010.
Heilbron B, Andrews G, Isserow S, and Forster B. Coronary computed tomographic angiography in British Columbia: A review. BCMJ. 2007;49:78-84.
Heilbron B., Klein GJ, Talajic M., Guerra PG. 2004 Canadian Cardiovascular Society Consensus Conference: atrial fibrillation – management of atrial fibrillation in the emergency department and following acute myocardial infarction, Can J Cardiol 2005;21(Suppl B):61B–66B.
Email:bheilbron@gmail.com
Office:350-1144 Burrard St., Vancouver, BC, V6Z2A5
Phone:604-688-5215
Fax:604-688-5229
Dr. Andrew Ignaszewski
Clinical Professor
The Healthy Heart Program, Rm. 180, Level 1, Burrard Building
Vancouver, BC V6Z 1Y6
• Medical Director of Heart Function Clinic, St. Paul’s Hospital
• Clinical Professor of Medicine (Cardiology), University of British Columbia
Dr. Ignaszewski received his medical training in Poland. He came to Canada in 1983 and completed Internal Medicine training at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia before moving to the University of Alberta where he finished Adult Cardiology training. He was recruited for medical leadership of a premier cardiac rehabilitation and prevention program at St. Paul’s Hospital, Vancouver, British Columbia in 1994.
His other areas of interest include management of severe heart failure and heart transplantation, including novel multidisciplinary approaches to the treatment of the disease with specialized clinics and quality improvement measures. Dr. Ignaszewski is the Director of the Heart Function Clinic at St. Paul’s Hospital and a former director of the UBC Heart Transplant Program at St. Paul’s Hospital. He is also Provincial Lead in Heart Failure.
Dr. Ignaszewski’s research interests are cardiac rehabilitation and prevention, heart failure and patient outcomes following various cardiovascular interventions. He has published 77 papers and 128 abstracts in these areas.
Dr. Ignaszewski is also involved in the teaching of medical students and medical residents at St. Paul’s Hospital. He has received teaching awards from the University of British Columbia such as Best Teacher during a clinical rotation, Excellence in Clinical Teaching Skills and Teacher of the Year Awards. He has also received an award for Excellence in Health Promotion from BC Medical Association and publication award for original research.
Dr. Ken Kaila
Clinical Assistant Professor (joint appt with Critical Care)
Dr. Kaila is a clinical assistant professor at UBC. He works in the cardiac intensive care unit, intensive care unit, general cardiology clinics, and inpatient services. He also works in the intensive care unit at Mount Saint Joseph Hospital. He attended medical school at the University of Manitoba. He then completed Internal Medicine and Cardiology training at the University of Alberta prior to pursuing further specialization in Critical Care Medicine at the University of British Columbia. His clinical interests are in general cardiology and intensive care including cardiac arrests, hemodynamic assessment, and patient safety.
Dr. Marla Kiess
Clinical Professor
Dr. Marla Kiess attended medical school at UBC, did her cardiology residency in Toronto and a research fellowship in Nuclear Cardiology at Massachusetts General Hospital. She is the Director of the Pacific Adult Congenital Heart Clinic, the Electrodiagnostic and Echocardiography Laboratories at Providence Health Care and Clinical Professor of Medicine and Radiology at UBC. She was an examiner for the Royal College of Physicians & Surgeons of Canada. She spent many years serving on review and policy committees for the BC and Canadian Heart Foundations and was co-chair of the clinical trials committee. She has been President of the BC Cardiac Society and the Canadian Society of Nuclear Cardiology. She has served on the Board of Directors of the Canadian Adult Congenital Heart Network and the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology. She has been on the organizing committees of many scientific meetings. She continues to be an abstract reviewer and has served as Chair of scientific sessions for the AHA, the ACC, ASNC, ICNC, CCS, and SNM. She was on the Editorial Board of the Journal of Nuclear Cardiology and has been a reviewer for many journals, including the JNC, JACC, JNM, AJC, Canadian Journal of Cardiology. Her research interests are in Nuclear Cardiology, Adult Congenital Heart Disease and heart disease in women.
Dr. Andrew Krahn
Professor (tenure)
Dr. Krahn is a Professor in the Division of Cardiology at the University of British Columbia. Dr. Krahn has research funded by a Foundation grant from the Canadian Institute of Health Research through 2027, with 416 peer reviewed publications. Current research interests include investigation of genetic causes of arrhythmias, causes of loss of consciousness and implantable arrhythmia devices. Dr. Krahn is the founder of the Hearts in Rhythm Organization (HiRO, https://hiro.heartsinrhythm.ca), a Canadian network of inherited arrhythmia clinics. HiRO aims to facilitate collaborative research and engage patients and families with inherited arrhythmias, as well as ensure high quality and standardized care across Canada. He is the Sauder Family Chair and UBC Chief of Cardiology, and the Paul Brunes Chair in Heart Rhythm Disorders. He is the President of the Canadian Cardiovascular Society and Vice President of the Heart Rhythm Society.
Dr. Zachary Laksman
Director, Systems Innovation & Improvement,
Assistant Professor
Dr. Zachary Laksman is the Director of the St. Paul’s Hospital Atrial Fibrillation Clinic and the Director of the St. Paul’s Hospital Inherited Arrhythmia Clinic. Dr. Laksman specializes in the management of cardiac arrhythmias, and simple and complex ablation and device implantation.
Dr. Laksman is a clinician-scientist with a specific focus on cardiogenetics, stem cell disease modeling, and personalized medicine. His research has been published in scientific journals such as JACC, Heart Rhythm, Circulation Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology, American Journal of Cardiology, Canadian Journal of Cardiology, Journal of Cardiac Electrophysiology, Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology, and Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews. Dr. Laksman’s research is funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health and Research, the Heart and Stroke Foundation, and the Canadian Cardiovascular Society.
Dr. Laksman holds Dr. Charles Kerr distinguished Scholar in Cardiovascular Genetics.
Dr. Jensen Lau
Dr. Scott Lear
Adjunct Professor
Dr. Scott Lear (www.CoHeaRT.ca) is a Professor in the Faculty of Health Sciences at Simon Fraser University and the inaugural Pfizer/Heart and Stroke Foundation Chair in Cardiovascular Prevention Research at St. Paul’s Hospital as well as past recipient of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research new investigator awards. Dr. Lear received his PhD at the University of British Columbia which demonstrated a modest intervention for the maintenance of lifestyle behaviours and risk factors following a four-month cardiac rehabilitation program resulted in a reduction of global risk compared to usual care. Building on the success of these findings, Dr. Lear leads the British Columbia Alliance for Telehealth Policy and Research (www.BCATPR.ca), a team of university-based researchers and health authority decision-makers to develop and evaluate Internet-based solutions for chronic disease management. To date, a ‘virtual’ cardiac rehabilitation program and a ‘virtual’ heart failure clinic have been successfully evaluated a multi-chronic disease telehealth solution is currently being investigated. In addition, Dr. Lear leads the Multi-cultural Community Health Assessment Trial (M-CHAT) which is an ongoing investigation to identify the role of ethnic background in risk for obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Results to date indicate that men and women of Chinese and South Asian origin have greater amounts of inner-abdominal fat than Europeans, even at the same body fat. This results in increased risk for diabetes and cardiovascular disease in these groups. Future research will explore the genetic and socio-cultural determinants of cardiovascular disease risk in these populations. Another area of Dr. Lear’s research consists of the identification of environmental characteristics that may act as facilitators and barriers of healthy lifestyle habits that can then determine downstream cardiovascular disease risk (the so-called ‘built environment). Working with other investigators of the Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiologic (PURE) study, Dr. Lear will look at how one’s community can influence disease risk. Together, these projects will translate into effective prevention and management policies and programs for cardiovascular disease.
Dr. Andrea Lee
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Andrea Lee is a Clinical Assistant Professor with the Department of Medicine at the University of British Columbia (UBC). She completed her Doctor of Medicine degree as well as her Internal Medicine and Cardiology residencies at UBC. She went on to complete her Clinical Electrophysiology subspecialty fellowship at UBC and Western University. Outside of her general cardiology practice, she also sees patients in the Atrial Fibrillation Clinic and Cardiac Device Clinic at VGH.
Dr. Jonathon Leipsic
Professor (tenure)
Jonathon A. Leipsic, M.D., F.R.C.P.C. F.S.C.C.T is the Chairman of the Department of Radiology for Providence Health Care, Vancouver Coastal Health and the Vice Chairman of Research for the UBC Department of Radiology. He is a Professor of Radiology and Cardiology with the University of British Columbia. Dr. Leipsic is also a Canada Research Chair in Advanced Cardiopulmonary Imaging. Dr. Leipsic has over 480 peer-reviewed manuscripts in press or in print, over 300 scientific abstracts, and editor of 2 textbooks. He speaks internationally on a number of cardiopulmonary imaging topics with over 150 invited lectures in the last 4 years.
Dr. Michael Luong
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Michael Luong is a UBC clinical assistant professor and a member of the UBC Division of Cardiology. He has privileges at St. Paul’s Hospital, Mount St Joseph’s Hospital and Vancouver General Hospital. He works at the VGH Cardio-Oncology Clinic and Cardiac Function Clinic and also in the Atrial Fibrillation Clinic at SPH. He received his medical degree from the University of Toronto and completed additional training in advanced heart failure and cardiac transplantation at UBC as well as cardio-oncology training at the University of Toronto.
Michael is also actively involved in medical education and is the Associate Director for Undergraduate Medical Education for the UBC Division of Cardiology. He is engaged in teaching medical students, residents and fellows.
Dr. Nima Moghaddam
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Moghaddam completed his medical school, Internal Medicine, and Cardiology residency at the University of British Columbia (UBC) where he also served as the chief cardiology resident. Subsequently, he pursued a fellowship in Advanced Heart Failure and Transplant Cardiology with further training in Cardiac Critical Care at Duke University in the United States, a leading center with one of the highest volumes of heart transplantation in the world. He also briefly worked at Duke University as a clinical instructor prior to joining the Cardiology faculty at UBC as a Clinical Assistant Professor in July 2024. Dr. Moghaddam’s research and clinical interests are in acute heart failure management, durable left ventricular assist devices and heart transplantation, as well as use of advanced heart failure therapies including temporary mechanical circulatory support in cardiogenic shock.
Dr. Robert Moss
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Rob Moss graduated with honors from the University of NSW in Sydney, Australia. He trained and practiced as a general internist and intensivist before training in cardiology at the Prince Charles Hospital, the dedicated cardiovascular hospital for Queensland, Australia. He completed a fellowship in Heart Failure and Transplant and then traveled to Vancouver where he completed a fellowship in Echocardiography. He was recruited to staff at St Paul’s Hospital Vancouver/UBC in 2005. He attends in the CCU in addition to his core duties as a staff echocardiographer. His interests are aortic stenosis, left ventricular diastolic function, pericardial disease, quantification of valvular regurgitation, 3-D imaging and the echo guidance of procedures (especially transcutaneous aortic valve replacement and MitraClip). He is interested in the promotion of quality in imaging. He has published in many of these areas.
Dr. Nathaniel Moulson
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Nathaniel Moulson, MD, FRCPC is a member of the Divisions of Cardiology at Vancouver General Hospital, University of British Columbia Hospital, and St. Paul’s Hospital. He was born and raised in Nelson BC. Dr. Moulson received his undergraduate degree in Kinesiology and Health Science and his medical doctorate from the University of British Columbia. He completed his internal medicine residency at Queen’s University and general cardiology fellowship at the University of British Columbia. Dr. Moulson completed subspecialty fellowships in the Cardiovascular Performance Program at the Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard University, and Cardiac Rehabilitation and Prevention at the University of British Columbia. He has additionally completed a Clinician Investigator Program residency and currently pursuing a Master of Health Administration. Dr. Moulson is actively involved in clinical and research activities. He focuses his clinical time in the Sports Cardiology clinic at UBC-Hospital, and in cardiac rehabilitation and prevention at both Vancouver General Hospital and St. Paul’s Hospital. Dr. Moulson is actively involved as a primary and co-investigator for multiple single and multi-center national and international research studies in the areas of sports cardiology, cardiac rehabilitation and prevention, and virtual health care.
Dr. Brad Munt
Clinical Instructor
Brad Munt was born in Ontario and spent his early years there. He received his undergraduate degree in Biology from Mount Allison University in New Brunswick, attended Medical School at the University of British Columbia, and did his Internal medicine training in Toronto and Vancouver. This was followed by his clinical cardiology training at the University of British Columbia, and a clinical and research echocardiography fellowship at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Brad is currently a staff cardiologist at St. Paul’s Hospital in Vancouver, where his primary role is patient care. His clinical interests are advanced heart failure including transplantation, percutaneous valve therapies, and echocardiography. Brad is involved in clinical echocardiographic research, with valvular heart disease, heart failure, percutaneous valve procedures, and pericardial disease the major focus of his work.
Brad has authored over 60 peer-reviewed publications, six echocardiography and 2 percutaneous valve related textbook chapters.
Brad is active in local medical politics as a current Board member and past president of the British Columbia Society of Cardiology and the British Columbia Section of Cardiology of the British Columbia Medical Association.
Brad’s main interests outside of medicine are his 4 children who have given him an excuse to experience a second childhood.
Dr. Kevin Ong
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Ong is a clinical assistant professor at UBC and director of the Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Clinic at St. Paul’s Hospital. He works concurrently in the cardiac intensive care unit and echocardiography lab. Dr. Ong is a graduate of the University of Toronto medical school, and UBC Internal Medicine and Cardiology fellowship programs. He completed advanced fellowships in echocardiography and hypertrophic/amyloid cardiomyopathy at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota.
Office:Room 477A - 1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, BC, V6Z 1Y6
Phone:604-806-8097
Dr. Alan Rabinowitz
Clinical Associate Professor
Dr. Alan Rabinowitz received his medical degree from the University of Cape Town, South Africa, completed his internal medicine and cardiology training at the University of Toronto and underwent subsequent training in interventional cardiology at St Paul’s Hospital. He is currently Clinical Associate Professor in the Division of Cardiology at the University of British Columbia.
In his prior capacity as Director of the Coronary Care Unit at St Paul’s Hospital, Dr. Rabinowitz recognized the critical importance of disruptive data solutions in transforming healthcare to enhance patient care, research and innovation, and advance sustainability of the healthcare ecosystem. This drove him to co-found PHEMI, a health solutions company focusing on clinical and research productivity and outcome improvement, and medical knowledge collaboration using Big Data and data science.
He has recently taken on an advisory role in the New St Paul’s Hospital development project focused on the intersect between clinical medicine, research and innovation using data innovation including opportunities for global collaboration as well as an advisory role in the Canadian Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada on clinical innovation and implementation science.
Dr. Rabinowitz currently chairs the cardiovascular clinical rounds forum at St Paul’s Hospital. His areas of interest include cardiac intensive care, general and preventive cardiology and data innovation in the context of systems biology and implementation science.
Dr. Krish Ramanathan
Clinical Professor
Dr. Krishnan Ramanathan Graduated from the University of Otago Medical School, in Dunedin, New Zealand. He completed his training in Cardiology at Green-Lane Hospital in Auckland, New Zealand before traveling to North America where he gained experience in Interventional cardiologist and clinical research. He returned to Vancouver in 2006 with appointments’ at both St. Paul’s Hospital and Vancouver General Hospital. He is currently the Medical Director of the Cardiac Intensive Care Unit (CICU) at St. Paul’s Hospital as well as being a Clinical Associate Professor at the University of British Columbia.
Since coming to British Columbia he has been active in research to better understand the complex interplay between coronary artery disease (CAD), Diabetes mellitus and or reno-vascular disease through international multi-center clinical trials and local research. He is also a leader in ethnicity research trying to understand the determinants for the increased incidence of atherosclerosis amongst South Asians. His experience in clinical trials consists of membership in many Steering / Operations Committees, Data, and Safety Monitoring Boards and Writings Committees. He was the inaugural recipient of the St Paul’s Hospital Foundation Physicians Scholars Award and a co-applicant on a number of national grants.
His publications are numerous and he is actively involved in all levels of education ranging from medical students to organizing continuing medical education for physicians. He has been involved with provincial guideline development for Chest pain management and Atrial fibrillation. He is a co-chair of the regional STEMI management committee and the co-chair of the provincial ACS registry.
Office:Rm. 475, Burrard Building, Vancouver, BC, V5Z1M9
Dr. Thomas Roston
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Thomas Roston is a cardiologist and clinician-scientist at St. Paul’s Hospital and Vancouver General Hospital. He received an MD from the University of British Columbia, followed by residencies in Internal Medicine and Cardiology, during which time he twice served as chief resident. He also obtained a PhD from the University of Alberta focused on inherited heart disease, and completed the UBC Clinician Investigator Program. He has additional fellowship training from Harvard Medical School in Cardiovascular Genetics, and from the University of Alberta in Cardiac Critical Care. Dr. Roston’s research is focused on cardiac genetics, heart disease in the young, and critical care cardiology.
Dr. Gnalini Sathananthan
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Gnalini Sathananthan (BSc (Med) MBBS, FRACP, MPhil) graduated with a Bachelor of Science (Medicine), Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery from the University of New South Wales (Sydney, Australia). She completed her cardiology training through Westmead Hospital (Sydney, Australia) and the Greenlane Cardiology Program (Auckland, New Zealand). She is a fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians. She underwent further fellowship training in both echocardiography and adult congenital heart disease at Auckland City Hospital (New Zealand), Toronto General Hospital (Canada) and at St Paul’s Hospital (Vancouver, Canada). Her clinical interests include echocardiography and adult congenital heart disease with a specific interest in structural echocardiography and heritable aortopathy. She has completed a Master of Philosophy through the University of Sydney and retains a keen interest in cardiology research. She has also been involved in both undergraduate and postgraduate medical education.
Dr. Janarthanan Sathananthan
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr Janarthanan (Janar) Sathananthan is an interventional cardiologist at St. Paul’s and Vancouver General Hospital. Janar graduated with a Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery (MBChB) from the University of Auckland (Distinction) and completed cardiology training through the Greenlane Cardiology Program in Auckland, New Zealand and is a Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians. During his cardiology training he also completed a Masters of Public Health (MPH) focusing on research methodology. He completed four years of subspecialty training in interventional cardiology which included 1 year at Greenlane Cardiology (Auckland, New Zealand), 1 year at Toronto General Hospital (Toronto) focussing on complex coronary intervention, and a further two years at the Centre for Heart Valve Innovation (Vancouver) focussing on structural heart interventions. His clinical interests include both coronary and structural intervention. He is active in both pre-clinical and clinical research with a focus on structural heart disease. Pre-clinical interests focus on bench testing of cardiovascular devices, and he is Director of the Centre for Heart Valve Innovation Bench Testing Laboratory. He is a Canadian representative for the International Standards Organization (ISO), an advisory body for the testing of cardiovascular devices.
Dr. Stephanie Sellers
Assistant Professor
Director of Fundamental Research, St. Paul’s Hospital Cardiovascular Imaging, Radiology
Dr. Michael Slawnych
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Slawnych initially trained as an electrical engineer at the University of Alberta and the University of British Columbia (UBC), and then did a post-doctoral fellowship in the Department of Anatomy at UBC. He subsequently went on to be a junior faculty member with the Department of Biomedical Engineering at McGill University, and then studied medicine at the University of Calgary, completing residencies in internal medicine, cardiology and palliative care. He currently works in both cardiology and palliative care and has a special interest in cardiac patients near the end of life.
Dr. Carolyn Taylor
Director, Finance,
Clinical Associate Professor
Dr. Carolyn M Taylor, MD, MPH is a clinical assistant professor at the University of British Columbia and a member of the Divisions of Cardiology at St Paul’s Hospital and Vancouver General Hospital. With fellowship training in Cardiac Disease Prevention (Harvard University) and Coronary CT Angiography (Massachusett’s General Hospital), Dr. Taylor is actively involved in clinical and research activities in these fields. Dr. Taylor focuses her clinical time in the Healthy Heart cardiac rehabilitation program at St Paul’s and Vancouver General Hospital and in the Prevention/Lipid Clinic at St Paul’s Hospital. Additionally, Dr. Taylor works in the advanced cardiac imaging department and the cardiac intensive care unit at St Paul’s Hospital. Prior research training includes a Masters of Public Health (2008) from Harvard University and completion of the UBC Clinical Investigator’s Program (2009). She is currently involved as a primary and co-investigator of numerous single center and multi-center research studies in the areas of non-invasive imaging, cardiac prevention, and risk factor modification. Dr. Taylor is the recent recipient of the St Paul’s Hospital Physician Scholar Award (2011-2014).
Dr. Christopher Thompson
Clinical Associate Professor
Dr. Thompson is a Clinical Associate Professor, Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia (UBC) and an Attending Cardiologist at St. Paul’s Hospital, where he was also the Director of the Cardiac Echo Laboratory from its inception in 1986 to 2010 and the Director of Cardiology Research from 1994 to 2001. He served as a Medical Advisor to Cardiac Services BC from 2008 to 2013.
Dr. Thompson received his Internal Medicine and Cardiology training at St. Paul’s Hospital (UBC) and his Cardiology Research training and Echocardiography Fellowship at Foothills Hospital, University of Calgary working with Drs. Eldon Smith and John Tyberg. His current research interests focus on multimodality imaging to support structural heart disease intervention and utilizing cardiac registries to improve cardiovascular outcomes. Dr. Thompson is a reviewer for many cardiology journals and belonged to the scientific review committee of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada and the Heart and Stroke Foundation of BC and the Yukon. He directed a cooperative cardiology clinical trials group at St. Paul’s Hospital that evaluated emerging therapies, therapeutic strategies and devices in cardiac patients. He currently serves as the Chief Scientific Officer of PHEMI Health Systems, a Vancouver process automation and analytics company that unlocks patient data to improve clinic productivity, patient outcomes, and medical research.
Dr. Mustafa Toma
Clinical Associate Professor
Dr. Toma graduated from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver in 2003 and completed training in Internal Medicine and Cardiology at the University of Alberta in Edmonton. He received subspecialty training in Advanced Heart Failure and Cardiac Transplantation at the Cleveland Clinic before completing a Master of Science in Clinical Epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health. His clinical interests include advanced heart failure, cardiac transplantation, mechanical circulatory support, and cardiac critical care.
Office:Division of Cardiology, Rm. 475A, Burrard Building, Vancouver, BC, V6Z 1Y6
Dr. Ricky Turgeon
Assistant Professor
Dr. Ricky Turgeon is Clinical Pharmacy Specialist in the PHARM-HF (Pharmacist-Led Rapid Medication Optimization for Heart Failure) Clinic at St. Paul’s Hospital. He is an Assistant Professor at the University of British Columbia (UBC) Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, holding the Greg Moore Professorship in Clinical & Community Cardiovascular Pharmacy, and an Associate Member of the UBC Faculty of Medicine, member of the Division of Cardiology at St. Paul’s Hospital, and Scientist at the Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences (CHÉOS). Dr. Ricky Turgeon received his BSc(Pharm) from the Dalhousie University College of Pharmacy, his Accredited Canadian Pharmacy Residency (ACPR) from the Lower Mainland Pharmacy Services Residency Program, his post-baccalaureate PharmD in the UBC Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences at UBC, and a two-year post-doctoral fellowship in cardiovascular pharmacotherapeutics at the University of Alberta Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry (Division of Cardiology).
Dr. Turgeon’s research focuses on integrating high-quality observational studies and meta-analyses of clinical studies to guide the creation and evaluation of decision support tools and other knowledge translation strategies to ensure that pharmacotherapy for cardiovascular disease align with patient goals, preferences and values. His research and clinical interests focus on implementation science, with a focus on heart failure pharmacotherapy, antithrombotic agents, lipid-lowering therapies, and on the cardiovascular safety of medications. Dr. Turgeon has authored over 65 peer-reviewed publications, predominantly in cardiovascular pharmacotherapy. He serves on the editorial board of the Canadian Journal of Cardiology Open.
Dr. Darryl Wan
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Darryl Wan, MD, FRCPC, RPVI is a general cardiologist and a member of the Division of Cardiology at St. Paul’s Hospital, Mount St. Joseph Hospital, and Vancouver General Hospital. He completed medical school, Internal Medicine residency, and Cardiology fellowship at the University of British Columbia. He then completed a Vascular Medicine fellowship in McMaster University, where he also certified as a Registered Physician in Vascular Interpretation. His clinical interests are in general cardiology, peripheral vascular disease and cardiovascular prevention.
Dr. John Webb
Professor (grant tenure)
Rm 476 Burrard Bldg
1081 Burrard St
Vancouver, BC V6Z1Y6
Dr. Webb is the director of interventional cardiology at St. Paul’s Hospital, McLeod Professor at UBC, Medical Director of the Transcatheter Valve Program for the Province of BC.
As director of the Centre for Heart Valve Innovation, he leads the group that developed the most widely used transcatheter aortic valve implantation procedures as well as many other first-in-human devices and procedures. He has performed or supervised over 3,000 aortic, mitral, pulmonary, and tricuspid valve procedures in over 30 countries throughout North America, Europe, and Australasia and has authored over 500 publications.
Dr. David Wood
Head, VCH Cardiology,
Clinical Professor
Dr. David Wood is a Professor of Medicine at the University of British Columbia. He is the Head of the Division of Cardiology and the Medical Director for the Cardiac Sciences Program at Vancouver Coastal Health. He is the inaugural Director of the Centre for Cardiovascular Innovation – Centre d’Innovation Cardiovasculaire (CCI-CIC), a clinical research operation centre with 39 affiliated staff and 72 cardiovascular investigators in British Columbia. Dr. Wood is the President of the Canadian Association of Interventional Cardiology (CAIC-ACCI). He received the Luminary Award at the recent C3 Global Submit. He is the Course Director of the CAIC-ACCI Summit, an open Canadian forum to discuss controversies in complex coronary and structural heart disease interventions.
Dr. Wood works as a structural and interventional cardiologist at St. Paul’s and Vancouver General Hospital. He obtained subspecialty training at Lenox Hill Heart and Vascular Institute of New York. His primary research interests include transcatheter management of structural and valvular heart disease, new device development, novel strategies for treating ACS, and advanced cardiac imaging. Dr. Wood has participated in over 50 live-cases and 20 first-in-human cases. He has co-authored over 200 publications with an h-index of 74. He recently published the 3M TAVR Study (JACC CVI), the SAFE MANTA Study (Circ CVI), and was co-principal investigator of the CIHR funded COMPLETE trial (4,041 patients, 140 centres, 31 countries) that was presented as Late Breaking Science at both ESC and TCT with simultaneous publication in NEJM and JACC. He is currently PI of the COMPLETE TAVR trial (n = 4000, 103 centres), the DISCORDANCE TAVR study (n = 50, 11 centres), the ULTRA CLOSURE study (n = 250, 7 centres), and the PROTECT TAVR study (n = 200, 15 centres). In May 2020, in collaboration with 15 North American Cardiovascular Society Leaders representing over 90,000 clinicians, he simultaneously published Safe Reintroduction of Cardiovascular Services During the COVID-19 Pandemic in JACC, CJC, and the ATS.
Office Contact Information:
Office Phone: 604-875-5601
Fax Number: 604-674-0981
Dr. John Yeung
Clinical Professor
Dr. John Yeung-Lai-Wah graduated in Medicine from the University of Glasgow, Scotland. He completed his Cardiology training at the University of Alberta and his Fellowship training in Cardiac Electrophysiology at the University of Oklahoma under Dr. W. Jackman. In 1986, he was the recipient of the third prize at the Young Investigator Award of the North American Society of Pacing and Electrophysiology (NASPE), now the Heart Rhythm Society. Shortly after, he joined the Faculty of Medicine at UBC. His main research focus has been on the mechanisms of arrhythmias in humans and he has done pioneering work in ablation therapy. In 1992, his Fellow trainee also received an award at the Young Investigator competition at NASPE.
His cardiology practice centers on the management of heart rhythm abnormalities.
St. Paul's Hospital Cardiovascular Surgeons
Dr. James Abel
Head, PHC Division of Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery Clinical Professor of Surgery, University of British Columbia. Associate Head, UBC Division of Cardiovascular Surgery
Dr Abel completed General Surgery and Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery at the University of Toronto, and joined the Division of Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery at St. Paul’s Hospital in 1993. He headed the Cardiac Transplant Program from 1996 until 2001, and has a clinical interest in higher risk coronary revascularization, left ventricular remodeling, and valve repair and replacement surgery as an alternative to transplantation. He was the first to do concomitant radiofrequency ablation for atrial fibrillation in the open heart in BC and is a leader in cardiac surgical training. Since arriving in BC he has been involved in outcomes analysis with the BC Cardiac Surgical Registry, and led the Cardiac Surgical Working Group of Cardiac Services British Columbia which developed and transitioned the Registry to the electronic web-based HeartIS system used today. He chairs the Canadian Cardiovascular Society Cardiac Surgery Quality Indicator group which, in partnership with CIHI, releases annual national cardiac surgical outcomes publicly.
Dr. Jamil Bashir
Surgical Director, Laser Lead Extraction and Device Implantation Clinical Associate Professor of Surgery, UBC BCMA Section Head
Dr Jamil Bashir is a Cardiovascular and Transplant surgeon at St. Paul’s Hospital and Vancouver General Hospital with a primary academic interest in heart failure, cardiac implantable electronic devices and laser lead extraction. He is a full Clinical Professor in the Department of Surgery at the University of British Columbia and the Director of the Lead Extraction Program. The St. Paul’s Hospital lead extraction program is a Western Canadian resource that manages patients from Manitoba west and is the largest program in Canada. Dr Bashir was the creator of the P6 program which has been instrumental in a complete reorganization of pacemaker device care in the province with a focus on quality.
In addition to winning the Moshier Memorial Gold medal as the top graduate from the University of Alberta Medical School, Jamil did a dual fellowship of complex device surgery in Goteborg Sweden and holds a certificate in Aortic Surgery from Houston Texas.
Dr Bashir is the principal investigator for the CLEAR (Canadian Lead Extraction Risk Study) with 2500 patients and was instrumental in the creation of the ongoing ATLAS randomized trial comparing risk of complications between transvenous and subcutaneous defibrillators.
Dr. Paul Bui
Cardiovascular Surgeon
Dr. Andrew Campbell
Clinical Associate Professor
Dr. Anson Cheung
Surgical Director, Cardiac Transplantation Clinical Professor of Surgery, UBC
Dr. Anson Cheung is the Director of Cardiac Transplantation of B.C. and Clinical Professor of Surgery with the University of British Columbia, Department of Surgery, Division of Cardiovascular Surgery. Practicing since 2000, he is currently on staff at St. Paul’s Hospital and Vancouver General Hospital. He is a graduate of the University of Manitoba with post-graduate work at Stanford University, University of Western Ontario and the University of Pittsburgh. He joined the academic staff at UBC in 2001 and St. Paul’s Hospital in 2000. His specialties include cardiac transplant surgery, mechanical circulatory assist devices, transcatheter valve therapy and off-pump coronary artery bypass grafting (OPCABG). Dr. Cheung has established the VAD (Ventricular Assist Device) Program at St. Paul’s Hospital which is the first VAD program in Western Canada. He is also a leader in transcatheter valve therapy. He is currently involved in numerous research projects along with other works in progress. He was also the recipient of the Department of Surgery Concept Awards in 2003 as well as the International Society of Minimally Invasive Cardiac Surgery President’s Award in 2010 and 2015. He continues to foster cardiac surgical education by participating in numerous symposiums and post-graduate courses worldwide.
Dr. Arthur Lee
Dr. Kevin Lichtenstein
Dr. Samuel Lichtenstein
Clinical Professor of Surgery, UBC Head, Division of Cardiac Surgery, UBC Regional Cardiac Program Medical Director, PHC & VCH
Dr. Samuel V. Lichtenstein is Clinical Professor of Surgery and University Head of the Division of Cardiac Surgery at the University of British Columbia. In addition to his Medical Degree, Dr. Lichtenstein holds a Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Publications include approximately 1240 peer reviewed articles and invited reviews. Early in his career, he introduced the notion of performing open heart surgery at normothermia which challenged previously held concepts of hypothermia in open heart surgery. In 2005, Dr. Lichtenstein and his group were the first in the world to implant an aortic valve for aortic stenosis through the apex of the left ventricle in man. Catheter-based valve implantation has become a tremendously important development in the treatment of valve disease and the transapical approach allows for treatment of patients with peripheral vascular disease. The group in Vancouver has the largest experience in the world with this modality.
Dr. Lichtenstein has a research interest in myocardial protection, heart-lung interaction, peripheral vascular physiology, and myocardial mechanics.
Dr. Lichtenstein holds multiple patents. In 1998, he developed a suture-based mechanical coronary anastomosis system for Perclose. The patented methodology has been adapted for femoral artery closures after interventional cardiological procedures. In 1999, Dr. Lichtenstein co-founded Ventrica, a biotech start-up in Menlo Park, California, based on a magnetic coupling system for coronary anastomosis. More recently, he co-founded biotech start-ups in Vancouver focused on percutaneous solutions for treating atrial fibrillation, methods of reducing x-ray radiation exposure for long fluoroscopic procedures, and non-invasive lung volume reduction for the treatment of emphysema.
Dr. Jian (James) Ye
Director, Cardiac Surgery Clinical Research, UBC Clinical Professor of Surgery, UBC
Dr. Jian (James) Ye is a cardiovascular surgeon at St. Paul’s Hospital and Vancouver General Hospital. He is also a Clinical Professor of Surgery and the Director of Cardiac Surgery Research at the University of British Columbia. His primary clinical interest/expertise is complex mitral & tricuspid valve repair, rheumatic mitral & tricuspid valve repair, complex cardiac surgery, and transcatheter heart valve therapies. Dr. Ye is a pioneer in the development and clinical application of transcatheter heart valve therapies, including transapical aortic valve implantation (TAVI), transcatheter mitral valve replacement or repair and transcatheter tricuspid valve therapy. He has performed many first-in-human transcatheter heart valve procedures, including: the first successful transapical TAVI in the world in 2005; transcatheter aortic valve-in-valve implantation for failed bioprosthesis in 2007; TAVI for pure aortic regurgitation; and transcatheter mitral valve repair or replacement. He has educated physicians around the world in TAVI and has supervised many transcatheter aortic and mitral valve procedures throughout North America, Asia and Australia. He has also educated surgeons in different countries in heart valve surgery. His research interests include clinical outcomes of traditional and transcatheter heart valve surgery, and the development and clinical application of new medical devices. As Director of Cardiac Surgery Research, he has served as the site principal investigator for many clinical trials in cardiac surgery and transcatheter heart valve therapies. He has over 200 peer-reviewed scientific publications and 6 book chapters, and has been an invited lecturer at numerous scientific meetings and hospitals worldwide.
St. Paul's Hospital Nurse Practitioners
Belinda-Ann Furlan
Cardiology NP at St. Paul’s Hospital
Belinda-Ann Furlan started her cardiology nursing career in the Heart Centre at St. Paul’s Hospital as a RN from 1999-2006 before obtaining her Masters of Science in Nursing/Nurse Practitioner degree at the University of British Columbia in 2006. She subsequently trained at the University Health Network, Toronto General Hospital with the cardiac surgery and heart failure teams. In 2007, she reunited with the St. Paul’s Hospital Heart Centre developing clinical experience in cardiac surgery, general cardiology, interventional cardiology, heart failure and heart rhythm/atrial fibrillation. Her areas of interest lie within general cardiology including lifestyle management in chronic disease, weight loss, heart failure and atrial fibrillation.
Belinda was the first recipient of the Terina Werry Nurse Practitioner award in 2008. She has participated in the development of provincial and national initiatives for the education and best clinical practice for heart failure patients and atrial fibrillation clinics. Belinda is active in a consultant role for the BC College of Nurses and Midwives as an examiner for nurse practitioner licencing exams and has held the position of deputy chief examiner.
Belinda has an interest in biomedical and research ethics. Belinda is proud to work for a catholic organization and carries out her vocation through the mission, vision and values of Providence Health Care in her daily interactions with her patients and families. She is driven to provide compassionate care for all. Outside of her occupational vocation, Belinda is a dedicated wife, mother of three, sister and daughter.
Tracy Gwozd
Cardiac Surgery NP at St. Paul’s Hospital
Tracy Gwozd is an alumnus of the UBC School of Nursing, having completed her Bachelor of Science in Nursing in 2002 and her Masters in Nursing- Nurse Practitioner in 2012. Tracy has had an accomplished career within St. Paul’s Heart Center, with clinical experience in areas of cardiology, interventional cardiology, hearth rhythm, and most recently cardiac surgery.
Tracy is the recipient of the Nini-M. Harris-Lowe Memorial Award in Nursing in recognition for efforts to advance nursing care of patients with cardiovascular disease. Tracy has worked as project lead for several QI initiatives aimed to improve delivery of care of patients with atrial fibrillation on regional and provincial levels. Tracy has acted as invited lecturer on topics in cardiology and cardiac surgery at hospital, regional, and national levels. Tracy is a passionate advocate for increasing public awareness and understanding of the NP profession. Tracy’s clinical interests include the integration of technology into systems of patient care delivery.
Lisa Mathur
Cardiac Surgery NP at St. Paul’s Hospital
Lisa Mathur is an award winning alumnus of the University of Victoria, earning a Master of Nursing degree in 2008. She has been a nurse practitioner within the St. Paul’s Hospital Cardiac Surgery Program for the past 12 years, and is a member of the Medical Staff at Providence Health Care. She is also an adjunct professor at UBC’s School of Nursing. Prior to embarking on her NP career, she spent many years nursing at several Harvard University affiliated hospitals, including Massachusetts General Hospital and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, Massachusetts. She has ongoing interest in patient and nursing education, improved antithrombotic management following cardiac surgery, and optimization of transition to back to primary care.
Cindy Nordquist
Cardiology NP at St. Paul’s Hospital
Cynthia (Cindy) Nordquist completed her Bachelor of Science in Nursing at the University College of the Cariboo (now known as Thompson Rivers University). She worked in various areas the Heart Centre at St. Paul’s Hospital until completing her Masters in Nursing-Nurse Practitioner Program at the University of British Columbia in 2011.
She is currently the nurse practitioner in the Heart Function Clinic at St. Paul’s Hospital and an adjunct professor at the UBC School of Nursing. She provides full scope nurse practitioner care for complex, vulnerable (substance use and/mental health disorders) and end stage heart failure patients with a focus on chronic disease and symptom management.
Megan Patapoff
Cardiac Surgery NP at St. Paul’s Hospital
Megan Patapoff is an alumnus of the UBC-Okanagan school of nursing, having graduated with her Bachelor of Science in Nursing in 2010. Megan spent nearly ten years working as a registered nurse, primarily in the emergency department, as well as intensive care areas. Megan completed her Master’s in Nursing: Nurse Practitioner through Athabasca University in 2019. Megan is currently a member of Medical Staff under Providence Health Care, and is employed as a Nurse Practitioner on unit 5B, Cardiac Surgery, at St. Paul’s hospital. Megan came to St Paul’s Heart Centre with previous cardiac NP experience, having worked at Abbotsford Regional hospital’s Heart Function Clinic where she provided autonomous care and disease management to heart failure patients in the outpatient setting. Megan is actively involved in clinical committees at Providence Health Care, and is interested in patient care systems improvement initiatives and promotion of nursing education.
Mount Saint Joseph Hospital
Dr. Rudy Chow
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Rudy Chow is a UBC clinical assistant professor and a member of the UBC Division of Cardiology and Geriatrics. He has a position as the first geriatric cardiologist in BC, working at Mount St. Joseph’s Hospital (MSJH). MSJH in Vancouver is a leader in the field of Eldercare. Since 2011, the hospital has developed and improved cardiac treatment for the elderly patients and residents in our care, establishing a new university-affiliated outpatient cardiac clinic. Rudy will provide a unique service to the elderly in East Vancouver. For the first time, geriatric patients will have a treatment plan charted that integrates expertise from both the cardiology and geriatric fields.
Rudy has an education focus and will be offering clinical electives to residents and fellows in the growing field of geriatric-cardiology. Topic areas of importance include frailty in cardiovascular disease, risk stratification in the elderly, interactions of comorbid illness on cardiovascular care, cardiac interventions in the elderly, and barriers to cardiovascular care in the elderly.
Dr. Michael Luong
Clinical Assistant Professor
Dr. Michael Luong is a UBC clinical assistant professor and a member of the UBC Division of Cardiology. He has privileges at St. Paul’s Hospital, Mount St Joseph’s Hospital and Vancouver General Hospital. He works at the VGH Cardio-Oncology Clinic and Cardiac Function Clinic and also in the Atrial Fibrillation Clinic at SPH. He received his medical degree from the University of Toronto and completed additional training in advanced heart failure and cardiac transplantation at UBC as well as cardio-oncology training at the University of Toronto.
Michael is also actively involved in medical education and is the Associate Director for Undergraduate Medical Education for the UBC Division of Cardiology. He is engaged in teaching medical students, residents and fellows.