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Subject Overview

Taught by the Department of Surgery within the School of Medicine, Surgery at the University of Auckland is taught at the highest possible standard in all disciplines of surgery, by experts who contribute to the delivery of high quality surgical healthcare in Auckland and beyond.

You can study Surgery at all levels of tertiary education, from undergraduate to doctoral study.
Surgical specialities include:
- General surgery
- Cardiothoracic surgery
- Neurological surgery
- Otolaryngology, head and neck surgery
- Paediatric surgery
- Orthopaedic surgery
- Plastic and reconstructive surgery
- Urology
- Vascular surgery

Knowledge and Skills

We offer a range of excellent opportunities for full time research.

Our research encompasses laboratory science, translational research and clinical trials.  


Research opportunities - Doctoral research in Surgery falls under one of the following themes: 

General surgery

A general surgeon is a specialist who is trained to manage a broad spectrum of surgical conditions affecting almost any area of the body. The surgeon establishes the diagnosis and provides the preoperative, operative, and post-operative care to patients and is often responsible for the comprehensive management of the trauma victim and the critically ill patient.

Subspecialties within general surgery include:

  • Upper gastro-intestinal
  • Hepato-pancreatic-biliary
  • Colorectal
  • Breast and endocrine


Cardiothoracic surgery

Cardiothoracic surgery involves the operative management, perioperative care, and critical care of patients with pathological conditions within the chest. It includes surgical care for coronary artery disease, cancers of the lung, esophagus, and chest wall, abnormalities of the great vessels and heart valves, congenital anomalies, tumours of the mediastinum, and diseases of the diaphragm.


Neurological surgery

Neurological surgery is the discipline of medicine and the specialty of surgery that deals with the diagnosis, evaluation, and treatment of disorders of the central, peripheral, and autonomic nervous systems, including their supporting structures and vascular supply. Neurological surgery involves the evaluation and treatment of pathological processes that modify the function or activity of the nervous system, including the pituitary gland.


Otolaryngology head and neck surgery

These are surgeons who investigate and treat conditions of the ear, nose, throat, and neck. These include the evaluation of hearing difficulties, sinus conditions, voice problems, cancer of the throat, snoring and nasal and facial plastic surgery.


Paediatric surgery

Paediatric surgeons are primarily concerned with the diagnosis, preoperative, operative, and postoperative management of surgical problems in children and they operate on children whose development ranges from the newborn stage through the teenage years.


Orthopaedic surgery

Orthopaedic surgery is specifically devoted to the care of the musculoskeletal system, including bones, joints, muscles, associated nerves, arteries, and the overlying skin. Much of the orthopaedic surgeon's practice involves the performance of surgical procedures, but many conditions are treated medically or physically through the use of braces, casts, splints, or physical therapy.


Plastic and reconstructive surgery

Plastic surgery deals with the repair, replacement, and reconstruction of defects of the form and function of the body covering and its underlying musculoskeletal system, with emphasis on the craniofacial structures, the oropharynx, the upper and lower limbs, the breast, and the external genitalia. This surgical specialty also focuses on the aesthetic surgery of structures with undesirable form.


Urology

A urologist is a physician who manages benign and malignant medical and surgical disorders of the adrenal gland and of the genitourinary system. Urologists have comprehensive knowledge of, and skills in, endoscopic, percutaneous, and open surgery of congenital and acquired conditions of the reproductive and urinary systems and their contiguous structures.


Vascular surgery

Vascular surgeons care for patients with diseases that affect the arteries and veins throughout the body. Vascular surgeons must deal with many problems in arteries and veins, such as atherosclerosis, aneurysms and blood clots, and deal with their after-effects.

Schedule

Plan Schedules