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Chapter III. Putting Hong Kong Surgery on the World Map  Professor Ong and Sir John Bruce,

                      President of the Royal College of
                      Surgeons of Edinburgh.


 International Networks





 Perhaps Ong’s greatest contribution to the Department was
 his skill as an international networker. Ong attended overseas
 surgical academic meetings, sat on editorial boards and took
 up fellowships. He used these forums to share his surgical feats,
 piquing the curiosity of other surgeons who began to come
 to Hong Kong to see his skills first-hand. These interactions
 resulted in great opportunities for surgical staff to participate
 in academic exchanges and gain international exposure.


 Ong also used his networks to benefit young surgeons by
 arranging for their examinations to be held in Hong Kong rather
 than in the UK, which until then was the only option. In 1966,
 the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh agreed to conduct
 the first diet of the Part 1 FRCS (Edin) in Hong Kong in which
 14 of the 29 candidates passed; Part II was added in 1970. The
 Royal Australasian College of Surgeons also later agreed to
 hold exams here, with the two colleges conducting exams in
 alternate years supported by the University Surgical Unit and
 the Hong Kong Surgical Society. This arrangement solidified
 the Department’s leadership in providing professional surgical
 training to benefit Hong Kong as a whole. Ong also tapped his
 networks to place young surgeons overseas for specialty training.


 Two professional societies were established through Ong’s
 efforts. In 1964, he launched the Hong Kong Surgical Society,   Professor Ong at the Hong Kong
 an important platform for fraternity and the exchange of ideas   Surgical Forum.
 and solutions for surgical problems unique to Hong Kong. In
 1976, he was the driving force behind the establishment of the
 Association of Surgeons of Southeast Asia, later renamed the
 Asian Surgical Association.


 By the time Ong left in 1982, the Department was well known
 among the leading surgical associations around the world. That
 reputation would become solidified under the watch of Professor
 John Wong, when the Department would make ground-breaking
 achievements and advance the professional development of its
 staff.





                                                                     Professor Ong and Sir John Lowenthal, President
                                                                     of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons.


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