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Chapter III. Putting Hong Kong Surgery on the World Map






            GB Ong’s Life and Legacy





            Professor Tan Sri Guan Bee Ong, OBE, PSm DSc, came to HKU from Sarawak,
            Malaysia at the age of 19 after being rejected by Singapore Medical College. It was
            1940, the eve of war, and it would take seven years for him to complete his studies
            – he fled to Chongqing to continue his studies there, where he met his wife Dr
            Christina Chow, then returned to Hong Kong to sit the MBBS exam in 1947. He
            and his wife were among nine of the 22 candidates to pass.

            Before joining HKU in 1964, Ong had been House Officer at Queen Mary Hospital
            under Professors Gray and Stock, became a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of
            London and Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, published papers in the Hong
            Kong Chinese Medical Association bulletin on appendicitis and the surgical treatment
            of oesophageal cancer    11,12 , and received a Harkness Commonwealth University
            fellowship, which allowed him to study at Massachusetts General Hospital. From
            1957-63, he was Surgeon-in-Charge at Kowloon Hospital, where he also worked with
            Professors Stock, Hodgson and Fang on the anterior approach to spinal tuberculosis.

            Throughout his career, Ong published more than 250 papers and 10 books and
            monographs . Apart from his work on spinal tuberculosis, he made a name
                          13
            for himself in several areas – surgical treatment of oesophageal carcinoma that
            involved forming a new oesophagus from the greater curvature of the stomach ;
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            the transsphenoidal approach to the pituitary gland; the transhiatal dissection of
            the oesophagus and oesophagogastric anastomoses in the neck; and the Roux-en-Y
            choledochojejunostomy.

            In 1970, Ong became the first HKU graduate to deliver a Hunterian Lecture at the
            Royal College of Surgeons of England, on “Colocystoplasty for Bladder Carcinoma
            after Radical Total Cystectomy”. He also received many awards and other honours
            locally and internationally for his contributions and became Professor Emeritus
            on his retirement in 1982. He was honoured with a Festschrift in 2002 and passed
            away in 2004.

            To commemorate Professor Tan Sri GB Ong’s retirement from the Chair of Surgery,
            the GB Ong Fund was established to support educational and training activities.
            It supports the GB Ong Travelling Fellowship, the GB Ong Visiting Professorship,
            and the GB Ong Visiting Fellowship in Surgery.





















                                                                                                                                         The young John Wong (top) observing Professor GB Ong in action.
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