IBJNews

2012 Health Care Heroes: Rajiv Sood, M.D., FACS

Back to TopCommentsE-mailPrint

Health Care HeroesWINNER: Physician

Rajiv Sood, M.D., FACS

Medical Director, Richard M. Fairbanks Burn Center, Wishard Health Services; Professor of Plastic Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine

 

It was practically a given that Rajiv Sood, M.D., would become a doctor. His mother, a pediatrician, had her office in the family’s house, and from age six the concept of helping and healing others was second nature to him. But it was his focused intensity, drive and high expectations that set Sood on course to become one of the world’s leading experts in burn treatments.


SoodRajiv_Phys_Winner.jpg (IBJ Photo/ Perry Reichanadter)

Sood and his team treat the most horrific cases from Indiana and neighboring states. At Wishard, no patient is turned away because of an inability to pay. Some patients, by all rights, shouldn’t have survived.

Mark Doucey suffered third-degree burns over 75 percent of his body in a mid-air plane collision. He spent three-and-a-half months at the Richard M. Fairbanks Burn Center and underwent 27 surgeries in two-and-a-half years.

“The expertise of Dr. Rajiv Sood and his entire team were amazing, and I owe much of my recovery to their great care,” Doucey said. “The burn patients who are saved are given opportunities to lead productive lives through tremendous advancements in surgical procedures and physical and emotional therapy.”

The number of patients treated at the burn centers has risen steadily since 1993. Sood, 52, treats more than 3,350 patients each year—330 inpatient; 3,000 outpatient. Caring for burn patients is intense and demanding, and patients are followed for a year or two after release from the hospital. “It’s not one operation and then you’re done,” Sood said. “No burn patient is ever the same. You have to learn how to take care of each patient all the way through.”

Burns weren’t always Sood’s focus. He attended Albany Medical College of Union University and followed it with a residency in general surgery at Temple University Hospital in Philadelphia. He served a plastic surgery residency at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation and was awarded a hand and micro-surgery fellowship. He came to Wishard in 1992 and became medical director of the burn center soon afterward.

That’s when he became hooked. He equates what he does with being an “old-time family doctor.” “Burns allow me to incorporate all parts of my training,” he said. “Most of all it allows me to be a physician and to work with a multi-disciplinary team. That’s what I’ve enjoyed most about it—building the center and this team.”

It was thanks to Sood’s efforts that Wishard built a new burn center nine years ago. Now Riley Hospital for Children is opening one, and the Wishard center will be enhanced when it opens in the new Eskenazi Hospital, which will replace Wishard.

“Dr. Sood worked with the Richard M. Fairbanks Foundation and other philanthropic entities to generate support and funding to build a new, state-of-the art, burn center that is envied and emulated around the country,” said Adam C. Cohen, M.D., assistant clinical professor of surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine.

Sood helped build, design and raise funds for a pediatric burn center in El Salvador which opened last year, the only such center in Central America, and is working with Panama to help build a burn center in that country. He sits on the certifying committee of the American Burn Association, which evaluates other burn units around the country.

Sood builds programs as well. He started a burn fellowship program for established plastic surgeons/burn surgeons. And he was instrumental in the founding of three burn programs to help burn patients cope with emotional and practical issues: an informal Burn Survivor Support Group; Survivors Offering Assistance in Recovery (S.O.A.R.), which helps prepare patients for the transition from the hospital to the outside world; and Image Enhancement, a spa that teaches patients how to camouflage scars.

“The S.O.A.R. program, coupled with the Burn Survivor Support Group, provides vital benefits to the burn survivor community, giving us a place to feel safe talking about our challenges, and hope that even the most traumatic events can be overcome,” said former patient Jeremy Warriner. “These programs wouldn’t be in place without Dr. Sood’s support, and I truly believe that without his skill as a physician, I would not be here to be part of them.”

Sood is well known for his research on skin and skin substitutes and for establishing the standards for how to use commercially available and grown skin. He is the lead investigator for spray-on-skin, in which a postage-stamp size piece of skin from the patient is liquefied and sprayed on the wound in the operating room. “It will revolutionize both acute and chronic wound management once it comes into being,” Sood said.

His extensive study of the cultured epithelial autograft technique, a first step toward an off-the-shelf skin substitute to treat large burns, is acknowledged to be the most extensive study of the topic. Sood is also working, in conjunction with other researchers at Indiana University, on another version of off-the-shelf skin substitute that involves infusing fat cells into skin products. In 2010 his paper on the use of skin substitutes in burns and non-healing wounds received the top award from the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.

“I couldn’t do this all by myself,” Sood said. “It really is a team effort, but we are also blessed to have great support for both IU Health and Wishard.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Post a comment to this story

COMMENTS POLICY
We reserve the right to remove any post that we feel is obscene, profane, vulgar, racist, sexually explicit, abusive, or hateful.
 
You are legally responsible for what you post and your anonymity is not guaranteed.
 
Posts that insult, defame, threaten, harass or abuse other readers or people mentioned in IBJ editorial content are also subject to removal. Please respect the privacy of individuals and refrain from posting personal information.
 
No solicitations, spamming or advertisements are allowed. Readers may post links to other informational websites that are relevant to the topic at hand, but please do not link to objectionable material.
 
We may remove messages that are unrelated to the topic, encourage illegal activity, use all capital letters or are unreadable.
 

Messages that are flagged by readers as objectionable will be reviewed and may or may not be removed. Please do not flag a post simply because you disagree with it.

Sponsored by
ADVERTISEMENT

facebook - twitter on Facebook & Twitter

Follow on TwitterFollow IBJ on Facebook:
Follow on TwitterFollow IBJ's Tweets on these topics:
 
Subscribe to IBJ
  1. So the Mayor adds another non value added layer to having a vehicle towed? Whereby the City Government RECIEVES AN ILLEGAL KICKBACK FROM A LGOISTICS COMPANY THAT SUBS THE WORK TO LOCAL TOW COMPANIES? What is the service the City performs for receiving the "tribute"? This is RICO!!!!! What a corrupt and unnecessary layer. What a dirtbag Mayor and his cronies.

  2. Owner occupied housing. Clear enough?

  3. So people think I am paranoid. It's from experience in dealing with puds requested by developers who make major donations themselves to representatives, have nice fund raisers for those running for office and hide through pac's. then there are the public relation firms. You will note some pr comments below. You there Clyde Lee? My opinion. Commercial along 421, great. Multifamily housing, terrible idea that will change the town. Senior condos or zero lot line homes west, great. I suggest keeping all entries to commercial areas at 421. All entries to owner occupied on sycamore. Will keep the traffic on sycamore down some. Two other things. You can't trust what will be there in 10 years. Steve builds quality stuff, but areas change over time. Look at the changes at the wall mart center at 86th and 421 over the last 10 years. Look at the apartments and neighborhoods behind St Vincent's. Raintree properties WILL decrease in value if commercial and multifamily goes in near. It has already been happening around the bridges area. The houses that have been sold recently are way below market. Several deals not closed due to the Illinois construction and the whole unsurety of the bridges. It's pretty simple, Zionsville will approve the whole thing because the city council has been groomed over a LONG period of time for this. I might even suggest some are in their position as a result of this.

  4. Esta, do you have a dog in this fight? You seem to really want to knock anyone against this project. No, I didn't move to Indiana for the architecture. I moved here for that red barn in the field. The horses and fields of corn. A place that is NOT overdeveloped. There are plenty of nearby places in Indianapolis that could be REDEVELOPED instead.

  5. RKW - OK, we get it, you're paranoid. The question is, are you paranoid enough? Greg - Yes, Pittman(s) is (are) at it again. They are developers, they build things. It's what they do. So when you go to work tomorrow, Greg, you're at it again too. Cliff - Really? You moved to Indiana for its progressive architecture? That's like moving to England for the cuisine. Zionsvillain - The house you moved to was once a field or woods. I'm willing to bet folks were upset when that ground was plowed under and a house was built. But I guess now that you are in, everything should stop? "My house was OK, but the next one is sprawl." SE Guy - Please don't paint us with such a wide brush. Most reasonable Zionsville residents welcome planned, measured development.

ADVERTISEMENT