Farah Naz Kausar Bhatti | |
Alma Mater: | Somerville College, Oxford University of Cambridge |
Thesis Title: | Preclinical strategies in pig-to-primate cardiac xenotransplantation |
Thesis Url: | http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/56143628 |
Thesis Year: | 2004 |
Awards: | Order of the British Empire |
Farah Bhatti FRCS FLSW is a British cardiac surgeon who is an honorary professor at the Swansea University Medical School. She serves as Chair of the Royal College of Surgeons of England Women in Surgery Forum. She was appointed an Order of the British Empire in 2020 for services to diversity in the National Health Service in Wales.
Bhatti is of Pakistani heritage. She was born in Birmingham and raised in South London.[1] As a young child, she decided that she wanted to be a doctor. She was an undergraduate student at the University of Oxford, where she studied physiological sciences and specialised in heart related topics.[2] She was a member of Somerville College. She completed a Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery at the University of Cambridge, where she was first introduced to clinical work and operating theatres. Bhatti spent her elective at The Texas Heart Institute, where she became interested in cardiology. She completed several different placements related to surgery (including in orthopaedics, accident and emergency and general surgery) at the Royal Brompton Hospital and Harefield Hospital. Alongside various surgical jobs, Bhatti researched transplantation at the University of Cambridge and was eventually awarded her Doctor of Medicine. She subsequently worked in the North West Anglia NHS Foundation Trust.
In 2007 Bhatti became the first British woman of Pakistani origins to be made a cardiac surgeon in the United Kingdom.[3] She was made Honorary Professor of Surgery at the Swansea University Medical School in 2015.[4]
Alongside her clinical work, Bhatti is committed to improving medical education, equity and inclusion in surgery.[5] She serves as Chair of the Royal College of Surgeons of England Women in Surgery Forum, and was the first Muslim woman to be on the council.[6]