Font-size: A A A
Dr. Divyakant B. Gandhi - Articles
Dr. Divyakant B. Gandhi - Articles - Media









Memorial Healthcare Center Welcomes Divyakant B. Gandhi, M.D.
Published: 1996
Memorial Healthcare Center welcomes Dr. Divyakant B. Gandhi to its medical staff. Dr. Gandhi specializes in cardiothoracic and vascular surgery, and he has opened his Owosso office in the Mitchell Medical Specialties Building at 802 W. King Street. Dr. Gandhi performs operations involving the heart, lungs and blood vessels... Click here to read this article.

MCH offers best deal
But report says all three Lansing hospitals serve better than benchmark
Published: Lansing State Journal - Thursday, December 5, 1996
The study - intended to help General Motors, Michigan State University and the state of Michigan find the best medical care for the buck - shows Michigan Capital provided care at a lower cost than its competitors.
In terms of quality, all of the hospitals performed better than the benchmark used in the study.
"The people of this community should be very happy with the fact they're getting high quality health care," said Keith Groty, who is in charge of human resources for Michigan State University. "Our concern is how much does quality cost"... Click here to read this article.

Local surgeon among 1,661 initiated into Fellowship
Published: The Argus Press, Owosso - January 10, 1997
Memorial Healthcare Center welcomes Dr. Divyakant B. Gandhi to its medical staff. Dr. Gandhi specializes in cardiothoracic and vascular surgery, and he has opened his Owosso office in the Mitchell Medical Specialties Building at 802 W. King Street. Dr. Gandhi performs operations involving the heart, lungs and blood vessels... Click here to read this article.

Bypass surgery is only first step
Heart patients face immediate lifestyle changes
Published: Lansing State Journal - Thursday, September 9, 2004
Heart: Diet, exercise will aid recovery
At 58, Barry Furgason is the same age as former president Bill Clinton. And Furgason had a quadruple bypass, too, in 1996.
But Clinton had one advantage over the East Lansing attorney: warning signs in the form of chest pains and shortness of breath.
"I suffered cardiac arrest and was fortunate just to survive the attack," said Furgason, who was four months into a new diet and exercise regimen when was stricken... Click here to read this article.

Grateful patient thanks doctors
Published: HGB Happenings & Celebrations, May/June 2005 edition.
On my very first visit (Feb. 18, 2005), I met Dr. Ted Coy and had mentioned that I was short of breath.
I was told by other doctors previously that I needed to lose about 30 pounds and then I would feel better. Dr. Coy told me the same thing, but then listened to my heart and ran an EKG... Click here to read this article.

Columnist Murphy Reflects on hospital Stay
The Towne Courier, February 4, 2007, By Patrick Murphy
In 1889, the artist Thomas Eakins was commissioned to paint a huge canvas depicting a surgical theater with an operation underway. The surgical team is dressed in white smocks. No masks. No gloves. One of the team members holds the patient down. The men in the spectator gallery are dressed in street clothes... Click here to read this article.

Teaming Up to Tackle Atrial Fibrillation
Published: McLaren Subsidiary News, 01/05/2010
Two free health education seminars in May and September at Ingham Regional Medical Center have resulted in referrals for dozens of patients considering an innovative, minimally invasive surgical approach to atrial fibrillation (afib). This condition causes the heart’s chambers to beat rapidly and out of sync... Click here to read this article.







All content is Copyright © CardiacSurgeonGandhi.com