Gary Hartstein

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Dr Gary Hartstein, M.D. (born 1955 in Staten Island, United States),[1] is Associate Professor of Anesthesia and Emergency Medicine at University of Liège Hospital, Liège, Belgium and FIA Medical Delegate for the Formula 1 World Championship.

After finishing his undergraduate study at the University of Rochester, Hartstein trained as a doctor in Belgium during the 1970s. In 1983 he returned to his native New York, spending six years at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, in the Bronx, specialising in anaesthesiology.

In 1989 Hartstein returned to Belgium and began working at Spa-Francorchamps as part of the local medical team attending races. In 1990 Hartstein was assigned to the medical car containing Professor Sid Watkins and the two doctors immediately formed a firm friendship.

Hartstein’s work at the Belgian Grand Prix continued until 1997 when the FIA, realising the need for an anaesthetist to assist Watkins, recruited him. For the next seven years Hartstein and Watkins rode together in the medical car at the start of most races.

In January 2005 Sid Watkins announced that he was to retire as Formula 1 Medical Delegate and Hartstein was selected as his successor.

Since that time, Hartstein has been key in developing some of the FIA's new approaches and policies in terms of medical safety. Dr Hartstein is chair of the FIA Institute's Medical Training Working Group,[2] which aims to standardize training and practices of motorsport doctors, based on the most up-to-date trauma training techniques. He was also, with Prof Gerard Saillant, behind the creation of the "FIA Institute Faculty" (FIMF), which will seek to consolidate the expertise of motor sport doctors and medical staff around the world, on the model of professional associations.

Hartstein lives in Liege year-round.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Eff One. GrandPrix.com (August 3, 2005). Retrieved on 2008-04-27.
  2. ^ FIA Institute - Working Groups - Safety Training Working Group
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