Paul Dorian

Paul Dorian is a Canadian physician. He is a professor of pharmacology and director of the Division of Cardiology at the University of Toronto. His primary research focus is the clinical pharmacology of antiarrhythmic drugs.[1]

He has been in the news as a consultant on the health effect of using Taser stun guns[2][3] and as a spokesman for the Heart and Stroke Foundation.[4]

Dorian received his medical degree from McGill University in Montreal in 1976. He continued training in internal medicine and Cardiology at the University of Toronto, and received certification by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada in internal medicine in 1983 and certification in cardiology in 1984. He completed training in clinical pharmacology at the University of Toronto in 1982, and received an MSc in pharmacology from the University of Toronto in 1982. From 1983 to 1985, he completed a Fellowship in cardiac electrophysiology at Stanford University Medical Center in California.

Selected publications

For the medical profession

For the lay public

References

  1. "Faculty Directory page". University of Toronto.
  2. "One-third of people shot by Taser need medical attention: probe". CBC. June 18, 2008.
  3. "Taser jolts didn’t kill man, coroner’s inquest hears". TheSpec.com. October 14, 2010. Retrieved May 29, 2011.
  4. Picard, André (June 11, 2009). "Irregular heartbeats raise risk of stroke". The Globe and Mail (Toronto). Retrieved May 29, 2011.
  5. Dorian, Paul (1996). Arrhythmia update: a contemporary review of arrhythmia management in the 1990s ; a satellite symposium to the Canadian Cardiovascular Society Annual Meeting, October 1995, Toronto, Ontario. Pulsus Group Inc.
  6. Brian Baker and Paul Dorian (1999). A change of heart: recovering from heart disease-- in body and mind. Random House of Canada. ISBN 0-679-30959-4. Retrieved May 30, 2011.
  7. Brian Baker and Paul Dorian (2000). Recovering from Heart Disease in Body & Mind: Medical and Psychological Strategies for Living with Coronary Artery Disease. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-7373-0360-3.