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Indians know Patel well for operating on cricketing legend Kapil Dev before he led India to victory in the 1983 World Cup. He has also treated baseball legend Ted Williams. Patel said that he had to thank Dr Harry Rubash, chief of the Department of Orthopedics at MGH, Thomas Gill, chief of Sports Medicine Service, MGH, and former chief of arthroscopic surgery at MGH Bertram Zarins, "who all worked tirelessly to make this teaching and training lab a reality and insisted that it be named after me."They had earlier sought an endowed professorship in his name at Harvard, but the amount required was prohibitive--$ 4 million to $ 5 million.
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"We will have dry models of the knee, shoulder, elbow, ankle and simulation machines for training and teaching," Patel said. "The main objective will be to teach and train orthopedic surgeons, residents, fellows, medical students, nurses, in all of the facets of arthroscopy surgery and in hand/eye coordination. The lab will also help show ways to reduce technical errors and also how to lower healthcare costs through these methods."
Among the several awards he has received is one from former Massachusetts governor William Weld: 'One of the Best New Immigrants in Massachusetts.' He also figured in the US News & World Report's acclaimed Best Doctors List in February 2002. He is also the founder of a non-governmental organization called A Leg to Stand On, which assists children who have either lost limbs or need artificial limbs to walk and write.
He is a longtime community and political activist and was among the founders of the Indian American Forum for Political Education--the oldest Indian American political organization, set up by Dr Joy Cherian--and also a stalwart of the American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin.
Image: Dr Dinesh Patel