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Carole Miller, M.D.

“I don't know why, but when I was five years old and in first grade, I decided I was
going to be a doctor. I even told Santa Claus, 'I'm going to be a doctor!'”

NOMINATING CONGRESSIONAL REPRESENTATIVE

Deborah Pryce

VIEW LETTER OF RECOMMENDATION

In PDF format

“PIONEERING NEUROSURGEON, RESEARCHER AND TEACHER”

BIOGRAPHY
A distinguished professor emeritus of neurosurgery at The Ohio State University who served
twice as interim chair of her department-in 1988-89 for the Division of Neurosurgery and, for the
newly created Department of Neurological Surgery from 2003 to 2004, Carole Miller is clinical
professor and director of OSU's residency program.

As Rep. Deborah Pryce (R-OH-15) noted in nominating her to be a Local Legend of Medicine,
Miller was "present at the 'ground floor' of tremendous neurosurgical research and practice" and
"worked locally, nationally and internationally in research, clinical care and education to help
bring it to its current fruition."

Neurosurgery in the 1960s was a new and perhaps difficult specialty for women to enter, let alone
flourish in. But pioneering and difficulty were never a problem for Miller, as she was to
demonstrate time and again over her illustrious career. "It never occurred to me I couldn't be a
neurosurgeon," she recalled recently. "If there was male chauvinism, I chose to ignore it."
Graduating with honors in history from OSU in 1962, Miller subsequently earned her M.D. there
four years later, and then served an internship at the University of Pennsylvania, where she was
named "Best Intern." She returned to OSU to complete her residency in neurologic surgery, and
was named Acting Senior Resident and Senior Resident.

Additionally, she completed a research fellowship in neurologic surgery at OSU, and then
undertook a six-month fellowship in neurophysiology at Yale New Haven Hospitals, before
joining the neurosurgery faculty at the University of Michigan for two years. In 1975, she
returned permanently to Ohio State as an assistant professor of neurosurgery, rising to the rank of
full professor.

She proved to be a strong researcher, receiving National Institutes of Health grants and becoming
an expert in thoraco-lumbar spine trauma and fractures. She teamed with her late husband,
William E. Hunt, M.D., longtime director of OSU's Division of Neurosurgery, to produce a
groundbreaking classification of aneurysms which became the international standard.

Author of more than 60 peer-reviewed journal articles in neurosurgery and related fields, Miller's
innovative research was an important contribution to the direction and knowledge based of the
developing field of neurosurgery.

Asked about a life in medicine, she is unequivocal: "If you are interested in science and people,
there's no better place to be than in medicine. By medical school, you've crossed a lot of hurdles
and should have the confidence to succeed. Most important, you need to be willing to work hard,
pay attention and be honest with yourself."

As for the hardships of being a doctor, Miller says, "Medicine is changing, evolving and offers
many more positives now than it did twenty or twenty-five years ago. There's more time off and
you're able to have a family for example.

"My advice about being a doctor-or anything-is to do it because you love it; it will fulfill you, and
if you are happy, you will be pleased and you will help people."

The bottom line for her, as a surgeon, she happily concludes is, "Doing a good; doing it as well as
anybody can do it any time, anywhere!"

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