A picture of Benjamin undergoing DBS.
Benjamin after he underwent DBS surgery on June 2nd, 2021
Five days after surgery: “Bandages off and feeling good. Back home for at least the next month or so with one goal – do nothing, just lie around and let the body heal.”
#12: Benjamin Stecher – A personal account of Parkinson’s and Deep Brain Stimulation
Benjamin Stecher is doing impressive work in is role a scientific writer and patient advocate. He co-authored the book “Brain Fables” together with Alberto Espay, which recently won the prose award by the Association of American Publishers in the category Neuroscience. The book is truly unique in its way to combine both the views of patient and health professional on the history and misconceptions of Parkinson’s Disease and what should change in our field to make progress.
Benjamin was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease at 29. Since then, he left a successful managing partner position in Shanghai to study the disease full time. He has been traveling the world to witness the latest and greatest progress being made in over 100 research laboratories around the globe. He has interviewed over 80 international experts and shares his insights on the website tmrwedition.com.
On June 2nd, Benjamin underwent deep brain stimulation surgery to the subthalamic nucleus. We are incredibly grateful that a mere nine days after that, he shares this experience lived from the most direct and intimate, the most important perspective: the one of the patient.
References relevant to the episode
- Ben’s blog, Tomorrow Edition
- Pre- and post-operative video interviews of Ben on his youtube channel
- A link to the book Brain Fables, authored by Alberto Espay and Benjamin Stecher
- Ben on twitter
Colleagues mentioned in the episode include
- Alberto Espay (Neurologist in Cincinnati)
- Hagai Bergman (Neuroscientist & Neuroelectrophysiologist in Jerusalem)
- Alfonso Fasano (Neurologist in Toronto)
- John Hardy (Geneticist in London)
- Anatol Kreitzer (Neuroscientist at UCSF)
- Bas Bloem (Neurologist in Nijmegen)
- Anthony Lang (Neurologist in Toronto)
- Eric Kandel (Neuroscientist in Maryland)
- Christof Koch (Neuroscientist in Seattle)