JM

Jeremy Ming Hsu

University of Sydney

Sydney NSW, Australia
4.50/5 · 4 reviews

Rate Professor Jeremy Ming Hsu

5 Star2
4 Star2
3 Star0
2 Star0
1 Star0
4.005/21/2025

Makes learning feel effortless and fun.

5.003/31/2025

Always approachable and supportive.

4.002/27/2025

Encourages innovative and creative solutions.

5.002/4/2025

Great Professor!

About Jeremy

Jeremy Ming Hsu is a Clinical Associate Professor in the Discipline of Surgery, School of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health at the University of Sydney. He is a trauma, breast oncoplastic, and general surgeon based in Sydney, Australia, and serves as the Director of Trauma at Westmead Hospital since January 2012. Professor Hsu completed his surgical training at Royal North Shore Hospital, Westmead Hospital, and Nepean Hospital. He undertook a fellowship year in trauma and surgical critical care at Harborview Medical Centre in Seattle. Additionally, he works as a consultant surgeon at the Westmead Breast Cancer Institute. His academic qualifications include a Bachelor of Pharmacy (BPharm), Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery with Honours (MBBS Hons), and Doctor of Clinical Surgery (DClinSurg) from the University of Sydney in 2011. He is a Fellow of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons (FRACS) and a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons (FACS, 2017).

Professor Hsu's research specializations include trauma surgery, trauma outcomes, coagulopathy of trauma, trauma systems, breast oncoplastic techniques, and breast cancer outcomes. He has made notable contributions to the field through peer-reviewed publications on trauma management and critical care. Key works include 'Efficacy of high-flow nasal prong therapy in trauma patients with rib fractures and high-risk features for respiratory deterioration: a randomized controlled trial' (Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open, 2020); 'Controlling hemorrhage in exsanguinating pelvic fractures: Utility of extraperitoneal pelvic packing as a damage control procedure' (International Journal of Critical Illness and Injury Science, 2016); 'Identifying the bleeding trauma patient: predictive factors for massive transfusion in an Australasian trauma population' (Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery, 2013); and 'Not All Black and White: Is Routine Chest Radiography Following Rib Fractures Beneficial?' (World Journal of Surgery, 2021). Professor Hsu is involved in education at all levels, from undergraduate to postgraduate training, and holds leadership positions in trauma services, enhancing clinical outcomes and surgical practices.