Paul M.
Parker,
M.D.
Pediatric Surgeon
Egleston
Practice
Children's Pediatric Surgery Practice
1975 Century Blvd., Suite 6 Atlanta, GA 30345
404-982-9938
Practice
Children's Pediatric Surgery Practice
1265 Highway 54 West, Suite 200, Fayetteville, GA 30214-4526
Practice
Children's Pediatric Surgery Practice
2660 Satellite Boulevard, Duluth, GA 30096-5803
Clinical Associate Professor of Surgery
Division of Pediatric Surgery, Department of Surgery
Emory University School of Medicine
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Education and Training
Medical Degree:
University of North Carolina ,
United States,
Chapel Hill,
NC,
1981
Residency:
General Surgery,
Strong Memorial Hospital, University of Rochester,
Rochester,
NY,
1982-1986
Fellowship:
St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children,
Philadelphia,
PA,
1986-1988
Certifications
-
General Surgery
-
Pediatric General Surgery
Professional Scientific Societies
Greater Atlanta Pediatric Society
Fellow, American College of Surgeons
American Academy of Pediatrics
Georgia Surgical Society
Southeastern Surgical Congress
American Pediatric Surgical Association
Publications / Presentations
Selected journal articles authored/co-authored by Dr. Parker are available at
PubMed, the online database provided by the U.S. National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health publications.
Areas of Interest
- Involved in all aspects of traditional general pediatric surgery, including thoracic surgery, newborn surgery, prenatal consultations, trauma, and adolescent surgery as well as the whole range of common problems such as appendicitis, hernias and pectus deformities
- Using minimally invasive surgical techniques since 1991 and performs the whole spectrum of these procedures from laparoscopic appendectomies, cholecystectomies, pyloromyotomies and fundoplications to more advanced splenectomies, thoracoscopic lung and mediastinal procedures, colectomy, tumor resection and biopsies.
Privileges
Egleston
Scottish Rite
Additional Information
Patient Story
Meet Christopher: The Abrams experienced two late-term miscarriages. Then, at 20 weeks, they learned their new baby had the same condition as the first two. Thankfully, Christopher's story has a happy ending.