Name Wilbert Keon Role Canadian Senator | ||
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Office Canadian Senator since 1990 |
Senator dr wilbert keon
Wilbert Joseph Keon, OC (born May 17, 1935) is a heart surgeon, researcher and was a Canadian Senator.
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Born in Sheenboro, Quebec, he received a Bachelor of Science from St. Patrick's College, Carleton University and a Doctor of Medicine from the University of Ottawa.
After a period of studying and teaching at Harvard University in Boston, he returned to Ottawa in 1969, Dr. Keon founded the University of Ottawa Heart Institute at the Ottawa Civic Hospital in 1976 and acted as its CEO for more than thirty years until his retirement from that job in April 2004. In 1986, he was the first Canadian to implant an artificial heart into a human as a bridge to transplant. He retired as a working doctor and resigned from the Ontario College of Physicians and Surgeons in June 2010.
In 1990 he was appointed to the Senate by Governor General Ray Hnatyshyn on the advice of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, where he sat as a Conservative. In 2010, Keon retired from the Senate upon reaching the mandatory retirement age of 75.
In 1960 he married Anne Jennings. They have three children: Claudia, Ryan (who is running for the Liberal Party of Canada in the federal riding of Nepean-Carleton) and Neil. Dr Wilbert Keon also has a school named after him D.W.K.S (Dr Wilbert Keon school) in chapeau Quebec
A day in the life at dr wilbert keon school
Controversy
On November 25, 1999, Keon was caught in a prostitution sting by an undercover Ottawa police officer. Shortly thereafter, on December 16 of that same year, he resigned as director of the Ottawa Heart Institute.