Dr George Fielding

Since 2004, George Fielding, MD, has served as Associate Professor in the Department of Surgery at the New York University Langone Medical Center and School of Medicine. As an affiliate and instructor at New York University Medical Center, George Fielding, MD, works to actively train and educate the next generation of physicians. A recipient of the Alan J. Lee Memorial Prize and the Lillee Scholarship, George Fielding, MD, serves as a prominent member of several international professional associations. George Fielding, MD, possesses a dedication to furthering the general canon of medical knowledge and particular advancements in procedures and techniques, holding membership in the Australian Medical Association, the American Society for Bariatric Surgery, the Gastroenterological Society of Australia, the Queensland Gastroenterology Society, and many others. Serving for decades as a medical professional and attending workshops throughout the world focusing on the best ways to administer and perform laparoscopic surgeries, as well as publishing many medical papers on the subject of obesity, George Fielding, MD, is highly qualified to perform bariatric surgery. Since 1995, when George Fielding, MD, established and organized the Wesley Obesity Clinic, he has completed more than 6,000 procedures to treat obesity, including both lap band procedures and bypass operations. As the author of more than 150 articles, book chapters, abstracts, and other professional publications, George Fielding, MD, has contributed an extensive amount of knowledge to medical literature on the matters in which he is most versed and proficient. George Fielding, MD, has published many articles, including “Short-Term Results in 53 U.S. Obese Pediatric Patients Treated with Laparoscopic Adjustable Gastric Banding,” published in the Journal of Pediatric Surgery, “Serum Fat Soluble Vitamin Deficiency And Abnormal Calcium Metabolism After Malabsorptive Bariatric Surgery,” which appeared in the Journal of Gastroinestinal Surgery, and “Laparoscopically Assisted Anterior Resection for Diverticular Disease: Follow-Up of 100 Consecutive Patients,” which was published in the Annals of Surgery. Today, George Fielding, MD, serves as an Associate Professor in the Department of Surgery at New York University Langone Medical Center and School of Medicine. In this role, George Fielding, MD, continues to perform bariatric surgery procedures.