Victor Chang (born November 21, 1936, Shanghai, China—died July 4, 1991, Mosman, New South Wales, Australia) was a Chinese-born Australian cardiologist and surgeon who was a pioneer in modern heart and heart-lung transplantation. He also helped develop devices, such as artificial heart valves, that could be used in heart surgery.
Chang was the son of Australian-born Chinese parents. In 1937 the Second Sino-Japanese War broke out between Japan and China, forcing the family to move to Hong Kong, then Myanmar (Burma), and finally Sichuan, China, where Chang began attending school. In 1945 they settled back in Hong Kong. In 1948, when Chang was 12 years old, his mother died from breast cancer, which ignited his interest in medicine.
In 1951 Chang’s father sent him and his sister to live with family in Sydney, Australia. There Chang attended Belmore Boys High School and Christian Brothers’ High School. He then studied medicine at the University of Sydney, receiving a bachelor’s degree in medical science in 1961. Two years later he graduated with a bachelor’s degree in medicine and surgery before completing his residency at St. Vincent’s Hospital in Darlinghurst, New South Wales. In 1965 Chang left for England, where he worked in various hospitals as a cardiothoracic surgeon and continued his education. Five years later he began training at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.
Upon his return to Australia in 1972, Chang became a cardiothoracic surgeon at St. Vincent’s Hospital. He worked alongside Harry Windsor, the surgeon responsible for the first heart transplant in Australia (1968). Chang arranged for exchanges of medical personnel between St. Vincent’s and hospitals in East Asia. He also was an official adviser on cardiac surgery in Indonesia and Japan, and in 1982 he began serving on the Australia-China Council to strengthen the relationship between the two countries. In 1984 he established Australia’s first heart transplant program at St. Vincent’s. The success rate of the hospital’s heart and heart-lung transplants was among the best in the world. Chang also helped develop low-cost artificial heart valves that were beneficial during surgery. These valves were then shared with hospitals in Asia and other areas. In 1986 the Australian government awarded Chang the Companion of the Order of Australia for his contributions to medicine.
On July 4, 1991, Chang was shot and killed by two would-be extortionists who were attempting to kidnap him. In his honour the Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute was established in 1994, and it opened two years later in Sydney. In 1999 he was named Australian of the Century.