Dr Geoff Billows to retire from IndyCar at season’s end
IndyCar has announced that Dr. Geoffrey Billows will retire from his role as director of medical services for IndyCar and IMS this September, to be replaced by Dr. Julia Vaizer.
Dr. Vaizer, who has served as the assistant medical director for IndyCar and IMS since 2021, will be the first female medical chief in the history of the sanctioning body and the track.
Billows has undergone treatment for parotid salivary cancer since November 2020, and this was key in his decision to stand down, although he has vowed to continue contributing to IndyCar medical services from 2023.
“It’s no secret that the last 20 months have been quite challenging for me,” said Billows. “After a lot of consideration and discussion with my wife, I have decided to retire at the end of this season. This is something I plan to battle and live for many years, and I thought, ‘I should enjoy whatever time I have left.’
“But I’m staying on so I can help part time because I enjoy it so much. The opportunity to work with INDYCAR and IMS has been an opportunity of a lifetime… I think it’s quite rewarding. It not only gives me a chance to help take care of the drivers but to also have the chance to promote safety in the motorsports industry.”
Billows began working at IMS during his residency in 1993, volunteering at the IU Health Emergency Medical Center in the infield during race events. He served as an AMR IndyCar Safety Team physician and deputy medical director and became IMS director of medical services in 2006. Billows then assumed the role of IndyCar director of medical services in 2016.
As well as providing medical care to drivers and spectators at IMS and on IndyCar race weekends, Billows has worked with IndyCar officials and the Safety Team to improve driver safety.
Throughout his career with IMS and INDYCAR, Billows also served as assistant professor of clinical emergency medicine at the Indiana University School of Medicine.
“Dr. Billows has been an integral part of IndyCar’s success both on and off the track,” said series president Jay Frye. “His guidance and expertise have been tremendous assets to the series, the drivers and all our stakeholders. We are excited for him to spend more time with his family and grateful that we’ll still get to see him around the racetrack.
“Dr. Billows and Dr. Vaizer have been working very closely together over the last few years, so we know this will be a seamless transition. We look forward to continuing to work with Dr. Vaizer as she trailblazes into her new leadership position as IndyCar’s first female medical director.”
IMS president J. Douglas Boles added: “There aren’t enough words to express our full sense of gratitude and respect for Dr. Billows and his service to our racing community. We’re so appreciative of his contributions and so glad we’ll still see him at the IU Health Infield Care Center during the Month of May and more.
“We also know Dr. Vaizer is extremely well prepared for this new role and congratulate her on this exciting opportunity.”
Vaizer has worked under Billows with the AMR IndyCar Safety Team since 2020 and became the first person to complete the IU School of Medicine Motorsports Fellowship in July 2021. She has been associated with motorsports medicine since 2017 and began her involvement with IndyCar and IMS the following year while attending a motorsports medicine elective training program. Vaizer also serves as an assistant professor of clinical emergency medicine at the IU School of Medicine and as the assistant medical director for IU Health LifeLine.
“Dr. Billows has been a friend, a mentor, a teacher and like family to me,” Vaizer said. “There
are a lot of emotions of excitement for him to take a new stage in his life and spend more time with his family. It’s wonderful that he’s going to stay on as an IndyCar physician.
“It’s a huge honor to be chosen to carry on his legacy. It fills me with inspiration. I know I will work really hard to continue doing what he established as one of the most successful medical teams in the world of motorsports. I cannot wait for the next chapter and see how we can continue to improve the field of motorsports medicine for the next generation to come.”
Vaizer received her undergraduate degree in 2011 from the University of Florida and received her medical degree in 2016 from the University of Central Florida. She completed her emergency residency training at Detroit Receiving Hospital in 2019 and completed a dual EMS/motorsports medicine fellowship at IU School of Medicine in 2021.
Said Billows: “Dr. Vaizer is not only a very skilled and talented emergency medicine physician but a gifted educator. She’s the only physician on the face of this planet who has completed a formal, post-graduate, university-based motorsports medicine fellowship. I have 100 percent confidence in turning the position of medical director over to her.”
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