Bitter-Suermann had his clinical education in Germany and Sweden, i. e. in Kiel, Kiruna and Haparanda. From 1971–1973 he worked at Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, as Honorary Senior Registrar and Transplant Fellow under Sir Roy Yorke Calne. His research interests focused on induction of transplantation tolerance by spleen transplants in rats and the preservation of pig liver transplants.
Funded by the Swedish Cancer Society, Bitter-Suermann in 1976–77 was Visiting Scientist to the Cancer Research Unit, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He performed research in spleen grafts versus chemically induced tumours in rats.
After forty years abroad he returned to Germany to assume the position of Director of Dialysis Surgery, Department of Surgery, Heidelberg University at Mannheim Medical School. In 2012, Robert-Bosch-Krankenhaus, Stuttgart, appointed him Director of the Shunt-Surgery Center.In 2019 he was appointed Head of the Shunt Surgery Center at the Helios Hospital, Blankenhain, Thuringia.
On March 31, 2000, Bitter-Suermann announced his candidacy for the leadership of the Nova Scotia New Democratic Party.[12][13] At the July 2000 convention, Bitter-Suermann finished last on the first ballot with 31 votes.[14]
Bitter-Suermann ran again in the 2003 election,[15] but lost to Chataway by 39 votes.[16][17] Following Chataway's death in December 2004, Bitter-Suermann was nominated as the NDP candidate for the byelection to replace him.[18][19] On June 21, 2005, Bitter-Suerman finished third in the byelection, losing to Progressive Conservative candidate Judy Streatch.[20][21]
References
^Dissertation: Untersuchungen der Carotispulskurve bei congenitalen Aortenstenosen (Evaluation of carotid pulse curves in congenital aortic stenosis)