Myers served two years with the
United States Army Medical Corps in 1965–67 at the 97th General Hospital in
Frankfurt, Germany He then completed a fellowship in head and neck surgery with John J. Conley, MD, at Saint Vincent's Hospital in New York. Myers served from 1968 to 1972 as an assistant professor of clinical otolaryngology at the
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in Philadelphia, then became professor, chairman, and the first academic faculty member of the Department of Otolaryngology at the
University of Pittsburgh in 1972. While serving in that leadership position he increased the size and quality of the school's department of otolaryngology, so that it is widely considered one of the leading programs in the world. In 2006 Myers was named distinguished professor and emeritus chair. During his 33-year tenure as chair, he introduced the department to modern head and neck surgery and cultivated a leading academic department. He estimates that he has performed more than 9,000 operations and mentored more than 150 residents and fellows. Twenty-five of his former trainees are now chairs at academic institutions. From 1972 to the present he served first as professor of clinical oncology in the Department of Oral Pathology of the
University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine, and then as professor in the Department of Oral and
Maxillofacial Surgery at that school. He served in various roles including chief of department, consulting staff, active staff, and courtesy staff at a number of major hospitals, including the VA Hospital, University of Pennsylvania Hospital, US Naval Hospital, Children's Hospital, and Presbyterian-University of Pennsylvania Medical Center, all in Philadelphia, and
Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Eye and Ear Hospital,
UPMC-Presbyterian Hospital,
Western Pennsylvania Hospital, UPMC-Braddock Medical Center, The Rehabilitation Institute,
UPMC South Side,
Magee-Womens Hospital, and the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, all in Pittsburgh. Myers has been a frequent speaker within the US and around the world. He's delivered over 500 talks before learned medical societies in the U.S. and on six continents between 1964 and 2013, starting with "Management of Otogenic Brain Abscess," at the New England Otolaryngological Society, and more recently on "Parapharyngeal Pleomorphic Adenoma" at the 3rd International Congress on Salivary Gland Diseases" in
Geneva, Switzerland. He's also moderated over 200 panels during that time. He's been honored to deliver over 50 eponymous addresses, including the 2nd John Conley Lecture at Columbia University in 1999, and the 1st David Myers Distinguished Lecture (named in memory of Myers’ father) at the University of Pennsylvania in 2005. Myers has secured multiple research grants by the U.S. federal government as well as industry organizations, including the
National Institutes of Health, the
National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, the
National Cancer Institute, the
American College of Radiology, and the
American Cancer Society. ==Publications==