The annual Association of Women
Surgeons Fall Conference was held at the stately Westin St. Francis in San
Francisco, California on Sunday, October 26. The 2014 theme was “Transitions:
Thriving Amidst Change.” The conference was attended by 124 people, 33 of which
were medical students and residents. Presentations were interspersed by
opportunities for networking with other attendees and corporate partners.
Celeste Hollands, MD and Lois Killewich, MD moderated
the Sunrise Scientific Session. Five abstracts of excellence were presented
from among those manuscripts accepted for publication in the American Journal
of Surgery:
- Hillary Braun, MD “Perceptions
of Surgeons: Women Surgeons Prefer Female and Communal Surgeons”
- Courtney Collins, MD “Effect
of Pre-Injury Warfarin Use on Outcomes after Head Trauma in Medicare
Beneficiaries”
- Amy Liepert, MD “Protecting trauma patients from
duplicated CT scans: the relevance of integrated care systems”
- Lisa McElroy, MD “A
Meta-Analysis of Complications following Deceased Donor Liver Transplant”
- Betsy Tuttle-Newhall, MD “Prognostic impact of mechanical ventilation
after liver transplantation: A national database study”
Ethicon has supported
our Grant program since 1996 – enabling us to award over half a million dollars
in research grants to AWS members. Heather Yeo, MD, the 2014 AWS
Foundation/Ethicon Endo-Surgery Fellowship winner presented her study: “Clinical
trial on the efficacy of sacral neuromodulation (SNM) with Interstim for fecal
incontinence following surgery for low rectal cancer with sphincter
preservation”.
Simultaneously, the 20
residents and medical students whose posters had been accepted for the 2014
STARR poster competition were being judged. The volunteer judges had a
difficult assignment however eventually chose exemplary winners. The overall
winner in the resident category was Dr. Fariha Sheikh for her
poster entitled “Anesthesia Induced Neurotoxicity” and the overall winner in
the medical student category was Martha Henderson from Emory
for “Gender Differences in the Correlation of Objective and Subjective
Assessments of Surgical Frailty.”
The keynote presentation
of the conference was graciously provided by Nancy Ascher MD, FACS,
the Professor and Chair, Department of Surgery Division of Transplant
Surgery Isis Distinguished Professor in Transplantation, Leon Goldman, MD,
Distinguished Professor in Surgery, University of California, San Francisco. Dr.
Ascher has devoted her career to organ transplants and transplant research and
has had a distinguished career of public service that includes appointments to
the Presidential Task Force on Organ Transplantation and the Surgeon General's
Task Force on Increasing Donor Organs. She also served as Chair of the Advisory
Committee on Organ Transplantation for the Secretary of Health and Human
Services from 2001 - 2005. She was also the 2007 AWS Nina Starr
Braunwald Award recipient. Dr. Ascher’s presentation focused on women
in leadership roles in surgery. She described the influential role artistic
works in Detroit had on her while growing up, statistics of women in all
leadership roles and the work yet to be done to achieve position and pay parity
for women in surgery. She discussed the roadblocks to success-patients,
employers and ourselves. Evaluation of our performance can be stilted due to
the “abrasiveness trap”: high-achieving men and women are described differently
in reviews. How we are perceived matters, and issues of family concerns,
pregnancy and work-life balance need attention at every level of training. View Dr. Ascher's presentation here.
Attendees next heard
“The Changing Face of US Healthcare: How to Optimize Your Career” presented by Patrick
Bailey, MD, Medical Director for Advocacy, American College of
Surgeons. An Arkansas native, Dr. Bailey is Chief of Pediatric Surgery
at Maricopa Medical Center in Phoenix, AZ. He is completing work towards a
Master of Legal Studies degree at Arizona State University’s Sandra Day
O’Connor College of Law and is a Captain in the U.S. Navy Reserve. Dr.
Bailey’s presentation focused on several topics of interest to the practicing
surgeon. He discussed the implementation of regulations under the ACA, funding
proposals for GME and the important role of advocacy in ensuring patient access
to quality care. Dr. Bailey inspired many attendees to pay attention when
opportunities for their expertise arise.
As a surgeon, balancing
personal and professional demands while maintaining some semblance of personal
wellness can seem impossible. The next speaker, Dr. Carol Scott–Conner
MD, PhD, MBA, Professor of Surgery, University of Iowa Carver
College of Medicine is armed with a wealth of both personal experience
and unique insight into success as a female surgeon. Dr. Scott-Connor,
whose clinical focus is Surgical Oncology and Endocrine surgery, is
the consummate surgical educator, the author of innumerable papers and texts
and the recipient of many awards. She was named a “local Legend” by the
National Library of Medicine and will be awarded the Honored Member Award
from the American Association of Clinical Anatomists (AACA) in June 2015. In
her spare time she serves as a Governor of the ACS.
Dr. Scott-Connor’s
inspiring and grounding presentation “The Challenge: Transition to a Healthier
You” focused on the oft-neglected areas that require attention in order for
women to be personally successful and enjoy it! She discussed organizational
skills, ergonomics, mindfulness, exercise, companionship, reflective writing,
burn-out and many other topics. Her addition of personal anecdotes gently drove
home her bottom line- that many areas of our lives need tending if we are to be
healthy. View Dr. Scott-Conner's presentation here.
The final formal
presentation of the morning was by Janet Bickel, MA a
nationally recognized expert in faculty, career and leadership development with
40 years of experience in academic medicine and science. In addition to a
wide-range of individual coaching clients, organizational clients have included
United American Nurses, US Department of Commerce, and US Department of Health
and Human Services. She is an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Medical Education
at George Washington University School of Medicine and has also taught
Leadership and Innovation at the CIA and the National Reconnaissance Office.
During the Executive Leadership in Academic Medicine [ELAM] Fellowship
Program's first 15 years, she served on its Advisory and Selection Committees;
among her many other roles she continues to serve as faculty and is a Principal
Member of its Executive Development Council. AWS recognized her contributions and
support of the goals of AWS by awarding her the AWS Honorary Member
Award in 1992.
Janet’s presentation
"Transitions and Resilience: Growing and Thriving throughout your life and
career" focused on how women professionals are inequitably evaluated, the
challenge of balancing short-term benefit with long-term satisfaction, success
traps and important decision criteria for taking on something new.
Multiple small group breakout sessions inspired discussion about the challenges
facing women professionals as they advance through their careers. Issues
discussed included: How aligned are your professional goals with your current
roles and your vision of “success”? How do you effectively communicate your
goals and accomplishments in a 30-second “elevator speech”? How can you
increase your influence in ways important to you? What is standing in your way?
What interferes with adaptability? How can you become more agile?
Janet emphasized
preparing for success, transitioning, sustaining success, and then transitioning
again all the while interweaving self-efficacy, political savvy,
personal/professional growth and “communities of practice”. She emphasized that
attendees needed to identify what resilience-promoting practice they were
willing to commit to-and what supports were needed for this to
work. View Ms. Bickel's presentation here.
After the AWS Business
Luncheon, including election of 2014-2015 AWS
officers, attendees reconvened in the Ballroom for directed networking
sessions. Table topics included:
- Financial
management: Meredith Duke, MD
- Work-Life
Balance: Joyce Majure, MD and Lauren Paton, MD
- Private
Practice: Yvette LaClaustra, MD and Shirin
Towfigh, MD
- Alternate
Career Pathways: Liz Robertson, MD
- Family
Planning: Sharon Stein, MD and Stephanie Bonne,
MD
- Social
Media: Erin Gilbert, MD
- Contract
Negotiation: Jennifer Rosen, MD
- Mentorship: Emina
Huang, MD and Nancy Gantt, MD
Discussion and
networking at each table was lively-the session moderators found that once
settled none of the attendees wanted to move!
Overall the 2014 AWS
conference was fun, informative and provided attendees with valuable skills to
achieve personal and professional success. Please join us in Chicago for our
2015 Fall Conference on Saturday October 3, 2015.
Respectfully submitted
by Nancy L. Gantt, MD FACS
After the AWS Business Luncheon, including election of 2014-2015 AWS officers, attendees reconvened in the Ballroom for directed networking sessions we need sarkari naukri
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