• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer
Association for Academic Surgery (AAS)

Association for Academic Surgery (AAS)

Inspiring and Developing Young Academic Surgeons

  • About
    • AAS Staff
    • Contact Us
    • Foundation
  • Membership
    • Apply For Membership
    • New Member List
    • Membership Directory
  • Jobs
    • AAS Job Board
    • Post a Job
  • Educational Content
    • Blog
      • Submit a Post
    • Webinars
      • How to Write an Abstract
      • Succeeding in the General Surgery Residency Match: the International Medical Graduate Perspective
      • AAS Journal Club Webinars
      • Fireside Chat – Maintaining Balance & Control
      • Diversity, Inclusion & Equity Series
        • Allyship
        • PRIDE: The LGBTQ+ Community in Academic Surgery
        • Racial Discrimination in Academic Surgery
      • Academic Surgery in the Time of COVID-19 Series
        • How to Optimize your Research During the Pandemic
        • How to Optimize Educational Experiences During the Pandemic
        • Virtual Interviews
      • The Transition to Practice – Presented by Intuitive
    • Assistant Professor Playbook
  • Grants/Awards
    • AAS/AASF Research Awards
      • The Geoffrey Dunn MD Research Award in Surgical Palliative Care
      • AAS/AASF Henri Ford Junior Faculty Research Award
      • Joel J. Roslyn Faculty Research Award
      • AAS/AASF Trainee Research Fellowship Awards
    • Travel Awards
      • AAS/AASF Fall Courses Travel Award
      • AAS/AASF Student Diversity Travel Award
      • Senior Medical Student Travel Award
      • Visiting Professorships
    • Awards FAQ’s
  • Meetings
    • Academic Surgical Congress
    • AAS Fall Courses
    • Surgical Investigators’ Course
  • Leadership
    • Current AAS Leadership
    • AAS Past Presidents
    • How to Chair
    • Committee Missions & Objectives
    • AAS Officer Descriptions
  • Donate!
  • Login

The Academic Surgeon - Official Blog of the AAS

The Academic Surgeon is the official blog of the AAS. We post anywhere from one to three times a week and our contributors will focus on issues relevant to young academic surgeons, residents, fellows, and even medical students.

If you would like to contribute, please submit your post here: https://www.aasurg.org/the-academic-surgeon-blog-submission/ 

Request for self-nominations for JSR Associate Editor positions

The Journal of Surgical Research (JSR) is accepting self-nominations for three editorial leadership positions. Associate Editor for Vascular Surgery – The journal is seeking applicants with expertise in vascular surgery research, including clinical studies and basic science. Associate Editor for Endocrine Surgery – The journal is seeking applicants with expertise in endocrine surgery, including clinical …

Read moreRequest for self-nominations for JSR Associate Editor positions

Humility and Confidence

Although everyone may not agree, I would argue that the practice of surgery is an emotionally and mentally challenging endeavor. That we are so intimately involved in directly impacting a human being’s life—both positively and negatively— is both a privilege and a heavy weight (at times). One facet of this challenge that I find particularly …

Read moreHumility and Confidence

Growing Pains

After many grueling years of surgical training, which included five years of General Surgery residency, three years of clinical and basic science research, and two years of clinical fellowship, I was ecstatic to be finally done with my training.  I have finally become a “grown-up.” However, little did I realize that being on the other …

Read moreGrowing Pains

“Global Surgery and the “Twinning” Model”

I decided to become a doctor at the age of 12, while my family was spending the summer in the Philippines.  My young mind could not grasp how and why so many children died of communicable diseases that were easily treated back home.  I couldn’t comprehend growing up in a place where there just weren’t …

Read more“Global Surgery and the “Twinning” Model”

AAS Call to Action

AAS Members: This past few months have been a challenging time for many of our colleagues across the country as they have had to deal with mass trauma and severe weather which has shown the complexities and challenges of providing surgical care in these types of situations. While not all of our members have been …

Read moreAAS Call to Action

Congratulations to our AAS Young Investigator Award Winners

The AAS is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2nd Annual AAS Young Investigator Award.  The award is designed to engage academic Cardiothoracic and ENT surgeons with the AAS. The award includes complimentary registration to both the Fall Courses taking place on October 21, 2017 in San Diego, CA and the Academic Surgical Congress taking …

Read moreCongratulations to our AAS Young Investigator Award Winners

The development of a successful mentor/mentee relationship in the general surgery research years

Evie Carchman, MD: As a junior faculty member having never mentored a general surgery resident in the lab before, there have been several lessons that my mentee and I have learned over the last year. We share these trials and tribulations to enforce the lack of formal training on how to be a mentor or …

Read moreThe development of a successful mentor/mentee relationship in the general surgery research years

InciSioN

On July 1st, 2017, the World Bank published its annual update of the World Development Indicators (WDI). From fishing to farming, education to employment, these indicators track progress in a wide variety of forms over regions, nations, and time. This year marks the second time surgical data has been included in the World Bank’s indicators. …

Read moreInciSioN

How Abraham Flexner is Failing Surgery

From January, 1909, through April, 1910, Abraham Flexner1 traveled throughout the United States and Canada on a trip that revolutionized North American medical education.  He visited every one of the existing 155 medical schools and, by the end of 1910, had published his report detailing the resources and practices of all these schools.2   Startlingly, he …

Read moreHow Abraham Flexner is Failing Surgery

Teaching Humanism in the New Era of Medicine

I never thought I was going to be the attending who started off a sentence with “when I was a student/resident…”  But one day, I realized, I had become that person.  It was not to prove that I worked harder checking labs or rounding on my patients.  It was in a different context.  I was …

Read moreTeaching Humanism in the New Era of Medicine
  • Previous
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 39
  • Page 40
  • Page 41
  • Page 42
  • Page 43
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 59
  • Next

Copyright © 2025 · Association for Academic Surgery (AAS) · All Rights Reserved