• 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/ 

Simpler Times

As the lyrics to the Doors song say, “Strange days have found us. Strange days have tracked us down.” Indeed, we live in crazy, scary times. Nearly every night, the lead news story is about global terrorism, domestic mass shootings, gun violence of one sort or another, or our current social and political landscape that …

Read moreSimpler Times

Combat Casualty Care Research for Continuing Conflict

Although not directly related to civilian global health, our national efforts in saving the lives of our American Heroes fighting in remote and austere locations around the globe should not go unrecognized by our global surgical community.  In much the same way we as military trauma surgeons attempt to translate lessons to civilian trauma care …

Read moreCombat Casualty Care Research for Continuing Conflict

Apply Now for the 2017 AWSF/Ethicon Fellowship Grant

Grant Applications are due August 29, 2016   Past  AWSF/Ethicon, Inc. Fellowship grants have supported women surgeons by funding original research in a variety of topics, including the following: 2016:  Analysis of circulationg exosomal RNA profiles in Melanoma. 2015: Teaching Palliative Care Communication Skills Following Surgical Emergencies. 2014:  Clinical Trial on the efficacy of sacral neuromodulation with …

Read moreApply Now for the 2017 AWSF/Ethicon Fellowship Grant

#ILookLikeALeader

As a resident surgeon I have found great solidarity and pride in the recently popularized #ILookLikeASurgeon hashtag. Online I witnessed women surgeons across the nation and the world display their achievements and at this year’s Academic Surgical Congress I met many of the women behind the #ILookLikeASurgeon posts. Yet despite these positive experiences, I see …

Read more#ILookLikeALeader

The Beating Blue Heart

More often than not, traumatic injuries result from preventable events that claim 5.8 million lives worldwide annually. These events can conceivably happen anywhere, but only by analyzing them within the greater context of a society’s economic structure can one begin to disentangle chance from circumstance. It is well established that trauma in low- and middle-income …

Read moreThe Beating Blue Heart

Dispatches from the Africa Mercy, Part 1

This blog submission will be the first of 2 submissions highlighting the experience of Dr. Sherif Emil, Division Director of Pediatric Surgery at the Montreal Children’s Hospital in Montreal Canada. This is where I completed my Pediatric Surgery fellowship training and developed, under his and Dr. Dan Poenaru’s mentorship, an interest and love for the …

Read moreDispatches from the Africa Mercy, Part 1

ACS Announces Deadlines for Research Awards

Below please find information on several American College of Surgeons Awards: George H.A. Clowes, Jr., MD, FACS Memorial Research Career Development Award – This research award for a young academic general surgeon provides $45,000 per year for each of five years. Preference will be given to applicants who are working towards an NIH K08 or …

Read moreACS Announces Deadlines for Research Awards

Rising to the Top – A Pathway to Leadership in the AAS

One of my favorite questions I get asked by current and potential members in the AAS is “How can I get involved in this society?” I love this question. I love it especially because in the past ten years that I have been working with the AAS, nine of which as its Executive Director, I …

Read moreRising to the Top – A Pathway to Leadership in the AAS

My Favorite Tips for Time Management as an Academic Surgeon

To start, a disclaimer: I am not an expert in time management. In fact, I am a serial procrastinator. Somehow, I have been able to function and achieve a modicum of success in spite of this. I often justify my procrastination with the excuses “I do my best work under pressure” and “I work best …

Read moreMy Favorite Tips for Time Management as an Academic Surgeon

Stop Running

There’s a young man in green scrubs running from the hospital. He’s running along the sidewalk, focused look on his face. He’s not trying to keep the stethoscope in his pocket from flopping around, and he’s not trying to run away from anything; he’s not looking over his shoulder, he’s not looking around to see …

Read moreStop Running
  • Previous
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 47
  • Page 48
  • Page 49
  • Page 50
  • Page 51
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 59
  • Next

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