• 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/ 

Ethics of Authorship

Writing manuscripts is an essential component of any academic surgery career – “publish or perish” is a rule we all live by. While most of us physician-scientists spent years in science lectures and labs, very few of us have formal training in writing, and probably even less of us, formal training in negotiating the complex …

Read moreEthics of Authorship

Elsevier Launches Surgical Specialties Innovation Challenge

Challenge encourages development of novel and innovative ideas for publishing research in the field of surgery; deadline for proposals October 31, 2015 Elsevier, a world-leading provider of scientific, technical and medical information products and services, has announced its first Surgical Specialties Innovation Challenge. As the number of surgical procedures increases annually, the need to look …

Read moreElsevier Launches Surgical Specialties Innovation Challenge

Fits & Starts with iPads in the Surgery Clerkship

To begin talking about the clamor to use technology in our medical school clinical curricula, let’s start by talking about the predecessor to tablet computers, the humble sheet of white paper. It can be big or folded to fit in almost any pocket; edited by anyone with a computer, pen or pencil; lost; shredded to …

Read moreFits & Starts with iPads in the Surgery Clerkship

Emotional Intelligence in the Surgical Workplace

Why do certain medical students, residents and attendings outperform their peers? What competencies can surgeons develop besides technical ones? Emotional intelligence (EI or EQ) describes the ability to perceive, understand and manage one’s own and another person’s emotions [1]. The business world has long recognized EI as being meaningful and equally, if not more, important …

Read moreEmotional Intelligence in the Surgical Workplace

Exploring Global Surgical Care in the Land of a Thousand Hills

As a medical student at VCU, I was able to pursue my interest in global trauma and emergency care through a fantastic summer research opportunity working with faculty from the Division of Acute Care Surgery who have ongoing projects in multiple countries. Under the guidance of Dr. Sudha Jayaraman, we developed a project on cost …

Read moreExploring Global Surgical Care in the Land of a Thousand Hills

Reflections from 30,000 feet . . . Being a Surgeon

Now being a surgeon is gratifying, rewarding, invigorating, inspirational, happy and fun – but it is also hard. A lot of surgeons don’t know this, but being hard is a critically important part of the appeal of our discipline. In fact, if surgery were not hard, we would eschew the entire field of surgery as …

Read moreReflections from 30,000 feet . . . Being a Surgeon

3 Ways to Improve Your Life with Technology Today

I’m an early adopter of technology and an eternal optimist that the next program, app, or device I try is going to be the one that gives me back time. Today, I’m going to tell you 3 ways to use technology to bring order back to the chaos that is residency and clinical practice. My …

Read more3 Ways to Improve Your Life with Technology Today

Palliative and End-of-Life Care Communications – why so difficult for surgeons?

Palliative and end-of-life care communication has been a continuous topic of discussion. It is now believed that palliative care is not just for those patients who are likely to die after trauma, but for all critical, severely injured, or terminally ill patients and their families. Surgery and trauma patients are a large group of individuals …

Read morePalliative and End-of-Life Care Communications – why so difficult for surgeons?

The Promise and Roadblocks of Mobile App Technology

Well into her 90s my grandma was actively using her cellphone. She was a little slow with it – bothered by the arthritis in her fingers – but she could use it to see pictures we sent of our kids, she could answer calls, and she generally kept it with her. Now, more than ever, …

Read moreThe Promise and Roadblocks of Mobile App Technology

Reflection

Recent articles in professional journals and the lay press have publicized episodes of unspeakable behavior by physicians directed at their patients. Virtually all of the highlighted episodes involved a patient under anesthesia, naked and incapacitated. One might think that the physicians involved were oblivious to the presence of others. Not so–they knew and wanted the …

Read moreReflection
  • Previous
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 51
  • Page 52
  • Page 53
  • Page 54
  • Page 55
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 59
  • Next

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