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Association for Academic Surgery (AAS)

Association for Academic Surgery (AAS)

Inspiring and Developing Young Academic Surgeons

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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/ 

Top Five Things Residency Programs Should Do When Selecting Surgery Residents

Most academic surgeons strive to practice evidence-based medicine: we critically evaluate the literature and apply it to patient care in order to deliver the best possible outcomes. Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for how we select our residents. For many general surgery residency programs, the process seems rather…arbitrary. With the caveat that this is …

Read moreTop Five Things Residency Programs Should Do When Selecting Surgery Residents

Productivity and Your Brain on Tech

With the official start of summer just last weekend, and so much sunny, sandy, poolside cabana-filled life waiting right outside your hospital’s sliding doors, I wanted to use this opportunity to remind you of the importance of unplugging. However, in my cursory search of Pubmed, OVID, and UpToDate, I’ve been unable to find any good …

Read moreProductivity and Your Brain on Tech

The Sinistral Surgeon

sinistral adjective | si?nis?tral | ’si-n?s-tr?l, s?-?nis- | of, relating to, or inclined to the left: as a: left-handed Before the musings about left-handed surgeons begins, I have a significant disclosure to make: I am left-handed. This was just confirmed by the 1971 Edinburgh Handedness Inventory [1] which puts me in the worst-possible 10th decile …

Read moreThe Sinistral Surgeon

July 1 is coming, ready or not…

As the new academic year approaches, we prepare to welcome a new cohort of surgical interns. For the newly graduated medical student, it is a time of both anticipation and trepidation, with many soon-to-be interns expressing concerns about their preparation for the rigors of surgical residency. Surgical educators have long mirrored these concerns, bringing up …

Read moreJuly 1 is coming, ready or not…

AAS and Global Surgery: Update on the G4 Alliance

Approximately 5 billion out of 7 billion people in the world have no access to basic surgical care. Lack of access to safe and timely surgical care results in more deaths and disability than HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria combined. Although international priorities are starting to reflect the importance of non-communicable diseases, provision for essential services …

Read moreAAS and Global Surgery: Update on the G4 Alliance

New in the Success in Academic Surgery book series: LEADERSHIP IN SURGERY

How does one become a successful leader? This book attempts to answer this question by providing a study of leadership and its role in the success of an academic surgeon’s career. This book contains chapters written by current leaders in surgery that teach the theories and concepts behind leadership and explain the skills and traits …

Read moreNew in the Success in Academic Surgery book series: LEADERSHIP IN SURGERY

Mobile Technology Integrated into Surgical Care: Daydream, Nightmare or Reality?

As health care reform marches on, there is continued pressure to deliver care for lower-cost and higher quality in order to provide more value. With smart phone technology becoming ubiquitous in the general population, leveraging this patient owned resource has become the focus of both large Silicon Valley-based corporations as well as independent technology entrepreneurs. …

Read moreMobile Technology Integrated into Surgical Care: Daydream, Nightmare or Reality?

Revisiting “Why Johnny Cannot Operate”

What goes around comes around. I did my general surgery residency at Northwestern University in Chicago, IL. Looking back I can see how hard they worked to systematically try to educate us inside and outside of the operating room; especially outside. I remember feeling that the mandatory lectures and skill sessions were detracting from my …

Read moreRevisiting “Why Johnny Cannot Operate”

New Initiative from The Association for Surgical Education

The Association for Surgical Education is excited to announce a new initiative to improve surgical skills in medical students who are transitioning to a surgical residency program. This curriculum was produced with the American College of Surgeons (ACS) and is a new modular simulation-based surgical skills curriculum that includes supply lists, learning objectives, instructions, expert …

Read moreNew Initiative from The Association for Surgical Education

American Board of Surgery – Report

As the representative to the American Board of Surgery from the AAS, I have a bidirectional responsibility to share information between our two organizations. One event at the ABS that has great implications for the Academic Surgeon and our field more broadly is the discussion underway at the ABS and in our field more broadly …

Read moreAmerican Board of Surgery – Report
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