• 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/ 

Scope of Practice for Volunteer Surgeons in Developing Countries

In an editorial in the Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery in 2006, Dr. O. Gordon Robinson, Jr. writes about an unsettling experience he had with a colleague. This colleague asked if he could observe a cleft lip procedure. When asked why, he replied that he wanted to know how to do this procedure, as …

Read moreScope of Practice for Volunteer Surgeons in Developing Countries

“Lean in”: Applicable to Women in Academic Surgery?

The gender gap in the upper echelons of academic surgery is well recognized. Many factors likely contribute to the discrepancies between the proportions of women in surgical residency, junior academic positions, and leadership positions. One of these factors is the believed to be that women do not know how to negotiate. There is a vast …

Read more“Lean in”: Applicable to Women in Academic Surgery?

CALL FOR INSTITUTIONAL REPRESENTATIVES – Deadline October 1, 2014

The AAS Membership Committee is seeking self-nominations for the new position of INSTITUTIONAL REPRESENTATIVE. We are looking for 1 representative from each academic Department of Surgery to serve as a liaison to the AAS. Please submit a one-paragraph statement regarding your interest in the program and qualifications for the position by October 1, 2014.  DESCRIPTION: …

Read moreCALL FOR INSTITUTIONAL REPRESENTATIVES – Deadline October 1, 2014

The AAS Global Affairs Committee

The Academic Surgical Congress (ASC) in San Diego, California in February 2014 was a fantastic conference that was attended by over 800 members, with more than 75 international members. The growth and participation of both domestic academic global surgeons and the AAS international membership has steadily increased and influenced the dynamics of the program and …

Read moreThe AAS Global Affairs Committee

Metrics, Money and Mentoring: How Resident Education is Taking the Brunt of Increased Pressure on Academic Faculty (and Can Leaders Re-Balance the Scales?)

There are 2 truisms about residents in training, compared to their faculty: 1) they are generally slower, and 2) they generally make more mistakes. But a third fact of resident education trumps the first two—it is the responsibility of academic surgery to graduate safe, competent general surgeons who can independently take care of patients. Thirty …

Read moreMetrics, Money and Mentoring: How Resident Education is Taking the Brunt of Increased Pressure on Academic Faculty (and Can Leaders Re-Balance the Scales?)

The American Board of Surgery

Dear Fellow Members of the AAS, It is my privilege to represent our organization at the American Board of Surgery (ABS).  As many of you are aware, the major function of the ABS is to help protect the American public by providing an independent, nonprofit organization to provide board certification to surgeons who have met …

Read moreThe American Board of Surgery

A Fellow’s Surgical Rotation in Bolivia: An Incredible Learning Experience

It’s been several weeks now and I am starting to get reaccustomed to the sparkling floors, giant-sized beds with a million buttons, T.V. sets in the ICU rooms and the ease of ordering labs, imaging studies and simply transfusing blood products without a family member to donate. But I am back. After all, this is …

Read moreA Fellow’s Surgical Rotation in Bolivia: An Incredible Learning Experience

The 2014 AAS Fall Courses are quickly approaching!

An academic surgical career demands excellence in the areas of clinical practice, research and education. Piloting this challenge can be intimidating and stressful; it requires preparation along with a certain degree of compromise and balance. It is also exhilarating and rewarding. Both the Fundamentals of Surgical Research Course and the Career Development Course have annually …

Read moreThe 2014 AAS Fall Courses are quickly approaching!

Is the Hippocratic Oath Outdated?

A recent editorial published in the Journal of the American Medical Association reports on the proceedings of The Institute of Medicine’s Global Forum on Innovation in Health Professional Education Workshop. The insights developed from this group of 59 members highlighted the need for a social contract between health care professionals and society. A social contract …

Read moreIs the Hippocratic Oath Outdated?

Demystifying the Leadership Structure of the American College of Surgeons

Approximately 3 years ago I was given the honor by the AAS to serve as the liaison to the ACS Board of Governors. Like many of you I am a fellow of the ACS, but really didn’t understand it’s hierarchy or what the Board of Governors was, prior to this appointment. Over the past two …

Read moreDemystifying the Leadership Structure of the American College of Surgeons
  • Previous
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 54
  • Page 55
  • Page 56
  • Page 57
  • Page 58
  • Page 59
  • Next

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