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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/ 

Checkmate

My son started to play chess nine months ago; he will turn six next month. He has developed a passion for this game and has competed at the national, state, and regional levels. How can his young mind process such a complex game and become the reigning Florida North Regional chess champion?  His basic methodology …

Read moreCheckmate

How do you change someone’s mind when their worldview has never been challenged by their life experience?

Recently, a disturbing tweet was circulated on Twitter. A Harvard Professor of Physiology and Medicine and former Dean tweeted the following statement: “When I last lectured in @BrighamWomens Bornstein auditorium, walls were adorned with portraits of prior luminaries of medicine & surgery. Connecting to a glorious past. Now all gone. Hope everyone is happy. I’m …

Read moreHow do you change someone’s mind when their worldview has never been challenged by their life experience?

Humility

When I was a second-year general surgery resident, I spent the month of December on the emergency general surgery service. It was dark when I drove to work in the morning and dark when I left the hospital, and like most junior residents at that time of year, I felt overworked, over-stressed, and discouraged. Much …

Read moreHumility

Patients and Their Families Drive Us to Succeed

Necrotizing enterocolitis affects roughly 10% of the 450,000 premature infants born in the US annually. Treatment advances for NEC have not progressed significantly in the last 30 years, and many clinicians and scientists continue to work diligently to find ways to decrease the morbidity and mortality of NEC. Over the years, many other prominent disease …

Read morePatients and Their Families Drive Us to Succeed

Sweat Equity or Serendipity?

Ever feel as though you are putting in maximal effort, but seeing very slow or little if any gains in your career?  Yet, you are seeing some of your colleagues or acquaintances around you take major leaps forward.  You start wondering what you are doing wrong and why ‘it’ is happening for everyone else, but …

Read moreSweat Equity or Serendipity?

mEnTee Phone Home

We spend a significant amount of time focusing on the mentee-mentor relationship within academic surgery. This focus is justified considering the relationship is often forged during the fires of our surgical training and provides us with guidance and unrivaled altruism that defines our early career paths. While many of us have surgeons we look to …

Read moremEnTee Phone Home

Modern Health Services Research for Surgeons – Not Just BIG DATA

Not too long ago I was an eager general surgery resident seeking out research opportunities anywhere I could get them. A minority of residents around me sought basic science opportunities, but most of us picked the “easier” route, a.k.a. clinical research. This referred, at that time, to a sprinkling of case series, small to medium …

Read moreModern Health Services Research for Surgeons – Not Just BIG DATA

Make AAS Your Village

As a new member of the Membership Committee, I had the pleasure of approaching members at the Academic Surgical Congress (ASC) to ask them why they joined the Association for Academic Surgery (AAS). While the answers were diverse, three themes were common during my conversations with AAS members: 1. Research Mentorship- The Village Neighbor The …

Read moreMake AAS Your Village

Levering Code-Switching to Improve Information Delivery for Surgical Patients

You may be saying to yourself, what exactly is code-switching and why should a surgeon care? Code-switching is a linguistic term that applies when a speaker, who is multilingual, switches between two or more languages or dialects within the context of a single conversation.1 Code –switching can happen without the cognitive awareness of the user …

Read moreLevering Code-Switching to Improve Information Delivery for Surgical Patients

Request for Self-Nominations for JSR Associate Editor for Gastrointestinal Surgery

The Journal of Surgical Research (JSR) is currently accepting applications for Associate Editor (AE) for the Gastrointestinal Surgery section of the journal. The GI Associate Editor typically handles approximately six articles per week, performing the primary assessment of manuscripts submitted to the journal and making the determination as to whether manuscripts meet the standard for …

Read moreRequest for Self-Nominations for JSR Associate Editor for Gastrointestinal Surgery
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