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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/ 

Congratulations to our AAS Young Investigator Award Winners

The AAS is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2nd Annual AAS Young Investigator Award.  The award is designed to engage academic Cardiothoracic and ENT surgeons with the AAS. The award includes complimentary registration to both the Fall Courses taking place on October 21, 2017 in San Diego, CA and the Academic Surgical Congress taking …

Read moreCongratulations to our AAS Young Investigator Award Winners

The development of a successful mentor/mentee relationship in the general surgery research years

Evie Carchman, MD: As a junior faculty member having never mentored a general surgery resident in the lab before, there have been several lessons that my mentee and I have learned over the last year. We share these trials and tribulations to enforce the lack of formal training on how to be a mentor or …

Read moreThe development of a successful mentor/mentee relationship in the general surgery research years

InciSioN

On July 1st, 2017, the World Bank published its annual update of the World Development Indicators (WDI). From fishing to farming, education to employment, these indicators track progress in a wide variety of forms over regions, nations, and time. This year marks the second time surgical data has been included in the World Bank’s indicators. …

Read moreInciSioN

How Abraham Flexner is Failing Surgery

From January, 1909, through April, 1910, Abraham Flexner1 traveled throughout the United States and Canada on a trip that revolutionized North American medical education.  He visited every one of the existing 155 medical schools and, by the end of 1910, had published his report detailing the resources and practices of all these schools.2   Startlingly, he …

Read moreHow Abraham Flexner is Failing Surgery

Teaching Humanism in the New Era of Medicine

I never thought I was going to be the attending who started off a sentence with “when I was a student/resident…”  But one day, I realized, I had become that person.  It was not to prove that I worked harder checking labs or rounding on my patients.  It was in a different context.  I was …

Read moreTeaching Humanism in the New Era of Medicine

Moving beyond “Good job, read more” in feedback for our students

We all remember our first experiences seeing patients during medical school and wondering “Am I doing this right?” During medical school hours upon hours were spent buried in books, journals, and occasionally attending lectures, to build a base of knowledge that would allow us the privilege of providing care to patients once in the clerkships.  …

Read moreMoving beyond “Good job, read more” in feedback for our students

(Don’t Fear) The Reaper

I’ve been thinking a lot about death. No, I’m no more depressed than usual, and I’d tell you if I were. I’m thinking about death in the Atul Gawande Being Mortal way, the way Shoshana Berger writes so eloquently about in an outstanding essay. Palliative medicine, I’m hoping beyond hope, is finally starting to make …

Read more(Don’t Fear) The Reaper

The Value of Global Humanitarian Medicine across the Academic Surgeon’s Career Path

In my fourth year of general surgery residency, I traveled on a surgical medical mission trip to Guatemala with a recent emeritus surgeon, another surgeon in the midst of his busy surgical practice, and a team of nine others including another surgery resident, nurses, and an engineer. The experience I had was invaluable and exceeded …

Read moreThe Value of Global Humanitarian Medicine across the Academic Surgeon’s Career Path

AAS Elects New Councilors!

Congratulations to the six new Councilors who will be representing the classes of 2008, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2016 and resident/fellows.  We look forward to their future leadership! Thank you to all the outstanding candidates who self nominated.  There are many opportunities to get involved in the AAS, including the committee self nomination process that is …

Read moreAAS Elects New Councilors!

“Higher” Education

When filling out my hospital profile, I was asked to list my hobbies. Admittedly, after an eye roll, I wrote theatre and running and adamantly told the staff to please not put my hobbies on the webpage. Like usual, my requests were completely ignored, and my hobbies were listed after my lengthy training and board …

Read more“Higher” Education
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