Review edition SOCIETY FOR VASCULAR SURGERY
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SEPTEMBER 2021
Dalman address: Meeting challenges of COVID-19, SVS future direction head-on
‘Let’s move on to solutions,’ keynote speaker tells diversity, equity and inclusion focus session By Beth Bales
By Bryan Kay In his introduction to the second of two Presidential Addresses on the 2021 Vascular Annual Meeting (VAM) slate (Aug. 18–21), new Society for Vascular Surgery (SVS) President Ali AbuRahma, MD, gave voice to that which seems virtually undeniable: that the SVS presidency of Ronald L. Dalman, MD, was defined by a double whammy of enormous challenges—both of which hit not only wider society but the world of medicine and vascular surgery.
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alman spent much of his time at the SVS helm dealing with matters related to the COVID-19 pandemic. And the Stanford University vice chair for clinical affairs in the department of surgery was also holder of the SVS office when the diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) torch was lit in the aftermath of a controversial paper published in the Journal of Vascular Surgery (JVS) in the back half of 2020. Few might argue he did not meet these twin challenges head on. After a 2020 in which VAM was canceled in the thick of the pandemic, for a while it looked like the 2021 event might suffer a similar fate. Yet, there he stood at the VAM 2021 podium in San Diego on Aug. 20, accepting the gauntlet from AbuRahma to deliver his presidential swansong. On the DEI front, too, the SVS tackled head on the fallout from the JVS publication—popularly retermed #Medbikini in the Twittersphere, Dalman would remind his audience in his address. So it was that Dalman’s address chimed with the zeitgeist of the times. “As a nation and as a professional medical association,
we have been through a lot this year,” he told those gathered for his Friday morning lecture. “But we’ve learned a lot as well. As Kim Brooks wrote in the New York Times, ‘Pandemics make visible what’s been hidden.’” Dalman had just taken attendees on a journey through the storied history of both vascular surgery itself and the Society as a representative entity, as the SVS marked the beginning of its 75th anniversary—from birth as a singular specialty, through adolescence and maturation, and into the presence it bears today. “Courage and commitment were needed to launch a professional society dedicated to an entirely new medical
“As a nation and as a professional medical association, we have been through a lot this year”— RONALD L. DALMAN
Ronald L. Dalman
specialty,” Dalman said of the founding years. “But just as our nation has changed tremendously in the ensuing decades, so too has our Society and the specialty it created.” There was “the breakthrough decade,” as Dalman described it. This saw the introduction of arterial reconstructive surgery; prosthetic grafts followed; and the SVS established its first guidelines committee. Later came non-invasive vascular imaging, then widespread adoption of vascular fellowship training. Into the 1980s, and the rapid evolution and improvement of endovascular technology dawned. The modern SVS emerged as a member services organization in tandem with the rise of multidisciplinary societies. And, more recently, there has been the rapid transition to outpatient treatment and a quality/outcome focus, Dalman added. So to the present day, the endpoint of his presidency, and the portent of those difficult matters that helped define his time leading the SVS: “And now,” Dalman asked the crowd, “looking forward another 75 years, who and what will define this time, our time?” He pointed to images depicted in a continued on page 2
Doubling down on quality: Hodgson champions appropriateness of care Kim Hodgson, MD, the 2019–2020 SVS president, challenges SVS members to confront key issue as he delivers his belated Presidential Address. see page 10–11
Lee Kirksey, MD, issued an unapologetic apology of sorts at the outset of his discussion of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) issues at VAM. “If I ruffle any feathers I apologize, but I think it’s a conversation that’s important to have,” said Society for Vascular Surgery (SVS) member Kirksey, of the Cleveland Clinic, in an Aug. 20 lecture. ”Let’s move beyond the problem we understand exists and let’s move on to solutions.” KIRKSEY’S ADDRESS, “EQUITY challenges in vascular surgery: Closing the gap,” kicked off an hour-long session covering DEI issues, including a slew of scientific abstract talks. The coronavirus “unveiled longstanding inequities … and laid bare problems that have existed for many years for poor brown, Black and white Americans,” he said, adding that evidence of these inequities in medical care and outcomes converged amid a background of social unrest. He reviewed some of the history of addressing such issues with the SVS, including a report from 2010, the creation of the DEI Task Force (now a committee), its recommendations and other positive steps the SVS has taken in the past few years. The existence of an equity action plan demonstrates the Society’s focus, he said. “Inequality and inequity do not exist in a vacuum,” he said. “It impacts the way we care for patients.” continued on page 2