May-June 2001

Page 1

NEWSLETTER

Newsletter of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine

PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE What a Great Meeting! Atlanta was Grand! I am honored to serve as the 2001-2002 SAEM President. I am honored to represent the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine and I am looking forward to the “March to the Arch at St. Lou in 02” for the 2002 meeting. Marcus Martin, MD I have the great opportunity to learn from the many great SAEM presidents who served before me. My term on the Board extends over the following 10 presidents: Barsan, Ling, Binder, Sklar, Goldfrank, Dronen, Marx, Syverud, Schneider and Zink. Much has been accomplished by SAEM during this period of time. It has also been my great fortune to witness the academic quality/caliber of our young SAEM members grow over the years. As Chair of the Nominating Committee this past year, I was very much impressed by the educational and research accomplishments of the nominees for the Young Investigators award. I congratulate the Young Investigator award winners, as well as all the SAEM award winners recognized at the annual business meeting and to those who were elected to SAEM positions. Thanks to all the nominees who did not win awards or who were not elected to positions. You are all winners. The SAEM Annual Meeting in Atlanta was just grand. When I arrived in Atlanta I felt warm and welcomed. Atlanta is a culturally rich city. At the airport in Atlanta, a large mural on the wall at the main terminal caught my attention. It was a picture of children of many races/ethnicities representing “Rainbow Atlanta”. An article, appeared in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution on Sunday, May 6, 2001 while the meeting was taking place, entitled “Rainbow Atlanta: Census shows racial barriers disappearing in the city, suburbs.” The people of Atlanta and the hotel, staff and amenities, were all top-notch. People were friendly and they provided outstanding services. The meeting was well attended and well organized. The atmosphere was exciting and enthusiasm was evident everywhere. The membership took advantage of the many opportunities offered. The SAEM family is diverse and talented. As I attended committee and task force and interest group meetings, I saw people involved who may not have been involved in the past. Residents and faculty were mingling and working harmoniously together. This is a sign of a great SAEM family. Meeting participants were advancing research and education in emergency medicine, which hopefully will improve patient care. (continued on page 19)

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May-June 2001 Volume XIII, Number 3

Update on SAEM Research Funding Programs Brian J. Zink, MD Past President, SAEM University of Michigan James Quinn, MD Chair, SAEM Grants Committee University of California, San Francisco SAEM began funding research over a decade ago when Medtronic Physio Control began supporting the EMS Research Fellowship. But for many years this was the only SAEM research training grant. In 1989 SAEM reserves were used to create the Fund for Academic Emergency Medicine (FAEM), and we began funding a Resident Research Year Award and a Scholarly Sabbatical Grant. In the past year the SAEM designated research as a focus area. After a great deal of discussion with SAEM members, investigators, and past grant recipients the Board decided to drop the FAEM designation, which we think may have been confusing to some members and potential contributors. Now our research funding program will be referred to simply as that: the SAEM Research Fund. More has changed than just the name — we decided to increase research funding this year by forming two new grants. The Resident Research Year Award has been renamed the SAEM Research Training Grant, and the award period is now two years with funding of $150,000. This is a research fellowship grant available to EM residents and junior faculty. A totally new grant, the Institutional Research Training Grant, will allow an EM program to develop a two year research fellowship, also funded at $150,000, at their site, and to recruit for a fellow to fill that position. As has been previously announced, we also have a new grant this year, the one year $50,000 Neuroscience Research Fellowship that is supported by AstraZeneca. The EMS Research Fellowship, sponsored by Medtronic Physio Control, will also be offered, and we are pleased to announce that the amount of this grant has been increased from $50,000 to $60,000 per year. For a full listing of SAEM grants, see the summary on the last page of this Newsletter. SAEM is committed to providing even more research training grants. We would eventually like to be able to offer a number of these grants in each category, rather than just one a year. In order to do this, we will obviously need to increase the SAEM Research Fund. The Board of Directors, with input from the Financial Development Committee, chaired by Scott Syverud, will be exploring ways to increase funding, including whether there is a need for a formal development program. We will be reaching out to the corporate world, and to private donors. As SAEM members, we encourage you to contribute to the SAEM Research Fund on an annual basis through the

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