November-December 2000

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NEWSLETTER

901 North Washington Ave. Lansing, MI 48906-5137 (517) 485-5484 saem@saem.org www.saem.org

Newsletter of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine November-December 2000 Volume XII, Number 6

PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE SAEM and the Corporate World SAEM is an academic, professional organization that has a myriad of interactions and relationships with individuals at all levels of training, and with other national emergency medicine and non-emergency medicine organizations. For SAEM, the activities, communications, and boundaries that develop in these individual and inter-organizational Brian Zink, MD relationships are usually fairly clear, and center around whether the interaction is in keeping with our mission — to improve patient care by advancing research and education in emergency medicine. Most individuals and organizations with whom we partner have objectives that are similar to our own, and it is relatively easy to collaborate on activities or projects. When SAEM interactions extend to the corporate world, the picture is less clear. At least part of the mission of businesses and corporations is to to make a profit. A profit motive does not necessarily set the missions of the corporate world and SAEM at odds. As a fiscally responsible organization, we also seek to generate revenue to help fund grants, awards, and the Annual Meeting and other Society activities. However, if a corporate profit motive leads SAEM to compromise academic freedom, injects bias, or promotes an unacceptable conflict of interest, our members and our emergency patients are not well served. Over the past few years, the SAEM Board of Directors has attempted to create a consistent position on our interactions with industry. This has resulted in a Policy on Commercial Support, and related policies on co-sponsorship of meetings and satellite meetings. (See the SAEM website for these policies.) Some members have regarded the SAEM position to be prudish and too restrictive, others have decried the fact that any association with commercial entities is permitted. Somewhere in the middle of these viewpoints rests our rationale, and in the following paragraphs I will attempt to explain why I think we are where we should be. In a 1999 article in JAMA, Pellegrino and Relman delivered a fairly scathing assessment of professional medical associations, stating: “Too many have already become corporatized entities in pursuit of profit to finance bulky administrative staffs or to lobby for the protection of privileges and benefit of their members.”(1) Not many people would accuse SAEM, with its 5 person administrative staff for a membership of 5,000, and it’s strong research, education, and public health focus, of being too corporatized. As part of our nonprofit status, we are not permitted to lobby. We do take

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Password Required to Receive AEM Online Academic Emergency Medicine (AEM) has been available online since mid-May. Beginning November 15, SAEM members must use a password to access their online subscription. All SAEM members are entitled to a receive a free subscription of both the print copy and online version of AEM. To activate your subscription go to the website: <www. aemj.org>. Click on the subscriptions button. Click on the link “activate your member subscription.” Enter your membership number (which is printed above your name on the mailing label of this Newsletter) and click the submit button. You will then be asked to select a user name and password. If you need assistance or do not have a member number, send an e-mail to saem@saem.org or call 517-485-5484.

The Unraveling Safety Net: Current Crises of U.S. Emergency Departments Call for Papers Academic Emergency Medicine is sponsoring a Consensus Conference to discuss this topic on May 9, 2001 at the SAEM Annual Meeting in Atlanta. Topics to be discussed include the importance of emergency departments as a medical and social safety net, challenges currently faced by U.S. emergency departments, and trends that threaten emergency care delivery. Manuscripts relevant to this theme are being solicited. The deadline is March 1, 2001, and authors should use the AEM Instructions for Authors posted on the AEM and SAEM web sites. Please send manuscripts electronically to aem@saem.org or by mail to: Academic Emergency Medicine, Special Issue, 901 North Washington Ave., Lansing, MI 48906.

Neuroscience Research Fellowship SAEM is pleased to announce the availability of the FAEM Neuroscience Research Fellowship, made possible by an unrestricted educational grant from AstraZeneca LP. The Grant provides for one year of funding at $50,000 for a mentored research training experience in cerebrovascular emergencies. The research training may be in basic science research, clinical research, or a combination of both. Completion of a research project is required, but the emphasis of the fellowship is on the acquisition of research skills. The Grant application and criteria will be posted on the SAEM web site at www.saem.org by December 10. The deadline for the submission of completed applications will be February 15, 2001, with announcement of the recipient by March 15. The funding will be for the period from July 1, 2001 to June 30, 2002. Contact SAEM at saem@saem.org for questions or further information.


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