September-October 2000

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NEWSLETTER

Newsletter of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine

PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE The Best Job in Medicine This is the time of year when the halls of our academic health centers are buzzing with the energy of career planning. Emergency medicine resident physicians are starting to seriously consider the employment options available to them in the coming months, and medical students are deciding if emergency medicine is the right career for Brian Zink, MD them. A natural part of this process is that academic emergency physicians are asked: Why did you go into academic emergency medicine, and are you happy that you did? This is my answer. I never planned on going into academics. As a medical student, I liked the feel of the teaching hospital, and had great respect for the faculty physicians who taught me the science and art of medicine, but I had no interest in research, and did not see myself as an academician. When I entered emergency medicine residency at the University of Cincinnati, I thought that I would be very happy practicing in a community emergency department. I had some thoughts of going back to my small hometown in rural upstate New York and becoming the ED director. I would save the lives and limbs of the people I grew up with (even those who were mean to me), and they would be eternally grateful. But a funny thing happened. It was never a “eureka” event, rather a steady, but powerful influence that drew me toward academic emergency medicine. At that time, the mid to late 1980’s, Richard Levy had assembled at the University of Cincinnati a group of emergency medicine faculty who were brimming with intellectual energy and curiosity. Like a child learning to blow a bubble, they were expanding the academic realm of emergency medicine, while experiencing the occasional sticky face. Their enthusiasm and drive to know more, to try out new ideas and things, and to challenge their residents and students made for a magical learning environment. They were superb, compassionate clinicians and bedside teachers, but also innovative thinkers who generated a constant stream of research questions and ideas. When my memory does the roll call on that collection of faculty — Bill Barsan, Jerris Hedges, Steve Dronen, Jim Roberts, Mel Otten, Alexander Trott, Jim Amsterdam, Dan Storer, to name a few – I am not surprised that I gravitated toward academic emergency medicine. Their pull was irresistible. Peer pressure can also be a powerful, positive force. My chief residents, senior residents, and classmates were some of the best and brightest people I

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

September-October 2000 Volume XII, Number 5

Neuroscience Research Fellowship Available The SAEM Board of Directors is pleased to announce a new Neuroscience Research Fellowship that has been made possible by an unrestricted educational grant from AstraZeneca LP to the Fund for Academic Emergency Medicine (FAEM). AstraZeneca has agreed to fund the fellowship for three years. The FAEM Neuroscience Research Fellowship 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 acquisition of research skills. SAEM would like to thank Dr. Dexter Morris from the University of North Carolina and the Chair of the SAEM Neurologic Emergencies Interest Group. Dr. Morris functioned as the primary liaison between SAEM and AstraZeneca LP in developing the neuroscience research fellowship. SAEM would also like to thank Dr. Steven Dronen, Chair of the Financial Development Task Force for his role in developing the funding plan and the structure of the fellowship. Cerebrovascular diseases are a major source of morbidity and mortality in our country. Although some progress has been made in the past decade there is an unquestioned need for further research and new treatments for stroke and other acute cerebrovascular emergencies. SAEM is hopeful that the new FAEM Neuroscience Research Fellowship will help to train the next generation of emergency physician scientists who will make a difference in reducing morbidity and mortality from cerebrovascular diseases. The call for applications for the FAEM Neuroscience Research Fellowship will appear in a future issue of the Newsletter.

Emergency Medicine Activities at the AAMC Annual Meeting The AAMC Annual Meeting will be held in Chicago on October 27 - November 1. On October 28 the Association of Academic Chairs of Emergency Medicine (AACEM) will meet at 8:00 am in the Trade Room of the Inter-Continental Hotel, followed by an educational session sponsored by AACEM at 1:00-2:30 pm in the Burnham Room on the topic, “The Role of Chairs in the AAMC.” A second educational session developed by the SAEM National Affairs Task Force will follow in the Burnham Room at 2:30-3:30 pm on the topic of “Errors in Emergency Medicine.” All emergency physicians are invited to attend the educational sessions. Contact SAEM at saem@ saem.org for more information or questions.


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