Candidate Statements (BOG Chair-Elect)
Vote during the 2012 BOG General Assembly, Monday, September 10, 2012 Ballots are distributed and voting takes place during the BOG General Assembly meeting on Monday, September, 10, between 5:00-7:00 pm, Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Salon ABC. The positions of chair-elect and member-at-large will be elected by the BOG members present, no proxy votes are allowed. Only Governors or the designated alternate governor (i.e., Leg. Rep. or PR Rep.) attending the meeting in lieu of the governor shall have the power to vote on any matter before the Board of Governors. Peter M. Abramson, MD Candidate, BOG Chair-Elect What are your qualifications and what is your experience? Served as secretary, treasurer, president-elect, and president of the Metro Atlanta Educational Society for Otolaryngology, member BOG. Served as secretary, treasurer, president-elect, and president of the Georgia Society of Otolaryngology, member BOG. Current governor, Georgia Society of Otolaryngology. Immediate-past secretary, Board of Governors. Current chair, Socioeconomic and Grassroots Committee, Board of Governors. Member, Media and Public Relations Committee, AAO-HNS. Founding member of ENT of Georgia. Clinical assistant professor, department of otolaryngology, Emory University School of Medicine. Given the Academy’s strategic plan, outline and prioritize your goals for the Board of Governors. The most important goal for the Board of Governors is to be connected to every member of the Academy. As current chair of the Socioeconomic and Grassroots Committee of the BOG and as chair of the BOG, I will remain committed to implementation of a regional representation plan. This additional layer of communication will get our committee members closer to the practicing ENT and thus more responsive to local/regional issues and better able to disseminate vital and timely information to the local practitioner from the Board of Governors. As the national healthcare landscape changes, the BOG needs to be responsive to our needs as a specialty. ICD-10 transition, accountable care organizations (in whatever form they ultimately assume), insurance reimbursement, and scope of practice matters are just a few of the many issues that will need a strong BOG leadership to remain a proactive advocate for all otolaryngologists. Jay S. Youngerman, MD Candidate, BOG Chair-Elect What are your qualifications and what is your experience? My experience and qualifications for chair of the Board of Governors extend over a 20-year time frame. As legislative representative from the Long Island Society of Otolaryngology (past president), then governor for 16 years, I was a member of the BOG Legislative Representatives (nine years), and Carrier Relations Committees (three years). I was the first elected member-at-large and on the BOG Executive Committee working and learning from past chairs for eight years, winning a chair award, and in 2007 the Academy’s Honor Award. I was chair of the BOG’s Big On Goals initiative and the BOG Development/Fundraising Task Force. I formed Long Island ENT Associates (1983), creating a premier, independent eight-physician otolaryngology and allergy practice. I was a founding member of the AAO-HNS Partners for Progress. I helped form a multispecialty ambulatory surgical center. I am chair of the division of otolaryngology, North Shore Plainview, and the physician in charge at North Shore Syosset. Given the Academy’s strategic plan, outline and prioritize your goals for the Board of Governors. The function of the BOG is to support the Academy’s strategic plan physically with time and effort (committees, research, participating in guideline development and surveys, meeting and emailing politicians, and informing patients, colleagues, and those who control reimbursement of our specialty’s value), and, financially, joining with others in the Millennium Society, Hal Foster Endowment, and ENT PAC. Developing future leaders and new strategies, and steering both toward strengthening our Academy is paramount. Membership education, understanding what the Academy does for us and the public, becoming more energized and active, speaking up, making suggestions, bringing new ideas to the Academy both academically, (course suggestions, research opportunities) and financially, is vital. Many of our physicians have extensive business experience that can help steer the Academy in its goals to become financially independent by introducing products and ideas that will profit the Academy and members in general as only a grassroots organization can do.
Vote during the 2012 BOG General Assembly, Monday, September 10, 2012
Ballots are distributed and voting takes place during the BOG General Assembly meeting on Monday, September, 10, between 5:00-7:00 pm, Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Salon ABC.
The positions of chair-elect and member-at-large will be elected by the BOG members present, no proxy votes are allowed.
Only Governors or the designated alternate governor (i.e., Leg. Rep. or PR Rep.) attending the meeting in lieu of the governor shall have the power to vote on any matter before the Board of Governors.
Peter M. Abramson, MD
Candidate, BOG Chair-Elect
What are your qualifications and what is your experience?
- Served as secretary, treasurer, president-elect, and president of the Metro Atlanta Educational Society for Otolaryngology, member BOG.
- Served as secretary, treasurer, president-elect, and president of the Georgia Society of Otolaryngology, member BOG.
- Current governor, Georgia Society of Otolaryngology.
- Immediate-past secretary, Board of Governors.
- Current chair, Socioeconomic and Grassroots Committee, Board of Governors.
- Member, Media and Public Relations Committee, AAO-HNS.
- Founding member of ENT of Georgia.
- Clinical assistant professor, department of otolaryngology, Emory University School of Medicine.
Given the Academy’s strategic plan, outline and prioritize your goals for the Board of Governors.
The most important goal for the Board of Governors is to be connected to every member of the Academy. As current chair of the Socioeconomic and Grassroots Committee of the BOG and as chair of the BOG, I will remain committed to implementation of a regional representation plan. This additional layer of communication will get our committee members closer to the practicing ENT and thus more responsive to local/regional issues and better able to disseminate vital and timely information to the local practitioner from the Board of Governors.
As the national healthcare landscape changes, the BOG needs to be responsive to our needs as a specialty. ICD-10 transition, accountable care organizations (in whatever form they ultimately assume), insurance reimbursement, and scope of practice matters are just a few of the many issues that will need a strong BOG leadership to remain a proactive advocate for all otolaryngologists.
Jay S. Youngerman, MD
Candidate, BOG Chair-Elect
What are your qualifications and what is your experience?
My experience and qualifications for chair of the Board of Governors extend over a 20-year time frame. As legislative representative from the Long Island Society of Otolaryngology (past president), then governor for 16 years, I was a member of the BOG Legislative Representatives (nine years), and Carrier Relations Committees (three years). I was the first elected member-at-large and on the BOG Executive Committee working and learning from past chairs for eight years, winning a chair award, and in 2007 the Academy’s Honor Award. I was chair of the BOG’s Big On Goals initiative and the BOG Development/Fundraising Task Force. I formed Long Island ENT Associates (1983), creating a premier, independent eight-physician otolaryngology and allergy practice. I was a founding member of the AAO-HNS Partners for Progress. I helped form a multispecialty ambulatory surgical center. I am chair of the division of otolaryngology, North Shore Plainview, and the physician in charge at North Shore Syosset.
Given the Academy’s strategic plan, outline and prioritize your goals for the Board of Governors.
The function of the BOG is to support the Academy’s strategic plan physically with time and effort (committees, research, participating in guideline development and surveys, meeting and emailing politicians, and informing patients, colleagues, and those who control reimbursement of our specialty’s value), and, financially, joining with others in the Millennium Society, Hal Foster Endowment, and ENT PAC. Developing future leaders and new strategies, and steering both toward strengthening our Academy is paramount. Membership education, understanding what the Academy does for us and the public, becoming more energized and active, speaking up, making suggestions, bringing new ideas to the Academy both academically, (course suggestions, research opportunities) and financially, is vital. Many of our physicians have extensive business experience that can help steer the Academy in its goals to become financially independent by introducing products and ideas that will profit the Academy and members in general as only a grassroots organization can do.