Responding to Changes in Healthcare: BOG Annual Meeting Events
While our nation prepares for what is sure to be another historic election, otolaryngologists from around the world will meet in September in Washington, DC, for the AAO-HNSF 2012 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO. The 116th annual meeting promises to be more valuable and exciting than ever, covering a broad range of topics and issues germane to otolaryngologists. Experts in our field will present scientific research, instruction courses, miniseminars, and honorary guest lectures. In addition, the meeting provides unparalleled collaborative and networking opportunities. Though it seems the dust is settling after the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to uphold the healthcare reform act, once again the flawed Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) formula threatens deep (27 percent) cuts in Medicare reimbursement. In addition, the fate of the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB) is being debated, and Graduate Medical Education funding is under scrutiny. While these and other issues are being settled, we are fortunate to have the Academy and Board of Governors (BOG) working diligently to protect the interests of otolaryngologists and our patients. As such, the BOG will host a slate of events at the annual meeting designed to engage otolaryngologists from all types of practices. More than ever, otolaryngologists cannot afford to be uninformed or misinformed, and the annual meeting is the opportune time and place to get up-to-date information. Saturday Leadership skills are critical in the current healthcare environment, and there are countless talented physician leaders among our otolaryngology ranks. Learn how to be an effective physician leader at the BOG Leaders Training Session from noon to 1:00 pm on Saturday, September 8. The training session will be followed by the BOG Socioeconomics & Grassroots Committee Meeting from 1:00 pm to 2:45 pm, and the BOG Legislative Representatives Committee Meeting from 3:00 pm to 4:45 pm. All are welcome at these committee meetings. Come see what these important committees are doing on your behalf. Monday Monday’s program includes the BOG General Assembly Meeting from 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm. As always, all are welcome at the assembly, which features the election of the BOG chair and Member-at-large, committee reports, and awards presentations. If you’ve never attended the BOG General Assembly, let this be your year to check it out. Tuesday Following the positive response to last year’s miniseminar, “Hot Topics in Otolaryngology: 2011,” the BOG Executive Committee is pleased to present “Hot Topics: 2012,” from 10:30 am to 11:50 am on Tuesday, September 11. BOG Secretary Wendy B. Stern, MD, will moderate the panel. Returning speaker Raymund C. King, MD, an otolaryngologist and attorney, will discuss hospital-physician joint ventures from a legal perspective. Darlene Burgess, vice president of corporate government affairs for Henry Ford Health System, will review such ventures from an institutional and financial perspective. And the Academy’s Joy L. Trimmer, JD, Senior Director of Government Affairs, will provide a legislative update of issues affecting medicine and otolaryngology, particularly in light of the upcoming elections. There is no question the landscape of healthcare is changing. Where will physicians fit into that landscape? Will we be the grass that gets walked on, or the brush that fades into the background and everyone looks past? Or will we be the trees that stand tall and strong, yet flexible enough to endure the unpredictable winds of change? We are physicians and therefore a vital component of the healthcare system, but we will have to learn to survive in this new landscape. The Academy and BOG serve as vital resources to help us survive and thrive in the shadow of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, but can do so only with the dedication, support, and engagement of our ranks. It is never too late (or too early) to get informed and get involved, and the annual meeting is an excellent place to start, as Academy activities for the upcoming year get underway. While the practice of medicine is undergoing drastic changes, the one thing that will not change is the ongoing scrutiny of the delivery and cost of healthcare. In order to advocate for our patients and preserve our ability to provide the best possible care, we will need to stand strong, but also work with our hospitals, legislators, and other interested parties to realistically make changes that will create a healthcare system that allows all of us to thrive.
While our nation prepares for what is sure to be another historic election, otolaryngologists from around the world will meet in September in Washington, DC, for the AAO-HNSF 2012 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO. The 116th annual meeting promises to be more valuable and exciting than ever, covering a broad range of topics and issues germane to otolaryngologists. Experts in our field will present scientific research, instruction courses, miniseminars, and honorary guest lectures. In addition, the meeting provides unparalleled collaborative and networking opportunities.
Though it seems the dust is settling after the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to uphold the healthcare reform act, once again the flawed Sustainable Growth Rate (SGR) formula threatens deep (27 percent) cuts in Medicare reimbursement. In addition, the fate of the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB) is being debated, and Graduate Medical Education funding is under scrutiny. While these and other issues are being settled, we are fortunate to have the Academy and Board of Governors (BOG) working diligently to protect the interests of otolaryngologists and our patients. As such, the BOG will host a slate of events at the annual meeting designed to engage otolaryngologists from all types of practices. More than ever, otolaryngologists cannot afford to be uninformed or misinformed, and the annual meeting is the opportune time and place to get up-to-date information.
Saturday
Leadership skills are critical in the current healthcare environment, and there are countless talented physician leaders among our otolaryngology ranks. Learn how to be an effective physician leader at the BOG Leaders Training Session from noon to 1:00 pm on Saturday, September 8. The training session will be followed by the BOG Socioeconomics & Grassroots Committee Meeting from 1:00 pm to 2:45 pm, and the BOG Legislative Representatives Committee Meeting from 3:00 pm to 4:45 pm. All are welcome at these committee meetings. Come see what these important committees are doing on your behalf.
Monday
Monday’s program includes the BOG General Assembly Meeting from 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm. As always, all are welcome at the assembly, which features the election of the BOG chair and Member-at-large, committee reports, and awards presentations. If you’ve never attended the BOG General Assembly, let this be your year to check it out.
Tuesday
Following the positive response to last year’s miniseminar, “Hot Topics in Otolaryngology: 2011,” the BOG Executive Committee is pleased to present “Hot Topics: 2012,” from 10:30 am to 11:50 am on Tuesday, September 11. BOG Secretary Wendy B. Stern, MD, will moderate the panel. Returning speaker Raymund C. King, MD, an otolaryngologist and attorney, will discuss hospital-physician joint ventures from a legal perspective. Darlene Burgess, vice president of corporate government affairs for Henry Ford Health System, will review such ventures from an institutional and financial perspective. And the Academy’s Joy L. Trimmer, JD, Senior Director of Government Affairs, will provide a legislative update of issues affecting medicine and otolaryngology, particularly in light of the upcoming elections.
There is no question the landscape of healthcare is changing. Where will physicians fit into that landscape? Will we be the grass that gets walked on, or the brush that fades into the background and everyone looks past? Or will we be the trees that stand tall and strong, yet flexible enough to endure the unpredictable winds of change? We are physicians and therefore a vital component of the healthcare system, but we will have to learn to survive in this new landscape. The Academy and BOG serve as vital resources to help us survive and thrive in the shadow of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, but can do so only with the dedication, support, and engagement of our ranks. It is never too late (or too early) to get informed and get involved, and the annual meeting is an excellent place to start, as Academy activities for the upcoming year get underway.
While the practice of medicine is undergoing drastic changes, the one thing that will not change is the ongoing scrutiny of the delivery and cost of healthcare. In order to advocate for our patients and preserve our ability to provide the best possible care, we will need to stand strong, but also work with our hospitals, legislators, and other interested parties to realistically make changes that will create a healthcare system that allows all of us to thrive.