The Unexpected Rise to Leadership
Rodney P. Lusk, MD, AAO-HNS/F President Last year at the Young Physicians Committee, I was asked how you become president of the Academy. My answer was short and truthful: It is not something you plan or aspire to. The nominations of our most important leadership positions come from a powerful group of elected committee members known as the Nominating Committee. These individuals take the job seriously and function independently of the existing Academy organization and leadership. The question got me thinking—how does an Academy member rise to a leadership position? It seems to me the recognition needed to obtain a leadership role is not prescribed or linear, but has at its core a willingness to serve. Further, you need the expertise and some leadership skills. It is like the proverbial three-legged stool: a delicate balance between knowledge, leadership skills, and willingness to serve. Hal Foster, MD, an otolaryngologist in Kansas City, MO, who had expertise and saw a need for sharing information, laid the foundation of the American Academy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery. In 1896, he sent out more than 500 invitations to ophthalmologists and otolaryngologists in the southern and western states in hopes of starting an association. The group grew into the American Academy of Ophthalmology and Oto-Laryngology by 1903. Within four years the organization had grown to 434 members, the largest U.S. specialty society. All this happened because Dr. Foster saw the need and had the expertise and the willingness to lead the way by devoting his time and energies (service) to the endeavor. When counseling medical students and residents about their career choices, I try to learn what they are really interested in and why. If their choices are driven by money, location, or others’ expectations, I try to get them to recognize the need to be passionate about what they are going to do. I don’t believe you will be successful in developing your expertise unless you have a real passion about your specialty or subspecialty, a “calling.” If the “calling” isn’t there, the demands and stresses of practicing medicine will frustrate you. Your practice will become just a business. Fortunately, I find most otolaryngologists are really passionate about their specialty and the care they provide. Of course the money is important—most of you have spent 12 years or more after high school before you started earning any significant amount of money. But I would venture to say that most of you make a good salary and are satisfied with your profession. You all have the opportunity to serve in your hospitals, state, and national societies. You may question if you are the “organization type.” Physicians who end up in leadership positions are individuals who have demonstrated they are willing to give their time, given a task they can get it completed in a timely manner, have demonstrated expertise in otolaryngology, are not necessarily gregarious, but are easy to work with; do not have their own agenda, but are willing to work with others toward a common goal. And now is the time. If you sit on the sidelines and let the “managers” of medicine, be they industry or government, dictate our course we have no one to blame but ourselves. Ella Wheeler Wilcox wrote at the turn of the century, “one ship drives east and the other west by the same winds that blow. It’s the set of the sails and not the gales that determines the way they go.” Don’t let the gales of medical change alter your personal or our specialty’s course. Remember your calling and why you went into our profession. Get involved; give of your time and expertise to our specialty. Influence those in charge of the gale—your members of Congress and those in authority. When the call for action comes from the Academy to contact Congress regarding an issue—just do it! It takes only a minute to send an email to your legislators through our system and every note or call makes a difference. Collectively, we can chart our course, set our sails to work towards our specialty’s and patients’ collective good. Let me close with President John F. Kennedy’s famous call to service, “My fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.” You can serve not only your country, but also your specialty and your patients by electing to get involved. Remember, all Academy committees are open. Define your passion, vote and get involved. Your efforts will be recognized and you will make a difference, www.entnet.org/getinvolved.
Rodney P. Lusk, MD, AAO-HNS/F President
Last year at the Young Physicians Committee, I was asked how you become president of the Academy. My answer was short and truthful: It is not something you plan or aspire to. The nominations of our most important leadership positions come from a powerful group of elected committee members known as the Nominating Committee. These individuals take the job seriously and function independently of the existing Academy organization and leadership. The question got me thinking—how does an Academy member rise to a leadership position? It seems to me the recognition needed to obtain a leadership role is not prescribed or linear, but has at its core a willingness to serve. Further, you need the expertise and some leadership skills. It is like the proverbial three-legged stool: a delicate balance between knowledge, leadership skills, and willingness to serve. Hal Foster, MD, an otolaryngologist in Kansas City, MO, who had expertise and saw a need for sharing information, laid the foundation of the American Academy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery. In 1896, he sent out more than 500 invitations to ophthalmologists and otolaryngologists in the southern and western states in hopes of starting an association. The group grew into the American Academy of Ophthalmology and Oto-Laryngology by 1903. Within four years the organization had grown to 434 members, the largest U.S. specialty society. All this happened because Dr. Foster saw the need and had the expertise and the willingness to lead the way by devoting his time and energies (service) to the endeavor.
When counseling medical students and residents about their career choices, I try to learn what they are really interested in and why. If their choices are driven by money, location, or others’ expectations, I try to get them to recognize the need to be passionate about what they are going to do. I don’t believe you will be successful in developing your expertise unless you have a real passion about your specialty or subspecialty, a “calling.” If the “calling” isn’t there, the demands and stresses of practicing medicine will frustrate you. Your practice will become just a business. Fortunately, I find most otolaryngologists are really passionate about their specialty and the care they provide. Of course the money is important—most of you have spent 12 years or more after high school before you started earning any significant amount of money. But I would venture to say that most of you make a good salary and are satisfied with your profession.
You all have the opportunity to serve in your hospitals, state, and national societies. You may question if you are the “organization type.” Physicians who end up in leadership positions are individuals who have demonstrated they are willing to give their time, given a task they can get it completed in a timely manner, have demonstrated expertise in otolaryngology, are not necessarily gregarious, but are easy to work with; do not have their own agenda, but are willing to work with others toward a common goal.
And now is the time. If you sit on the sidelines and let the “managers” of medicine, be they industry or government, dictate our course we have no one to blame but ourselves. Ella Wheeler Wilcox wrote at the turn of the century, “one ship drives east and the other west by the same winds that blow. It’s the set of the sails and not the gales that determines the way they go.”
Don’t let the gales of medical change alter your personal or our specialty’s course. Remember your calling and why you went into our profession. Get involved; give of your time and expertise to our specialty. Influence those in charge of the gale—your members of Congress and those in authority. When the call for action comes from the Academy to contact Congress regarding an issue—just do it! It takes only a minute to send an email to your legislators through our system and every note or call makes a difference. Collectively, we can chart our course, set our sails to work towards our specialty’s and patients’ collective good.
Let me close with President John F. Kennedy’s famous call to service, “My fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.” You can serve not only your country, but also your specialty and your patients by electing to get involved. Remember, all Academy committees are open.
Define your passion, vote and get involved. Your efforts will be recognized and you will make a difference, www.entnet.org/getinvolved.