LaFerriere Honored as AAFPRS 2011 Schoenrock Award Recipient
Keith A. LaFerriere, MD, has been chosen to receive the 2011 Larry D. Schoenrock Distinguished Service Award. He received the award at the AAFPRS Fall meeting in San Francisco.The American Board of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery grants the award annually to an individual who has made significant contributions to the facial plastic surgery examination program, its financial security, and/or its support within the specialty, organized medicine, and state legislative and regulatory bodies. Dr. LaFerriere credits his father with pushing him in the direction of medicine as a career. “My father had definite career plans for all of his children,” said Dr. LaFerriere. “As the oldest of five children, his career plans for me were simple — I was going to be a doctor — period — end of discussion. Luckily for me, it was the right decision. I have often thought, during the course of my 32-year career, how much I owe him for knowing me well enough to guide me, at an early age, into the most fulfilling of professions.” Dr. LaFerriere also credits another source with providing support and encouragement in his early years to complete his medical training. “I was a sophomore in college at a fraternity party that got raided,” he said. “The band was still playing and everybody was still dancing, so I reached a hand into the crowd to pull out a dancing partner, and lo and behold, I pulled out the love of my life, Randy… She has been my best friend, my most ardent supporter, and the backbone of our family for 44 years.” Dr. LaFerriere began medical school at the University of Michigan where he had his initial exposure to otolaryngology. Head and neck surgery turned out to be a good fit, and he headed to St. Louis for his residency to study under the renowned otolaryngologist, Joseph Ogura, MD, at Washington University. Dr. LaFerriere’s residency training under Dr. Ogura made such an impression that the young surgeon had every intention of pursuing a career in academic medicine. Fate and the Viet Nam War intervened, and Dr. LaFerriere found himself headed into the Air Force for two years following his residency. “Corpsmen needed rhinoplasties and colonels’ wives knew I could perform blepharoplasties, facelifts, and skin cancer reconstructions,” said Dr. LaFerriere. “Those cases challenged my ingenuity and the spark to perform facial plastic surgery was ignited. Although I explored many academic positions, I realized my heart was leading me in the direction of opening my own practice. I found a private practice opportunity and did some additional training with Dr. E. Gaylon McCollough after I heard him lecture about facelifts at the Missouri ENT Society,” said Dr. LaFerriere. “As a result of that additional training with Gaylon, my practice, which has been almost exclusively devoted to facial plastic surgery, has been a good fit for me for over 32 years.” With his practice firmly established, Dr. LaFerriere began a long involvement with the AAFPRS and the ABFPRS. He took the Board examination in 1990 with the first wave of eligible facial plastic surgeons. “I immediately recognized the future potential in the ABFPRS certification process,” Dr. LaFerriere said, “but it would be several years before I actively participated as a Board examiner. Once I began examining for the Board, I realized that the examination and the process of constructing and reviewing exam questions was a vitally important component of the certification process that perhaps I could be helpful with.” “Keith LaFerriere is part of the cadre of unsung ABFPRS heroes who devote an incredible amount of time every year to ensure that examination questions are reviewed and revised to meet rigorous psychometric standards,” said Ira D. Papel, MD, ABFPRS president. “Most of our colleagues who achieve certification don’t think about our exam again until recertification deadlines loom in 10 years. Keith, on the other hand, volunteers every year with other exam committee members, to put in hundreds of hours of work to ensure that our written and oral examinations meet the highest standards. For the past seven years, this has been Keith’s way of cementing the Board’s reputation as the gold standard of certification for facial plastic surgeons — a cause that Larry Schoenrock proudly championed. ” Dr. LaFerriere was elected to the ABFPRS Board of Directors and has served as an ABFPRS examiner for 13 years. He is now a senior advisor who has contributed generously to the financial well-being of the ABFPRS. Dr. LaFerriere was also one of the first candidates to sign up for, as well as complete, the ABFPRS MOC in FPRS® program and has worked continuously to persuade his colleagues that completing the MOC in FPRS® program is the right thing to do for the specialty. In addition to his work for the ABFPRS, Dr. LaFerriere served as president of the AAFPRS in 2003-2004 and has been a fellowship director with Gregory J. Renner, MD, since 1995. He has also served on the IFFPSS Board for the past eight years and has been involved in the development of the international facial plastic surgery certification process while mentoring his international colleagues to pursue that newly emerging credential. In addition to all his work for the ABFPRS, the AAFPRS, and the IFFPSS, Dr. LaFerriere has also represented the specialty with his appointment to the Missouri Board of Healing Arts, which is the licensing and disciplinary board for physicians in Missouri. Nominations for the 2012 Schoenrock award should be addressed to the ABFPRS Executive Committee in care of ABFPRS, 115-C S. Saint Asaph St., Alexandria, VA 22314, or email SchoenrockAward@abfprs.org.
Keith A. LaFerriere, MD, has been chosen to receive the 2011 Larry D. Schoenrock Distinguished Service Award. He received the award at the AAFPRS Fall meeting in San Francisco.The American Board of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery grants the award annually to an individual who has made significant contributions to the facial plastic surgery examination program, its financial security, and/or its support within the specialty, organized medicine, and state legislative and regulatory bodies.
Dr. LaFerriere credits his father with pushing him in the direction of medicine as a career. “My father had definite career plans for all of his children,” said Dr. LaFerriere. “As the oldest of five children, his career plans for me were simple — I was going to be a doctor — period — end of discussion. Luckily for me, it was the right decision. I have often thought, during the course of my 32-year career, how much I owe him for knowing me well enough to guide me, at an early age, into the most fulfilling of professions.” Dr. LaFerriere also credits another source with providing support and encouragement in his early years to complete his medical training. “I was a sophomore in college at a fraternity party that got raided,” he said. “The band was still playing and everybody was still dancing, so I reached a hand into the crowd to pull out a dancing partner, and lo and behold, I pulled out the love of my life, Randy… She has been my best friend, my most ardent supporter, and the backbone of our family for 44 years.”
Dr. LaFerriere began medical school at the University of Michigan where he had his initial exposure to otolaryngology. Head and neck surgery turned out to be a good fit, and he headed to St. Louis for his residency to study under the renowned otolaryngologist, Joseph Ogura, MD, at Washington University. Dr. LaFerriere’s residency training under Dr. Ogura made such an impression that the young surgeon had every intention of pursuing a career in academic medicine. Fate and the Viet Nam War intervened, and Dr. LaFerriere found himself headed into the Air Force for two years following his residency.
“Corpsmen needed rhinoplasties and colonels’ wives knew I could perform blepharoplasties, facelifts, and skin cancer reconstructions,” said Dr. LaFerriere. “Those cases challenged my ingenuity and the spark to perform facial plastic surgery was ignited. Although I explored many academic positions, I realized my heart was leading me in the direction of opening my own practice. I found a private practice opportunity and did some additional training with Dr. E. Gaylon McCollough after I heard him lecture about facelifts at the Missouri ENT Society,” said Dr. LaFerriere. “As a result of that additional training with Gaylon, my practice, which has been almost exclusively devoted to facial plastic surgery, has been a good fit for me for over 32 years.”
With his practice firmly established, Dr. LaFerriere began a long involvement with the AAFPRS and the ABFPRS. He took the Board examination in 1990 with the first wave of eligible facial plastic surgeons. “I immediately recognized the future potential in the ABFPRS certification process,” Dr. LaFerriere said, “but it would be several years before I actively participated as a Board examiner. Once I began examining for the Board, I realized that the examination and the process of constructing and reviewing exam questions was a vitally important component of the certification process that perhaps I could be helpful with.”
“Keith LaFerriere is part of the cadre of unsung ABFPRS heroes who devote an incredible amount of time every year to ensure that examination questions are reviewed and revised to meet rigorous psychometric standards,” said Ira D. Papel, MD, ABFPRS president. “Most of our colleagues who achieve certification don’t think about our exam again until recertification deadlines loom in 10 years. Keith, on the other hand, volunteers every year with other exam committee members, to put in hundreds of hours of work to ensure that our written and oral examinations meet the highest standards. For the past seven years, this has been Keith’s way of cementing the Board’s reputation as the gold standard of certification for facial plastic surgeons — a cause that Larry Schoenrock proudly championed. ”
Dr. LaFerriere was elected to the ABFPRS Board of Directors and has served as an ABFPRS examiner for 13 years. He is now a senior advisor who has contributed generously to the financial well-being of the ABFPRS. Dr. LaFerriere was also one of the first candidates to sign up for, as well as complete, the ABFPRS MOC in FPRS® program and has worked continuously to persuade his colleagues that completing the MOC in FPRS® program is the right thing to do for the specialty.
In addition to his work for the ABFPRS, Dr. LaFerriere served as president of the AAFPRS in 2003-2004 and has been a fellowship director with Gregory J. Renner, MD, since 1995. He has also served on the IFFPSS Board for the past eight years and has been involved in the development of the international facial plastic surgery certification process while mentoring his international colleagues to pursue that newly emerging credential.
In addition to all his work for the ABFPRS, the AAFPRS, and the IFFPSS, Dr. LaFerriere has also represented the specialty with his appointment to the Missouri Board of Healing Arts, which is the licensing and disciplinary board for physicians in Missouri.
Nominations for the 2012 Schoenrock award should be addressed to the ABFPRS Executive Committee in care of ABFPRS, 115-C S. Saint Asaph St., Alexandria, VA 22314, or email SchoenrockAward@abfprs.org.