Gear Up for the Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO
M. Steele Brown, special to the Bulletin It’s getting to be that time again. Early registration and housing opens for the American Academy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery Foundation’s 2011 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO on May 2, so it’s time to start thinking about your trip. The world’s largest gathering of otolaryngologists, this year’s meeting will be held September 11-14, at the Moscone Center in San Francisco. The event, which is expected to bring together 9,000+ attendees and more than 300 exhibiting companies, will educate otolaryngologist—head and neck surgeons about the newest leading-edge tools and techniques, present ground-breaking discoveries, and provide an opportunity to renew old friendships and meet new colleagues. Ready for Registration At present, the Academy is gearing up for the early meeting registration push. Meeting registration and the 2011 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO Preliminary Program, will be available with the May edition of the Bulletin. The best way to register is online at www.entnet.org/annual_meeting or call the registration line at 1-866-212-0683 or 1-972-349-5970. Building the Program With Miniseminar and Instruction Course proposal qualifiers already selected — the notifications for oral and poster Scientific Program Abstracts are set to be mailed in May. Although the AAO-HNSF isn’t quite ready to drop the green curtain on the preliminary program for the 2011 San Francisco event, members should expect the same high-quality meeting they’ve experienced year to year. The 2010 program in Boston featured approximately 76 miniseminars, 250 oral presentations, 400 poster presentations, and 342 instruction courses, which represented a more than double-digit increase in every category compared to the 2009 meeting in San Diego. Like its predecessor, the San Francisco program promises to be integrated across all areas of the specialty, including the newest discoveries in basic and translational science, as well as the latest trends in clinical research and practice. The Academy will again make CME stations available in the convention center, which will give attendees the opportunity to evaluate a course immediately after attending it. CME credits earned will be included in the official transcript sent to physicians in January. A Certificate of Attendance will also be available for printing at certain points in the convention center. Networking The Academy will continue to offer opportunities to attendees whose goal it is to find a new job, employee, or research partner. A list of available events and networking locations will be made available at the Moscone Center. The popular alumni events also will be on tap, allowing former colleagues to rekindle their professional relationships and catch up with old friends. The Millennium Society Appreciation Lounge will be open for business in San Francisco. Eligible visitors may take advantage of the business services available in the lounge, which include telephones, fax machines and computers for checking email and browsing the Internet. Millennium Society members can get help with course registrations and the submission of CME evaluations, as well as information about local events and meeting activities. The Academy will continue to offer an online itinerary planner in San Francisco, complete with a downloadable appointment scheduler. This application includes all education and scientific programming, social functions, and committee and other special meetings taking place at the 2011 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO. As one satisfied attendee indicated, the Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO “inspires one to continue providing excellent care because of the universal bond between all otolaryngologists, which can be seen and felt when we all gather together.” Golden Locale The location of this year’s meeting is second to none. Known by many different names – “The Golden Gate City,” “The City by the Bay,” and “Everybody’s Favorite City” to name a few – San Francisco offers scenic beauty, cultural attractions, diverse communities, and world-class cuisine. Measuring 49 square miles, the 12th-largest U.S. city is dotted with landmarks like the Golden Gate Bridge, cable cars, Alcatraz, and the largest Chinatown in the United States. A stroll of the city’s streets can lead to Union Square, the Italian-flavored North Beach, Fisherman’s Wharf, the Castro district, Japantown, and the Mission District, with intriguing neighborhoods to explore at every turn. If you’re planning on walking, make sure to pack good shoes and the right clothing. San Francisco has some major hills and unique weather. While the rest of the country is starting to cool down, many consider fall to be the best time of year for weather in San Francisco, with warm, sunny days and mild, clear nights. It can, at times, get hot in September, so if you’re planning to walk, check the forecast and pack appropriately. Rainfall at this time of year is rare, and, for the most part, the ever-present fog has cleared, so this is one of the best times to visit San Francisco. Views of the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay create a romantic mood in this European-influenced city. The city has a colorful past, growing from a small village to a major city nearly overnight as a result of the 1849 Gold Rush. The writers of the beat generation — Jack Kerouac and Alan Ginsberg are two good examples of the hippies of the Summer of Love in the late 1960s, and the large international population have all contributed to making San Francisco the fascinating place it is today. The city is home to world-class theater, opera, symphony, and ballet companies and often boasts premieres of Broadway-bound plays and culture-changing performing arts. San Francisco is also widely regarded as one of America’s best dining cities. The diverse cultural influences, proximity to the freshest ingredients, and competitive creativity of the many and varied chefs, results in an array of unforgettable dining experiences. San Francisco also offers first-class hotels and ultra-chic boutique hotels. The Academy has negotiated excellent hotel rates and has made the reservation process seamless when you book your hotel after registering for the meeting. Go online to register for the meeting at www.entnet.org/annual_meeting, and make your hotel reservation at the same time. If you want to get out of the city, you might try hiking or mountain biking through Mount Tamalpais across the Golden Gate in Marin County or a tour of the vineyards in Napa Valley. If you’re planning an extended stay in the area, there’s surfing just south in Santa Cruz or the beautiful scenery to be had a few hours north in Lake Tahoe. For more information on registration, hotels, events, activities, and transportation in San Francisco, visit www.entnet.org/annual_meeting.
M. Steele Brown, special to the Bulletin
It’s getting to be that time again.
Early registration and housing opens for the American Academy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery Foundation’s 2011 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO on May 2, so it’s time to start thinking about your trip. The world’s largest gathering of otolaryngologists, this year’s meeting will be held September 11-14, at the Moscone Center in San Francisco. The event, which is expected to bring together 9,000+ attendees and more than 300 exhibiting companies, will educate otolaryngologist—head and neck surgeons about the newest leading-edge tools and techniques, present ground-breaking discoveries, and provide an opportunity to renew old friendships and meet new colleagues.
Ready for Registration
At present, the Academy is gearing up for the early meeting registration push. Meeting registration and the 2011 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO Preliminary Program, will be available with the May edition of the Bulletin. The best way to register is online at www.entnet.org/annual_meeting or call the registration line at 1-866-212-0683 or 1-972-349-5970.
Building the Program
With Miniseminar and Instruction Course proposal qualifiers already selected — the notifications for oral and poster Scientific Program Abstracts are set to be mailed in May. Although the AAO-HNSF isn’t quite ready to drop the green curtain on the preliminary program for the 2011 San Francisco event, members should expect the same high-quality meeting they’ve experienced year to year.
The 2010 program in Boston featured approximately 76 miniseminars, 250 oral presentations, 400 poster presentations, and 342 instruction courses, which represented a more than double-digit increase in every category compared to the 2009 meeting in San Diego.
Like its predecessor, the San Francisco program promises to be integrated across all areas of the specialty, including the newest discoveries in basic and translational science, as well as the latest trends in clinical research and practice. The Academy will again make CME stations available in the convention center, which will give attendees the opportunity to evaluate a course immediately after attending it. CME credits earned will be included in the official transcript sent to physicians in January. A Certificate of Attendance will also be available for printing at certain points in the convention center.
Networking
The Academy will continue to offer opportunities to attendees whose goal it is to find a new job, employee, or research partner. A list of available events and networking locations will be made available at the Moscone Center. The popular alumni events also will be on tap, allowing former colleagues to rekindle their professional relationships and catch up with old friends.
The Millennium Society Appreciation Lounge will be open for business in San Francisco. Eligible visitors may take advantage of the business services available in the lounge, which include telephones, fax machines and computers for checking email and browsing the Internet. Millennium Society members can get help with course registrations and the submission of CME evaluations, as well as information about local events and meeting activities.
The Academy will continue to offer an online itinerary planner in San Francisco, complete with a downloadable appointment scheduler. This application includes all education and scientific programming, social functions, and committee and other special meetings taking place at the 2011 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO.
As one satisfied attendee indicated, the Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO “inspires one to continue providing excellent care because of the universal bond between all otolaryngologists, which can be seen and felt when we all gather together.”
Golden Locale
The location of this year’s meeting is second to none.
Known by many different names – “The Golden Gate City,” “The City by the Bay,” and “Everybody’s Favorite City” to name a few – San Francisco offers scenic beauty, cultural attractions, diverse communities, and world-class cuisine. Measuring 49 square miles, the 12th-largest U.S. city is dotted with landmarks like the Golden Gate Bridge, cable cars, Alcatraz, and the largest Chinatown in the United States. A stroll of the city’s streets can lead to Union Square, the Italian-flavored North Beach, Fisherman’s Wharf, the Castro district, Japantown, and the Mission District, with intriguing neighborhoods to explore at every turn.
If you’re planning on walking, make sure to pack good shoes and the right clothing. San Francisco has some major hills and unique weather. While the rest of the country is starting to cool down, many consider fall to be the best time of year for weather in San Francisco, with warm, sunny days and mild, clear nights. It can, at times, get hot in September, so if you’re planning to walk, check the forecast and pack appropriately.
Rainfall at this time of year is rare, and, for the most part, the ever-present fog has cleared, so this is one of the best times to visit San Francisco.
Views of the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay create a romantic mood in this European-influenced city. The city has a colorful past, growing from a small village to a major city nearly overnight as a result of the 1849 Gold Rush. The writers of the beat generation — Jack Kerouac and Alan Ginsberg are two good examples of the hippies of the Summer of Love in the late 1960s, and the large international population have all contributed to making San Francisco the fascinating place it is today.
The city is home to world-class theater, opera, symphony, and ballet companies and often boasts premieres of Broadway-bound plays and culture-changing performing arts. San Francisco is also widely regarded as one of America’s best dining cities. The diverse cultural influences, proximity to the freshest ingredients, and competitive creativity of the many and varied chefs, results in an array of unforgettable dining experiences.
San Francisco also offers first-class hotels and ultra-chic boutique hotels. The Academy has negotiated excellent hotel rates and has made the reservation process seamless when you book your hotel after registering for the meeting. Go online to register for the meeting at www.entnet.org/annual_meeting, and make your hotel reservation at the same time.
If you want to get out of the city, you might try hiking or mountain biking through Mount Tamalpais across the Golden Gate in Marin County or a tour of the vineyards in Napa Valley. If you’re planning an extended stay in the area, there’s surfing just south in Santa Cruz or the beautiful scenery to be had a few hours north in Lake Tahoe.
For more information on registration, hotels, events, activities, and transportation in San Francisco, visit www.entnet.org/annual_meeting.