Our Envisioned Future
As springtime approaches, Academy leaders, Boards, and staff are completing the final draft of our 2011-2012 operational plan. The approaching spring coincides with the renewal that takes place each year as we update and improve our efforts to achieve our goals. The current round began last fall with a long-term view of what we wish to see — our attempt at a “vivid description” of our envisioned future. Your Boards of Directors and senior staff met in December to look beyond the near future to the next 10 to 30 years at what we think, or hope, will occur. Some of the exciting ideas and futuristic comments we discussed were “industry” or overall professional dreams: finding a way to cure or eliminate sensory-neural hearing loss; expanding our knowledge of the human genome to eliminate allergies and infectious diseases; and implementing robotic surgery techniques. Although these goals are not specifically achievable for the Academy, nor do we alone have the resources to address them, the collective efforts of our members, along with valued colleagues in related disciplines, will undoubtedly achieve goals once thought unimaginable. Fifty years ago, any descriptions of routine surgical laser use, robotic surgery of the head and neck and airway, cochlear implants, and a host of other developments were hardly believable. I think all of us would agree that as technology advances, we practice medicine in ways we did not learn in residency. Although being strategic and effective requires that we create and achieve measurable goals within a specified time frame, we must also stay relevant by ensuring that our processes, programs, and activities are moving us toward the best that we can envision for the long-term future. We continue to improve our stated aspirations, which are laudable but need to be converted into measurable and achievable goals. Some of them are affirmative statements, such as: We improve the health of all people by preventing, treating, or curing otolaryngic diseases. Our members, partners, and the public know and value what we do. We have diverse leadership and staff who work together in integrated teams. We collaborate with specialty societies and strategic partners who share our vision and values. We provide the knowledge base that supports physician and patient education for the specialty. We have an optimal level of evidence to demonstrate and measure the quality of care our members provide. We believe in a long-term, continually growing, philanthropic endowment, supported by members and friends. We convene the world’s best otolaryngology meeting. These objectives, along with associated operational specifics and actions, are constantly modified and improved on. While qualitative and admittedly aspirational, they can lead to more specific descriptors of our envisioned future, such as: AAO-HNS will provide educational resources: For specific learners (medical students, residents, allied health professionals, otolaryngologists, other physicians, and the public); That are integrally linked to point-of-care access and systems; That are accessible and affordable. We will assist in the development of tools and systems that address gaps in healthcare and improve patient outcomes. We will continue to foster unity by collaborating internally and externally to continually adapt to change. We will ensure that partners (members and collaborators) are satisfied, through education, advocacy, effective communication, and extending our vision to encompass all providers of otolaryngic care, not just our members. (We will be the one-stop shop for all resources related to ENT care). We will effectively link all stakeholders for collaborative efforts to positively affect our patients (research, acquisition, and sharing of knowledge, technology implementation, and improving access to quality care). We will have a continuously growing endowment to ensure financial stability. Such statements are general, but they lead to specific actions and strategies that must be employed to be successful. Using them as a guide, we can evaluate the best of what we do — the Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO; our journal, Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery and the Bulletin; AcademyU, Home Study Course, online and other educational offerings; CORE and research support; guidelines development; Specialty Society Advisory Council (SSAC); Joint Surgical Advocacy Conference (JSAC); ENT PAC; and many others. This will allow us to see if they are leading us to our envisioned future, and what else we can do to increase our relevance to our members. In addition, for a few years we have been building an endowment to help underwrite these efforts and ensure that we remain strong. In the next few months, as required by our bylaws, you will be notified of the proposed annual budget. In the fall, you will receive updates at the Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO. Please take the time to discuss them with your elected leaders to ensure that we continue to move toward the best that we can envision, for our future and the future health of our patients.
As springtime approaches, Academy leaders, Boards, and staff are completing the final draft of our 2011-2012 operational plan. The approaching spring coincides with the renewal that takes place each year as we update and improve our efforts to achieve our goals. The current round began last fall with a long-term view of what we wish to see — our attempt at a “vivid description” of our envisioned future. Your Boards of Directors and senior staff met in December to look beyond the near future to the next 10 to 30 years at what we think, or hope, will occur.
Some of the exciting ideas and futuristic comments we discussed were “industry” or overall professional dreams: finding a way to cure or eliminate sensory-neural hearing loss; expanding our knowledge of the human genome to eliminate allergies and infectious diseases; and implementing robotic surgery techniques. Although these goals are not specifically achievable for the Academy, nor do we alone have the resources to address them, the collective efforts of our members, along with valued colleagues in related disciplines, will undoubtedly achieve goals once thought unimaginable. Fifty years ago, any descriptions of routine surgical laser use, robotic surgery of the head and neck and airway, cochlear implants, and a host of other developments were hardly believable.
I think all of us would agree that as technology advances, we practice medicine in ways we did not learn in residency. Although being strategic and effective requires that we create and achieve measurable goals within a specified time frame, we must also stay relevant by ensuring that our processes, programs, and activities are moving us toward the best that we can envision for the long-term future.
We continue to improve our stated aspirations, which are laudable but need to be converted into measurable and achievable goals. Some of them are affirmative statements, such as:
- We improve the health of all people by preventing, treating, or curing otolaryngic diseases.
- Our members, partners, and the public know and value what we do.
- We have diverse leadership and staff who work together in integrated teams.
- We collaborate with specialty societies and strategic partners who share our vision and values.
- We provide the knowledge base that supports physician and patient education for the specialty.
- We have an optimal level of evidence to demonstrate and measure the quality of care our members provide.
- We believe in a long-term, continually growing, philanthropic endowment, supported by members and friends.
- We convene the world’s best otolaryngology meeting.
These objectives, along with associated operational specifics and actions, are constantly modified and improved on. While qualitative and admittedly aspirational, they can lead to more specific descriptors of our envisioned future, such as:
- AAO-HNS will provide educational resources:
- For specific learners (medical students, residents, allied health professionals, otolaryngologists, other physicians, and the public);
- That are integrally linked to point-of-care access and systems;
- That are accessible and affordable.
- We will assist in the development of tools and systems that address gaps in healthcare and improve patient outcomes.
- We will continue to foster unity by collaborating internally and externally to continually adapt to change.
- We will ensure that partners (members and collaborators) are satisfied, through education, advocacy, effective communication, and extending our vision to encompass all providers of otolaryngic care, not just our members. (We will be the one-stop shop for all resources related to ENT care).
- We will effectively link all stakeholders for collaborative efforts to positively affect our patients (research, acquisition, and sharing of knowledge, technology implementation, and improving access to quality care).
- We will have a continuously growing endowment to ensure financial stability.
Such statements are general, but they lead to specific actions and strategies that must be employed to be successful. Using them as a guide, we can evaluate the best of what we do — the Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO; our journal, Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery and the Bulletin; AcademyU, Home Study Course, online and other educational offerings; CORE and research support; guidelines development; Specialty Society Advisory Council (SSAC); Joint Surgical Advocacy Conference (JSAC); ENT PAC; and many others. This will allow us to see if they are leading us to our envisioned future, and what else we can do to increase our relevance to our members. In addition, for a few years we have been building an endowment to help underwrite these efforts and ensure that we remain strong.
In the next few months, as required by our bylaws, you will be notified of the proposed annual budget. In the fall, you will receive updates at the Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO. Please take the time to discuss them with your elected leaders to ensure that we continue to move toward the best that we can envision, for our future and the future health of our patients.