Reconnecting
Richard W. Waguespack, MD AAO-HNS/F President Sometimes we get stuck. We get lost in the process—the details—the sticking points and we forget to keep our sights on the end goal. We suddenly realize that we are involved in an issue so complex that it obfuscates passage, that we do not know where we are and cannot see the “markers” that may help us find our way. We all from time to time share this predicament, but our responses to it vary greatly. Do we continue on, doggedly convinced of the ideal, despite finding ourselves isolated and unsure? Or do we look for signs, blazes on the trees, so to speak, that lead us to other seekers who work together to find the way? When the sun shines along the way and the trails are clearly marked, we can sometimes be lucky enough to navigate alone. Often, however, this is not the case, and making progress becomes more time-consuming and frustrating. How we respond to our predicaments makes a difference. Our practice environments today provide ample opportunity for us as individuals in either a community-based or academic setting, to veer off course, and be overwhelmed. It is just such a time when the Academy can help us reconnect by drawing upon its resources. The Academy Board of Governors, for example, is well aware of the incredible challenges you, its members, face in finding your way through the ongoing requirements of change. Often local medical societies are the first to identify specific issues as they emerge in a community. To quote the AAO-HNS BOG Model Society Handbook, “…local societies have a significant advantage…because issues directly affect the local practitioner and the community. The result is a stronger desire for involvement.” The society is small and agile and built on personal relationships between the medical community and governing agents. These society-built relationships then become an asset to the Academy and you. When local societies work with the AAO-HNS Board of Governors network, such as those awarded each year as model societies, they coalesce their resources and function as a high-performing team for the overall good of the state society and the specialty. The BOG has a long history of leading our state societies to benefit the specialty at the national, regional, and state levels. They form an important legislative, socioeconomic, and public relations force for the specialty at large. At the national level the BOG accesses its collective power and reach to lead and find solutions that individuals and smaller societies cannot. I am reminded of our EVP and CEO David Nielsen’s BOG leadership in the late ‘90s for the hugely successful AAO-HNS Through with Chew campaign. In this effort, the Academy’s BOG developed a national message that received considerable attention. Many such successes have occurred since then marking the effectiveness of this pathway. Last year, the New York State Society of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery (NYSSO) was able to organize around legislative challenges and leverage relationships with other state organizations and individuals to be heard in its legislature. These resources help us all reconnect and find solutions together. Please click here for a listing of the newly organized regional BOG groupings that may help you make the right connection.
Richard W. Waguespack, MD
AAO-HNS/F President
Sometimes we get stuck. We get lost in the process—the details—the sticking points and we forget to keep our sights on the end goal. We suddenly realize that we are involved in an issue so complex that it obfuscates passage, that we do not know where we are and cannot see the “markers” that may help us find our way.
We all from time to time share this predicament, but our responses to it vary greatly. Do we continue on, doggedly convinced of the ideal, despite finding ourselves isolated and unsure? Or do we look for signs, blazes on the trees, so to speak, that lead us to other seekers who work together to find the way?
When the sun shines along the way and the trails are clearly marked, we can sometimes be lucky enough to navigate alone. Often, however, this is not the case, and making progress becomes more time-consuming and frustrating. How we respond to our predicaments makes a difference.
Our practice environments today provide ample opportunity for us as individuals in either a community-based or academic setting, to veer off course, and be overwhelmed. It is just such a time when the Academy can help us reconnect by drawing upon its resources.
The Academy Board of Governors, for example, is well aware of the incredible challenges you, its members, face in finding your way through the ongoing requirements of change. Often local medical societies are the first to identify specific issues as they emerge in a community. To quote the AAO-HNS BOG Model Society Handbook, “…local societies have a significant advantage…because issues directly affect the local practitioner and the community. The result is a stronger desire for involvement.” The society is small and agile and built on personal relationships between the medical community and governing agents. These society-built relationships then become an asset to the Academy and you.
When local societies work with the AAO-HNS Board of Governors network, such as those awarded each year as model societies, they coalesce their resources and function as a high-performing team for the overall good of the state society and the specialty.
The BOG has a long history of leading our state societies to benefit the specialty at the national, regional, and state levels. They form an important legislative, socioeconomic, and public relations force for the specialty at large. At the national level the BOG accesses its collective power and reach to lead and find solutions that individuals and smaller societies cannot.
I am reminded of our EVP and CEO David Nielsen’s BOG leadership in the late ‘90s for the hugely successful AAO-HNS Through with Chew campaign. In this effort, the Academy’s BOG developed a national message that received considerable attention.
Many such successes have occurred since then marking the effectiveness of this pathway. Last year, the New York State Society of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery (NYSSO) was able to organize around legislative challenges and leverage relationships with other state organizations and individuals to be heard in its legislature.
These resources help us all reconnect and find solutions together. Please click here for a listing of the newly organized regional BOG groupings that may help you make the right connection.