2014 Honorary Guest Lectures – EXTENDED ONLINE VERSION
Each year the Annual Meeting & OTO EXPOSM features invited lecturers to present on topics of value epitomizing the highest standards that our profession has to offer. This year is no different. Each lecture is unique in prospective and tone. This year we are honored to have four exemplary lectures included as part of the programming presented by individuals who exemplify the best of the best in otolaryngology. John Conley, MD Lecture on Medical Ethics The John Conley, MD Lecture on Medical Ethics was established in 1987. 8:30 am Sunday, September 21 (Opening Ceremony Keynote Speaker) Rosemary Gibson is senior advisor to The Hastings Center and an editor for JAMA Internal Medicine and author. At the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation in Princeton, NJ, she led national healthcare quality and safety initiatives for 16 years. As chief architect of the foundation’s long-term strategy, she was developed the practice of palliative care in more than 1600 U.S. and for this received Lifetime Achievement Award from the AmericanAcademy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Ms. Gibson worked with Bill Moyers and Public Affairs Television on the PBS documentary, “On Our Own Terms,” about how to provide better care for seriously ill patients and their families. She initiated a series in the Journal of the American Medical Association, “Perspectives on Care at the Close of Life.” Along with positions of leadership with the American Board of Medical Specialties Public Policy Committee and the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education CLER Evaluation Committee acting to evaluate quality and patient safety in sponsoring institutions for residency training, Ms. Gibson belongs to the Consumers Union Safe Patient Project. Her publications often interpret the costs to individuals and more broadly to society of U.S. healthcare’s shortcomings, and have received acclaimed by peers and medical press. These titles include: Wall of Silence, the human story behind the Institute of Medicine report, To Err is Human; The Treatment Trap about overtreatment; The Battle Over Health Care: What Obama’s Health Care Reform Means for America’s Future; and Medicare Meltdown: How Wall Street and Washington Are Ruining Medicare and How to Fix It. AAO-HNS/F International Hearing Foundation/Michael M. Paparella, MD Endowed Lecture for Distinguished Contributions in Clinical Otology It recognizes outstanding achievements and significant sustained contributions to clinical otology and neurotology. Given biennially since 1992, the award is co-sponsored by the International Hearing Foundation. 9:30 am Monday, September 22 Richard A. Chole, MD, PhD, is a highly skilled clinician and surgeon, an outstanding administrator. After U.S.C. School of Medicine graduation, Dr. Chole and completed a residency and subsequent fellowship at the University of Minnesota School of Medicine. In tandem with this effort, he also finished a PhD in Otolaryngology Anatomy-Biochemistry track from the graduate school. Dr. Chole chose a position with the Department of Otolaryngology at University of California-Davis and later became a professor and chairman of the Otolaryngology Department from 1985-1998. In 1998, he became the Lindburg Professor and Head of the Department of Otolaryngology at Washington University School of Medicine. Here he also holds joint appointments as Professor in the Department of Molecular Biology and Pharmacology and in Audiology and Communication Sciences. His invitation to serve on the Advisory Council of the National Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD) of the National Institutes of Health by the Secretary of Health and Human Services is an outstanding honor. Dr. Chole was appointed on the Board of Scientific Counselors at the NIH in 2005 and he was elected to the Board of Directors of the American Board of Otolaryngology in 2000. He has served as President of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology in 1999-2000, President of the American Otological Society, in 2001-2002. Dr. Chole is a member of numerous professional societies, as well as university committees and is a sought after speaker, both nationally and internationally. He has authored more that 200 scientific publications, book chapters and editorials. He has been continually funded (since 1979) as a Principal Investigator from the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Chole has served as Chief of Otolaryngology at Barnes-JewishHospital since 1998, Chief of Staff at Barnes-JewishHospital from 2005-2007 and has served on the Barnes-Jewish Hospital Board of Directors. He is a member of the St. LouisCenter for Bioethics and Culture since 2001 Eugene N. Myers International Lecture on Head and Neck Cancer Established in 1991, it was endowed by Leslie Nicholas, MD, in honor of his nephew, Eugene N. Myers, MD, Past President of the AAO-HNS/F. 9:30 am Tuesday, September 23 Sheng-Po Hao, MD, FICS, is professor and chairman of the Department of Otolaryngology of Shin Kong Wu Ho-Su Memorial Hospital and Fu Jen Catholic University in Taiwan. Dr. Hao is a specialist in both Head and Neck Cancer Surgery and Skull Base Surgery. After his residency at ChangGungMemorialHospital, he perused an International Fellowship in Head and Neck Surgery in Pittsburgh, USA with Dr. Eugene N. Myers. He has published hundreds of articles and book chapters on the subject. Dr. Hao has given numerous International lectures including the Keynote Lecture in Seoul IFOS in 2013. In addition, he has been asked to present at medical gatherings around the world. Yale, University of Pittsburgh, and SeoulNationalUniversity have hosted Dr. Hao as a visiting professor. As an editor and reviewer, for more than 20 medical journals Dr. Hao has contributed to the body of knowledge on head and neck and skull base detection and treatment. Specifically, he served on the Editorial Board of Laryngoscope from 2005–2012. Dr. Hao is the founding President of Taiwan Head and Neck Society, Taiwan Oral Cancer Prevention and Therapy Association and the past President of Taiwan Skull Base Society. He is also the founding President and currently the Secretary General of Asian Society of Head and Neck Oncology. Dr. Hao also serves in the Head and Neck Committee and Nominating Committee in the International Federation of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery and also the Taiwan representative in the International Federation of Head and Neck Oncological Society. H. Bryan Neel III MD, PhD, Distinguished Research Lecture Funded by the Neel family and friends, it was established to disseminate information on new developments in biomedical science to the otolaryngologic community. 9:30 am Wednesday, September 24 Carter Van Waes, MD, PhD, is clinical director and chief, Head and Neck Surgery branch, NIDCD, and senior investigator, Radiation Oncology Sciences Program, NCI. In 1987, He received an NIH Medical Scientist Training Program Award and earned his MD and PhD in Tumor Immunology from University of Chicago. During his doctoral thesis research with Hans Schreiber, he showed that cancer cells express unique tumor antigens recognized by specific helper T cells, retained during tumor progression and metastasis. He took his Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery residency at University of Michigan. While there he completed an NIH supported postdoctoral fellowship in cancer 1988-90, discovering the integrin structure and laminin binding function of the A9 squamous cell carcinoma antigen. Dr Van Waes came to NIH as a Senior Staff Fellow in NIDCD, 1993/94, and was appointed as a tenure-track investigator and Acting Chief of the Tumor Biology Section, NIDCD in 1994. He established an NIDCD and inter-institute program with NCI and NIDCR in Head and Neck Cancer. Recently, Dr. Van Waes has contributed to broad understanding of the genetic alterations that contribute to HNSCC development, as part of The Cancer Genome Atlas NIH initiative. He served as Acting Clinical Director from 1995-2003, and has been Clinical Director and Chief, Head and Neck Surgery Branch, NIDCD since 2003. He is Director of NIDCD’s Otolaryngology Surgeon Scientist Career Development Program. Dr. Van Waes has served on the Editorial Boards of Cancer Research, Clinical Cancer Research, Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, Head and Neck and Oral Oncology. Among Dr. Van Waes’s awards are an NIH MSTP award, Leon Jacobson Prize for outstanding PhD thesis, and MD with honors from the University of Chicago. He received the Norwich Eaton Resident Research Award of the American Academy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery in 1989, and is a Fellow of AAO-HNS and American Association of Cancer Research. He has received a Merit, Special Act and Clinical Center Director’s awards for the building of the clinical research program in NIDCD and inter institute Head and Neck Cancer Program. In 2013, he received an award from NIH Director Francis Collins for leadership in developing an NIH-FDAIntramuralCenter for Tobacco Regulatory Sciences. Mark Your Calendar The following will be presented at the AAO-HNSF 2014 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPOSM Miniseminar – AAO-HNSF Clinical Practice Guideline: Tinnitus 10:30 am-11:50 am Sunday, September 21 Moderator: David E. Tunkel, MD Instruction Course – Understanding Clinical Practice Guidelines 12:30 pm-1:30 pm Sunday, September 21 Instructors: Richard M. Rosenfeld, MD, MPH, and Stephanie Jones Miniseminar – AAO-HNSF Clinical Consensus Statement: Chronic and Recurrent Pediatric Sinusitis 8:00 am-9:20 am Monday, September 22 Moderator: Scott E. Brietzke, MD, MPH Miniseminar – AAO-HNSF Clinical Practice Guideline: Allergic Rhinitis 9:30 am-10:20 am Monday, September 22 Moderator: Michael D. Seidman, MD
Each year the Annual Meeting & OTO EXPOSM features invited lecturers to present on topics of value epitomizing the highest standards that our profession has to offer. This year is no different. Each lecture is unique in prospective and tone. This year we are honored to have four exemplary lectures included as part of the programming presented by individuals who exemplify the best of the best in otolaryngology.
John Conley, MD Lecture on Medical Ethics
The John Conley, MD Lecture on Medical Ethics was established in 1987.
8:30 am Sunday, September 21 (Opening Ceremony Keynote Speaker)
Rosemary Gibson is senior advisor to The Hastings Center and an editor for JAMA Internal Medicine and author. At the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation in Princeton, NJ, she led national healthcare quality and safety initiatives for 16 years. As chief architect of the foundation’s long-term strategy, she was developed the practice of palliative care in more than 1600 U.S. and for this received Lifetime Achievement Award from the AmericanAcademy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine.
Ms. Gibson worked with Bill Moyers and Public Affairs Television on the PBS documentary, “On Our Own Terms,” about how to provide better care for seriously ill patients and their families. She initiated a series in the Journal of the American Medical Association, “Perspectives on Care at the Close of Life.”
Along with positions of leadership with the American Board of Medical Specialties Public Policy Committee and the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education CLER Evaluation Committee acting to evaluate quality and patient safety in sponsoring institutions for residency training, Ms. Gibson belongs to the Consumers Union Safe Patient Project.
Her publications often interpret the costs to individuals and more broadly to society of U.S. healthcare’s shortcomings, and have received acclaimed by peers and medical press. These titles include: Wall of Silence, the human story behind the Institute of Medicine report, To Err is Human; The Treatment Trap about overtreatment; The Battle Over Health Care: What Obama’s Health Care Reform Means for America’s Future; and Medicare Meltdown: How Wall Street and Washington Are Ruining Medicare and How to Fix It.
AAO-HNS/F International Hearing Foundation/Michael M. Paparella, MD Endowed Lecture for Distinguished Contributions in Clinical Otology
It recognizes outstanding achievements and significant sustained contributions to clinical otology and neurotology. Given biennially since 1992, the award is co-sponsored by the International Hearing Foundation.
9:30 am Monday, September 22
Richard A. Chole, MD, PhD, is a highly skilled clinician and surgeon, an outstanding administrator.
After U.S.C. School of Medicine graduation, Dr. Chole and completed a residency and subsequent fellowship at the University of Minnesota School of Medicine. In tandem with this effort, he also finished a PhD in Otolaryngology Anatomy-Biochemistry track from the graduate school. Dr. Chole chose a position with the Department of Otolaryngology at University of California-Davis and later became a professor and chairman of the Otolaryngology Department from 1985-1998.
In 1998, he became the Lindburg Professor and Head of the Department of Otolaryngology at Washington University School of Medicine. Here he also holds joint appointments as Professor in the Department of Molecular Biology and Pharmacology and in Audiology and Communication Sciences. His invitation to serve on the Advisory Council of the National Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD) of the National Institutes of Health by the Secretary of Health and Human Services is an outstanding honor.
Dr. Chole was appointed on the Board of Scientific Counselors at the NIH in 2005 and he was elected to the Board of Directors of the American Board of Otolaryngology in 2000. He has served as President of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology in 1999-2000, President of the American Otological Society, in 2001-2002.
Dr. Chole is a member of numerous professional societies, as well as university committees and is a sought after speaker, both nationally and internationally. He has authored more that 200 scientific publications, book chapters and editorials. He has been continually funded (since 1979) as a Principal Investigator from the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Chole has served as Chief of Otolaryngology at Barnes-JewishHospital since 1998, Chief of Staff at Barnes-JewishHospital from 2005-2007 and has served on the Barnes-Jewish Hospital Board of Directors. He is a member of the St. LouisCenter for Bioethics and Culture since 2001
Eugene N. Myers International Lecture on Head and Neck Cancer
Established in 1991, it was endowed by Leslie Nicholas, MD, in honor of his nephew, Eugene N. Myers, MD, Past President of the AAO-HNS/F.
9:30 am Tuesday, September 23
Sheng-Po Hao, MD, FICS, is professor and chairman of the Department of Otolaryngology of Shin Kong Wu Ho-Su Memorial Hospital and Fu Jen Catholic University in Taiwan. Dr. Hao is a specialist in both Head and Neck Cancer Surgery and Skull Base Surgery.
After his residency at ChangGungMemorialHospital, he perused an International Fellowship in Head and Neck Surgery in Pittsburgh, USA with Dr. Eugene N. Myers. He has published hundreds of articles and book chapters on the subject. Dr. Hao has given numerous International lectures including the Keynote Lecture in Seoul IFOS in 2013. In addition, he has been asked to present at medical gatherings around the world. Yale, University of Pittsburgh, and SeoulNationalUniversity have hosted Dr. Hao as a visiting professor.
As an editor and reviewer, for more than 20 medical journals Dr. Hao has contributed to the body of knowledge on head and neck and skull base detection and treatment. Specifically, he served on the Editorial Board of Laryngoscope from 2005–2012.
Dr. Hao is the founding President of Taiwan Head and Neck Society, Taiwan Oral Cancer Prevention and Therapy Association and the past President of Taiwan Skull Base Society. He is also the founding President and currently the Secretary General of Asian Society of Head and Neck Oncology. Dr. Hao also serves in the Head and Neck Committee and Nominating Committee in the International Federation of Otolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery and also the Taiwan representative in the International Federation of Head and Neck Oncological Society.
H. Bryan Neel III MD, PhD, Distinguished Research Lecture
Funded by the Neel family and friends, it was established to disseminate information on new developments in biomedical science to the otolaryngologic community.
9:30 am Wednesday, September 24
Carter Van Waes, MD, PhD, is clinical director and chief, Head and Neck Surgery branch, NIDCD, and senior investigator, Radiation Oncology Sciences Program, NCI. In 1987, He received an NIH Medical Scientist Training Program Award and earned his MD and PhD in Tumor Immunology from University of Chicago. During his doctoral thesis research with Hans Schreiber, he showed that cancer cells express unique tumor antigens recognized by specific helper T cells, retained during tumor progression and metastasis. He took his Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery residency at University of Michigan. While there he completed an NIH supported postdoctoral fellowship in cancer 1988-90, discovering the integrin structure and laminin binding function of the A9 squamous cell carcinoma antigen.
Dr Van Waes came to NIH as a Senior Staff Fellow in NIDCD, 1993/94, and was appointed as a tenure-track investigator and Acting Chief of the Tumor Biology Section, NIDCD in 1994. He established an NIDCD and inter-institute program with NCI and NIDCR in Head and Neck Cancer. Recently, Dr. Van Waes has contributed to broad understanding of the genetic alterations that contribute to HNSCC development, as part of The Cancer Genome Atlas NIH initiative.
He served as Acting Clinical Director from 1995-2003, and has been Clinical Director and Chief, Head and Neck Surgery Branch, NIDCD since 2003. He is Director of NIDCD’s Otolaryngology Surgeon Scientist Career Development Program. Dr. Van Waes has served on the Editorial Boards of Cancer Research, Clinical Cancer Research, Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, Head and Neck and Oral Oncology.
Among Dr. Van Waes’s awards are an NIH MSTP award, Leon Jacobson Prize for outstanding PhD thesis, and MD with honors from the University of Chicago. He received the Norwich Eaton Resident Research Award of the American Academy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery in 1989, and is a Fellow of AAO-HNS and American Association of Cancer Research. He has received a Merit, Special Act and Clinical Center Director’s awards for the building of the clinical research program in NIDCD and inter institute Head and Neck Cancer Program. In 2013, he received an award from NIH Director Francis Collins for leadership in developing an NIH-FDAIntramuralCenter for Tobacco Regulatory Sciences.
Mark Your Calendar
The following will be presented at the AAO-HNSF 2014 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPOSM
Miniseminar – AAO-HNSF Clinical Practice Guideline: Tinnitus
10:30 am-11:50 am Sunday, September 21
Moderator: David E. Tunkel, MD
Instruction Course – Understanding Clinical Practice Guidelines
12:30 pm-1:30 pm Sunday, September 21
Instructors: Richard M. Rosenfeld, MD, MPH, and Stephanie Jones
Miniseminar – AAO-HNSF Clinical Consensus Statement: Chronic and Recurrent Pediatric Sinusitis
8:00 am-9:20 am Monday, September 22
Moderator: Scott E. Brietzke, MD, MPH
Miniseminar – AAO-HNSF Clinical Practice Guideline: Allergic Rhinitis
9:30 am-10:20 am Monday, September 22
Moderator: Michael D. Seidman, MD