WIO: role models, trail blazers
Take advantage of the extraordinary networking and mentoring opportunities at this year’s WIO activities at the Annual Meeting. Learn about the incredible activities and career trajectories of some of our most respected leaders and interact in person.
By Christine B. Franzese, MD, EVMS Otolaryngology, Virginia Beach, VA
Take advantage of the extraordinary networking and mentoring opportunities at this year’s WIO activities at the Annual Meeting. Learn about the incredible activities and career trajectories of some of our most respected leaders and interact in person.
There are those who used to ask “what’s a nice girl like you doing in a profession like this?” That’s how the essay of one of the four women otolaryngologists featured in the book Being a Women Surgeon: Sixty Women Share Their Stories begins. Among the esteemed authors are our own Sujana S. Chandrasekhar, MD, Marion E. Couch, MD, PhD, MBA, Cherie-Ann Nathan, MD, and Kathleen Yaremchuk, MD, MSA.
These four accomplished women contributed heartfelt stories from their lives and experiences. Some are amusing and comical, some shocking or disturbing, some frustratingly sad, but all of them inspiring. These contributions describe the challenges and experiences from residency, from academics, and from private practice, that each of these women, faced and still face. Each independently describes the unfortunate lack of female role models, particularly female otolaryngology leadership role models.
So what are these nice girls doing in a profession like this? To paraphrase one, these girls are blazing trails, getting up when they’ve fallen, teaching themselves and others to be better, wearing blinders when needed, and taking them off to fight for what’s right when called for. I boldly add: You are also serving as role models. My sincerest thanks to each of you fiercely brilliant ladies for filling that void.
To continue this momentum, the WIO general assembly will be held in a new time slot at the Annual Meeting on Monday, 28, from 7:30-9:30 am. This year we break tradition having a panel rather than a speaker. The topic will be “Do We Still Need General Otolaryngologists?” Please join us for a lively and exciting debate.