1 / 25

Scholarship for the APD

Scholarship for the APD. Jonathan Davis , Georgetown Manish Garg , Temple Jacob Ufberg , Temple. Written Publications. Jacob Ufberg , M.D. “The Coin of the Realm”. Understand your P&T guidelines, and relative value of types of pubs Peer-reviewed Textbooks Non-peer

julius
Download Presentation

Scholarship for the APD

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Scholarship for the APD Jonathan Davis, Georgetown Manish Garg, Temple Jacob Ufberg, Temple

  2. Written Publications Jacob Ufberg, M.D.

  3. “The Coin of the Realm” • Understand your P&T guidelines, and relative value of types of pubs • Peer-reviewed • Textbooks • Non-peer • Shoot for “high-value” targets • Long-term career • Transferrable “credits”

  4. Work in Parallel • Say “YES” to publication opportunity • Get involved with productive people • Learn the process • Look for “spin-off” opportunity • Don’t poison the well- be on time and do good work • Say “no” as your niche develops

  5. Find Mentorship • Almost impossible to fly solo • Start local and build outward • Department • School • Regional • National • Often more than one, or “graduating” to new mentors

  6. Find Time • Be selfish- “closed door” time • Beware the “time-suck” • High commitment, low yield • Locally valuable, non-transferrable and non-promotable • Learn efficiency and time-management • Think risk/benefit • Talk to your boss

  7. Parlay • Publish what you are already doing • Speaking, education, service • This can be the beginning of a niche • Look for an “angle” • What else can I get out of this? • Put yourself out there • Look for help from mentors, senior faculty with connections

  8. Don’t let opportunity die on the vine Respond promptly Do you best ON TIME EVERY TIME Think ANGLE Taking work/ making work Be BOLD Abstracts MUST become manuscripts Write them together Resubmit quickly ABC – Always Be Closing

  9. Making Yourself Invaluable Manish Garg, M.D.

  10. Core Principles Learn the past, watch the present & CREATE the future Research and understand what is truly valued in your dept/institution Play nice in the sandbox; maximize your sweat equity Share & parlay at multiple levels

  11. Create, Create, Create! Choose a “hot” interest that may be un(der)represented in your department but ESPECIALLY in your institution Ultrasound, simulation and global health

  12. Create, Create, Create! Consider starting an elective, rotation or work-shop in med school, residency, or the hospital EM, global health, disaster medicine Teaching or administration rotation EM procedures workshop for non-EM residencies in the hospital

  13. What Is Truly Valued? Medical Students (first 2 years) desire clinical exposure ED shadowing; Clinical talks Medical Students (3rd & 4th year) desire guidance & mentorship Be a mentor, create teaching opportunities, get involved with EMIG

  14. What Is Truly Valued? Medical School desires clinical teaching and committee administration EKG/ultrasound/ortho/suturing/IV placement/OB workshops Admissions/honor board committees Residents desire interactive didactics, technical competence, scholarship & wellness

  15. What Is Truly Valued? EM Faculty desire a “go to person” EM Chair desires teaching, operational efficiency, ambassador & consistency Show up at conferences/JC/fac. meetings Hospital desires committee administration & cross-pollination GME, P&T, peer review, operations

  16. Play Nice In The Sandbox Remember that despite the time/personality pressures you face in the department or in the medical school, good interpersonal skills and rapport will build your reputation; it takes very little to self-implode

  17. Max Your Sweat Equity Initially say “YES!” with energy and great product As you mature, develop junior faculty by handing off your legacy creation Do the “best bang for your buck” later Remember to stay educationally relevant; evolve as learners morph; and reassess your educational priorities/goals to ensure continued impact/value

  18. Share & Parlay Med school, EM residencies & other residencies in the institution Advance scholarship and opportunities for yourself and your colleagues/learners This will create your unique niche on multiple levels of the dept/institutional arena and make you INVALUABLE to your department and institution!

  19. Public Speaking Jonathan Davis, M.D.

  20. Core Principles • Get the most from your “investment” • Parlay your efforts • Cross-fertilize • Continuously refine • Embrace serendipity • The 3 P’s: prepare, practice, perform

  21. Lessons Learned • Find an under-represented niche • cardiology vs. male GU • Parlay your efforts • leverage “line items” • gain experience, develop expertise • Cross-fertilize • additional “credit” for investment

  22. Lessons Learned • Embrace serendipity • early career = yes • mid-career = maybe • established career = no* • Put on a road show • grow, refine, gain confidence • Grand Rounds, Noon Conference

  23. Lessons Learned • Take advantage of high-profile opps • New Speakers: ACEP, AAEM • Take speaker evals in stride • reflect, learn, consider, but… • Learn from experienced speakers • observe: speaker, audience • non-medical

  24. Lessons Learned • Be yourself • funny? shocking? • passion…engage…learn • Prepare to perform

  25. Thank you!

More Related