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On-site reporting from the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons (SGS) Scientific Meeting

3/26/14. Day 3 at SGS
Debates, rebuttals, and relaxation

The morning at SGS was divided up between the small-group academic roundtables with experts in the fields. Topics ranged from mesh complications to coding and billing, and even a primer on urology for the gynecologist.

In the main hall, Drs. Dee Feener and Mark Walters outlined the challenges and opportunities for training the next generation of gynecologic surgeons. Dr. Feener argued that there simply are not enough cases, not enough time, and not enough people to train excellent surgeons. A perfect storm. Dr. Walters outlined his program and resident support at the Cleveland Clinic, showing how to provide robust experience and feedback to residents and fellows. Questions from the audience were pointed, and questioned the need to track obstetrics and gynecology separately for trainees.

Oral posters today also added to the debate with Vanderbilt sharing their hysterectomy training experience both before and after adding a fellowship. They did not see any change in vaginal hysterectomy participation over time. Most interesting was a study looking at abstract acceptance rates if an institution, research network, or author were disclosed in the body of a blinded abstract. They saw a much higher rate of acceptance if the source of the research was known by the reviewer. In his discussion, Dr. John Gebhart mused if the quality of these studies were somehow better, or if this perceived association resulted in any true bias. Nevertheless, the audience was actively engaged in the discussion.

The morning's highlight was certainly the debate over cosmetic gynecologic surgery. Dr. Rachel Pauls advocated FOR labiaplasty and Dr. Becky Rogers AGAINST. Though spirited and based largely on the principals of medical ethics, the final blow came from Dr. Rogers as she distributed Love Our Labia (LOL) buttons to the audience and presented Dr. Pauls with a pink LOL t-shirt. The Twitter feed exploded after this. 

Follow us on Twitter @obgmanagement #SGS14.

The evening wrapped up with a lively social event in the exhibit hall with the meeting sponsors, colleagues, and friends. 

We were also honored to have Dr. Clifford Ko, director of the American College of Surgeons Quality Improvement Program, as the esteemed Telinde lecturer. This robust and data-filled talk underlines his thesis that accurate, believable, and actionable data can be used to create quality in surgery. Quality improvement is local, he stated, and culture is the hardest institutional characteristic to change. Though any team working together on quality will elevate their culture if the data are good and the benefit to patients is clear. Dr. Ko, a colorectal surgeon at UCLA, is also now an honorary member of SGS.

The afternoon adjourned after the business meeting, and members were able to play golf, tour the desert in 4-wheel drive, or just relax in the lazy river by the pool. Activities were threatened by a large dust storm in Phoenix, but I have heard of no reports of problems.

Everyone convened at the outside terrace for the evening Fiesta Margarita reception. Over drinks and Southwest-themed sombreros, the new Michael Aronson Fund was announced to support Surgeons Helping Advance Research and Education (SHARE). This was the result of more than $25,000 raised by the program committee and SGS Board. Tomorrow looks to be an excellent conclusion to a well-planned and very well-executed meeting.

Follow us on Twitter @obgmanagement #SGS14.

3/25/14. Day 2 at SGS
Scientific sessions and socializing

The first day of the SGS scientific sessions was another energetic and interactive day. Oral posters stimulated heated debates on uterine morcellation, asymptomatic prolapse, and resident training. The Fellows Pelvic Research Network (FPRN) presented their work on the introduction of robotic hysterectomies to training centers. They showed that number of hysterectomies went down, and participation in robotic cases was poor. 

This was followed by the exceptional keynote address by Dr. Barbara Levy. She shared her expertise of health policy and described the coming of quality-based payment, value in Supervises, and the need to protect resources. She predicted that hospitals need to cut costs by 25% to 30% in the next 5 years just to survive.

The afternoon videofest included surgical techniques, anatomy instruction, and a comprehensive review on bowel surgery for the practicing gynecologist. 

For the second year running, the SGS hosted a mock NIH study session. Dr. Katherine Hartmann of Vanderbilt University provided background prep to prepare fellows for a K or R award application. Combined with a most-study section review of two actual applications demystified the process of grant review (and rejection). 

The FPRN met to update their ongoing projects and to review new proposals. This was an enlightening and engaging session which should give everyone great hope to see the creativity and energy of the next generation of researchers. 

 

 

SGS President Dr. Holly Richter had the great honor to present the best poster and video awards, as well as recognize the largest new-member class in the history of SGS. Dr. Norton was recognized for the best member presentation, which was on long-term prolapse follow-up in the TOMUS trial cohort. The FPRN was also recognized for their work on the impact of robotic hysterectomy in training. 

The evening wrapped up with a lively social event in the exhibit hall with the meeting sponsors, colleagues, and friends.

3/24/14. Day 1 at SGS
Postgraduate course examines cautions and takeaways from published research

Our first day at the annual Society of Gynecologic Surgeons Scientific Meeting was off to a running start at the Postgraduate Courses. Program Chair Dr. Cheryl Iglesia joined me for a rapid-fire account of the evidence-based medicine course on social media.

The SGS birth on Twitter was explosive, with our four social media Fellow Scholars linking real-time comments to the courses. Dr. Vivian Sung put together an amazing team to review and apply the principles of evidence-based medicine for the course attendees. Once we accepted that most published research was bad and not terribly generalizable, small break-out groups were quick to use the PICO-S model to define (or try to define) a Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcomes, and Study design.

This was followed by Dr. Ethan Balk of Tufts Center for Clinical Evidence Synthesis helping us wrap our heads around the randomized controlled trial (RCT). His caution was to consider the costly and underpowered trial, and lack of generalizability needed to define rigorous study inclusion and outcome criteria.

More bad news followed when Dr. Sung reviewed the cautionary tale of surrogate outcomes. While the perfect surrogate would allow us to shorten studies and save money, the seduction of association and causation can lead to some questionable conclusions. Are anatomical and urodynamic outcomes the same as patient perception of cure and improvement?

It wasn't all doom and gloom, as reflected in the lively tweets and posts by @obgmanagement and @gynsurgery. The strong work of the SGS Systemic Review Committee was lauded by Dr. Miles Murphy in his "How to Use a Clinical Practice Guideline." A systematic review needs to be included, though a meta-analysis is not always required, he said. What limits us is the poor quality and paucity of randomized trials for most patient populations. Treatment effect is best shown in RCTs, but minimizes harm; cohort and case series are better. Patient registries may allow for better determining a denominator and harm "rates," though they will miss clinical patient-based outcomes. With the coming of comparative effectiveness, these registries will be online quickly. Further, Dr. Balk showed us that, with more than 13,000 gynecologic research papers published each year, no one could ever keep track.

Dr. Ike Rahn gave an excellent presentation of subgroup analysis. To summarize: do it cautiously, describe which groups you analyze and have statistical back-up for your power and P-value calculations.

To round out the course, Dr. John Wong took us through his crystal ball on the future of evidence-based medicine. Because RCTs are expensive and comprise less than 2.5% of published studies, he proposed the analysis of observational studies as RCTs. Using patient-centered outcomes, efficacy data, and multiple providers, we will be better able to inform our patient and our colleagues on the best treatments. Again, as comparative effectiveness broadens policy decision, we must be agile, adaptive, and accountable.

Follow us on Twitter @obgmanagement #SGS14

Author and Disclosure Information

 

On-site conference reporting by Michael Ehlert, MD
Fellow Scholar, Society of Gynecologic Surgeons
Fellow, Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery
William Beaumont Health System
Oakland University School of Medicine
Royal Oak, Michigan

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OBG Management - 26(3)
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Michael Ehlert,SGS,Society of Gynecologic Surgeons,Scientific Meeting,blog,Evidence-based medicine,EBM,Holly Richter,Peggy Norton,Vivian Sung,Ike Rahn,Cheryl Iglesia,Barbara Levy,Katherine Hartmann,Dee Feener,Mark Walters,John Gebhart,Chifford Ko,Rachel Pauls,Becky Rogers,social media,twitter,#SGS14,Fellows Pelvic Research Network,FPRN,Surgeons Helping Advance Research and Education,SHARE
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Author and Disclosure Information

 

On-site conference reporting by Michael Ehlert, MD
Fellow Scholar, Society of Gynecologic Surgeons
Fellow, Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery
William Beaumont Health System
Oakland University School of Medicine
Royal Oak, Michigan

Author and Disclosure Information

 

On-site conference reporting by Michael Ehlert, MD
Fellow Scholar, Society of Gynecologic Surgeons
Fellow, Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery
William Beaumont Health System
Oakland University School of Medicine
Royal Oak, Michigan

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3/26/14. Day 3 at SGS
Debates, rebuttals, and relaxation

The morning at SGS was divided up between the small-group academic roundtables with experts in the fields. Topics ranged from mesh complications to coding and billing, and even a primer on urology for the gynecologist.

In the main hall, Drs. Dee Feener and Mark Walters outlined the challenges and opportunities for training the next generation of gynecologic surgeons. Dr. Feener argued that there simply are not enough cases, not enough time, and not enough people to train excellent surgeons. A perfect storm. Dr. Walters outlined his program and resident support at the Cleveland Clinic, showing how to provide robust experience and feedback to residents and fellows. Questions from the audience were pointed, and questioned the need to track obstetrics and gynecology separately for trainees.

Oral posters today also added to the debate with Vanderbilt sharing their hysterectomy training experience both before and after adding a fellowship. They did not see any change in vaginal hysterectomy participation over time. Most interesting was a study looking at abstract acceptance rates if an institution, research network, or author were disclosed in the body of a blinded abstract. They saw a much higher rate of acceptance if the source of the research was known by the reviewer. In his discussion, Dr. John Gebhart mused if the quality of these studies were somehow better, or if this perceived association resulted in any true bias. Nevertheless, the audience was actively engaged in the discussion.

The morning's highlight was certainly the debate over cosmetic gynecologic surgery. Dr. Rachel Pauls advocated FOR labiaplasty and Dr. Becky Rogers AGAINST. Though spirited and based largely on the principals of medical ethics, the final blow came from Dr. Rogers as she distributed Love Our Labia (LOL) buttons to the audience and presented Dr. Pauls with a pink LOL t-shirt. The Twitter feed exploded after this. 

Follow us on Twitter @obgmanagement #SGS14.

The evening wrapped up with a lively social event in the exhibit hall with the meeting sponsors, colleagues, and friends. 

We were also honored to have Dr. Clifford Ko, director of the American College of Surgeons Quality Improvement Program, as the esteemed Telinde lecturer. This robust and data-filled talk underlines his thesis that accurate, believable, and actionable data can be used to create quality in surgery. Quality improvement is local, he stated, and culture is the hardest institutional characteristic to change. Though any team working together on quality will elevate their culture if the data are good and the benefit to patients is clear. Dr. Ko, a colorectal surgeon at UCLA, is also now an honorary member of SGS.

The afternoon adjourned after the business meeting, and members were able to play golf, tour the desert in 4-wheel drive, or just relax in the lazy river by the pool. Activities were threatened by a large dust storm in Phoenix, but I have heard of no reports of problems.

Everyone convened at the outside terrace for the evening Fiesta Margarita reception. Over drinks and Southwest-themed sombreros, the new Michael Aronson Fund was announced to support Surgeons Helping Advance Research and Education (SHARE). This was the result of more than $25,000 raised by the program committee and SGS Board. Tomorrow looks to be an excellent conclusion to a well-planned and very well-executed meeting.

Follow us on Twitter @obgmanagement #SGS14.

3/25/14. Day 2 at SGS
Scientific sessions and socializing

The first day of the SGS scientific sessions was another energetic and interactive day. Oral posters stimulated heated debates on uterine morcellation, asymptomatic prolapse, and resident training. The Fellows Pelvic Research Network (FPRN) presented their work on the introduction of robotic hysterectomies to training centers. They showed that number of hysterectomies went down, and participation in robotic cases was poor. 

This was followed by the exceptional keynote address by Dr. Barbara Levy. She shared her expertise of health policy and described the coming of quality-based payment, value in Supervises, and the need to protect resources. She predicted that hospitals need to cut costs by 25% to 30% in the next 5 years just to survive.

The afternoon videofest included surgical techniques, anatomy instruction, and a comprehensive review on bowel surgery for the practicing gynecologist. 

For the second year running, the SGS hosted a mock NIH study session. Dr. Katherine Hartmann of Vanderbilt University provided background prep to prepare fellows for a K or R award application. Combined with a most-study section review of two actual applications demystified the process of grant review (and rejection). 

The FPRN met to update their ongoing projects and to review new proposals. This was an enlightening and engaging session which should give everyone great hope to see the creativity and energy of the next generation of researchers. 

 

 

SGS President Dr. Holly Richter had the great honor to present the best poster and video awards, as well as recognize the largest new-member class in the history of SGS. Dr. Norton was recognized for the best member presentation, which was on long-term prolapse follow-up in the TOMUS trial cohort. The FPRN was also recognized for their work on the impact of robotic hysterectomy in training. 

The evening wrapped up with a lively social event in the exhibit hall with the meeting sponsors, colleagues, and friends.

3/24/14. Day 1 at SGS
Postgraduate course examines cautions and takeaways from published research

Our first day at the annual Society of Gynecologic Surgeons Scientific Meeting was off to a running start at the Postgraduate Courses. Program Chair Dr. Cheryl Iglesia joined me for a rapid-fire account of the evidence-based medicine course on social media.

The SGS birth on Twitter was explosive, with our four social media Fellow Scholars linking real-time comments to the courses. Dr. Vivian Sung put together an amazing team to review and apply the principles of evidence-based medicine for the course attendees. Once we accepted that most published research was bad and not terribly generalizable, small break-out groups were quick to use the PICO-S model to define (or try to define) a Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcomes, and Study design.

This was followed by Dr. Ethan Balk of Tufts Center for Clinical Evidence Synthesis helping us wrap our heads around the randomized controlled trial (RCT). His caution was to consider the costly and underpowered trial, and lack of generalizability needed to define rigorous study inclusion and outcome criteria.

More bad news followed when Dr. Sung reviewed the cautionary tale of surrogate outcomes. While the perfect surrogate would allow us to shorten studies and save money, the seduction of association and causation can lead to some questionable conclusions. Are anatomical and urodynamic outcomes the same as patient perception of cure and improvement?

It wasn't all doom and gloom, as reflected in the lively tweets and posts by @obgmanagement and @gynsurgery. The strong work of the SGS Systemic Review Committee was lauded by Dr. Miles Murphy in his "How to Use a Clinical Practice Guideline." A systematic review needs to be included, though a meta-analysis is not always required, he said. What limits us is the poor quality and paucity of randomized trials for most patient populations. Treatment effect is best shown in RCTs, but minimizes harm; cohort and case series are better. Patient registries may allow for better determining a denominator and harm "rates," though they will miss clinical patient-based outcomes. With the coming of comparative effectiveness, these registries will be online quickly. Further, Dr. Balk showed us that, with more than 13,000 gynecologic research papers published each year, no one could ever keep track.

Dr. Ike Rahn gave an excellent presentation of subgroup analysis. To summarize: do it cautiously, describe which groups you analyze and have statistical back-up for your power and P-value calculations.

To round out the course, Dr. John Wong took us through his crystal ball on the future of evidence-based medicine. Because RCTs are expensive and comprise less than 2.5% of published studies, he proposed the analysis of observational studies as RCTs. Using patient-centered outcomes, efficacy data, and multiple providers, we will be better able to inform our patient and our colleagues on the best treatments. Again, as comparative effectiveness broadens policy decision, we must be agile, adaptive, and accountable.

Follow us on Twitter @obgmanagement #SGS14

3/26/14. Day 3 at SGS
Debates, rebuttals, and relaxation

The morning at SGS was divided up between the small-group academic roundtables with experts in the fields. Topics ranged from mesh complications to coding and billing, and even a primer on urology for the gynecologist.

In the main hall, Drs. Dee Feener and Mark Walters outlined the challenges and opportunities for training the next generation of gynecologic surgeons. Dr. Feener argued that there simply are not enough cases, not enough time, and not enough people to train excellent surgeons. A perfect storm. Dr. Walters outlined his program and resident support at the Cleveland Clinic, showing how to provide robust experience and feedback to residents and fellows. Questions from the audience were pointed, and questioned the need to track obstetrics and gynecology separately for trainees.

Oral posters today also added to the debate with Vanderbilt sharing their hysterectomy training experience both before and after adding a fellowship. They did not see any change in vaginal hysterectomy participation over time. Most interesting was a study looking at abstract acceptance rates if an institution, research network, or author were disclosed in the body of a blinded abstract. They saw a much higher rate of acceptance if the source of the research was known by the reviewer. In his discussion, Dr. John Gebhart mused if the quality of these studies were somehow better, or if this perceived association resulted in any true bias. Nevertheless, the audience was actively engaged in the discussion.

The morning's highlight was certainly the debate over cosmetic gynecologic surgery. Dr. Rachel Pauls advocated FOR labiaplasty and Dr. Becky Rogers AGAINST. Though spirited and based largely on the principals of medical ethics, the final blow came from Dr. Rogers as she distributed Love Our Labia (LOL) buttons to the audience and presented Dr. Pauls with a pink LOL t-shirt. The Twitter feed exploded after this. 

Follow us on Twitter @obgmanagement #SGS14.

The evening wrapped up with a lively social event in the exhibit hall with the meeting sponsors, colleagues, and friends. 

We were also honored to have Dr. Clifford Ko, director of the American College of Surgeons Quality Improvement Program, as the esteemed Telinde lecturer. This robust and data-filled talk underlines his thesis that accurate, believable, and actionable data can be used to create quality in surgery. Quality improvement is local, he stated, and culture is the hardest institutional characteristic to change. Though any team working together on quality will elevate their culture if the data are good and the benefit to patients is clear. Dr. Ko, a colorectal surgeon at UCLA, is also now an honorary member of SGS.

The afternoon adjourned after the business meeting, and members were able to play golf, tour the desert in 4-wheel drive, or just relax in the lazy river by the pool. Activities were threatened by a large dust storm in Phoenix, but I have heard of no reports of problems.

Everyone convened at the outside terrace for the evening Fiesta Margarita reception. Over drinks and Southwest-themed sombreros, the new Michael Aronson Fund was announced to support Surgeons Helping Advance Research and Education (SHARE). This was the result of more than $25,000 raised by the program committee and SGS Board. Tomorrow looks to be an excellent conclusion to a well-planned and very well-executed meeting.

Follow us on Twitter @obgmanagement #SGS14.

3/25/14. Day 2 at SGS
Scientific sessions and socializing

The first day of the SGS scientific sessions was another energetic and interactive day. Oral posters stimulated heated debates on uterine morcellation, asymptomatic prolapse, and resident training. The Fellows Pelvic Research Network (FPRN) presented their work on the introduction of robotic hysterectomies to training centers. They showed that number of hysterectomies went down, and participation in robotic cases was poor. 

This was followed by the exceptional keynote address by Dr. Barbara Levy. She shared her expertise of health policy and described the coming of quality-based payment, value in Supervises, and the need to protect resources. She predicted that hospitals need to cut costs by 25% to 30% in the next 5 years just to survive.

The afternoon videofest included surgical techniques, anatomy instruction, and a comprehensive review on bowel surgery for the practicing gynecologist. 

For the second year running, the SGS hosted a mock NIH study session. Dr. Katherine Hartmann of Vanderbilt University provided background prep to prepare fellows for a K or R award application. Combined with a most-study section review of two actual applications demystified the process of grant review (and rejection). 

The FPRN met to update their ongoing projects and to review new proposals. This was an enlightening and engaging session which should give everyone great hope to see the creativity and energy of the next generation of researchers. 

 

 

SGS President Dr. Holly Richter had the great honor to present the best poster and video awards, as well as recognize the largest new-member class in the history of SGS. Dr. Norton was recognized for the best member presentation, which was on long-term prolapse follow-up in the TOMUS trial cohort. The FPRN was also recognized for their work on the impact of robotic hysterectomy in training. 

The evening wrapped up with a lively social event in the exhibit hall with the meeting sponsors, colleagues, and friends.

3/24/14. Day 1 at SGS
Postgraduate course examines cautions and takeaways from published research

Our first day at the annual Society of Gynecologic Surgeons Scientific Meeting was off to a running start at the Postgraduate Courses. Program Chair Dr. Cheryl Iglesia joined me for a rapid-fire account of the evidence-based medicine course on social media.

The SGS birth on Twitter was explosive, with our four social media Fellow Scholars linking real-time comments to the courses. Dr. Vivian Sung put together an amazing team to review and apply the principles of evidence-based medicine for the course attendees. Once we accepted that most published research was bad and not terribly generalizable, small break-out groups were quick to use the PICO-S model to define (or try to define) a Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcomes, and Study design.

This was followed by Dr. Ethan Balk of Tufts Center for Clinical Evidence Synthesis helping us wrap our heads around the randomized controlled trial (RCT). His caution was to consider the costly and underpowered trial, and lack of generalizability needed to define rigorous study inclusion and outcome criteria.

More bad news followed when Dr. Sung reviewed the cautionary tale of surrogate outcomes. While the perfect surrogate would allow us to shorten studies and save money, the seduction of association and causation can lead to some questionable conclusions. Are anatomical and urodynamic outcomes the same as patient perception of cure and improvement?

It wasn't all doom and gloom, as reflected in the lively tweets and posts by @obgmanagement and @gynsurgery. The strong work of the SGS Systemic Review Committee was lauded by Dr. Miles Murphy in his "How to Use a Clinical Practice Guideline." A systematic review needs to be included, though a meta-analysis is not always required, he said. What limits us is the poor quality and paucity of randomized trials for most patient populations. Treatment effect is best shown in RCTs, but minimizes harm; cohort and case series are better. Patient registries may allow for better determining a denominator and harm "rates," though they will miss clinical patient-based outcomes. With the coming of comparative effectiveness, these registries will be online quickly. Further, Dr. Balk showed us that, with more than 13,000 gynecologic research papers published each year, no one could ever keep track.

Dr. Ike Rahn gave an excellent presentation of subgroup analysis. To summarize: do it cautiously, describe which groups you analyze and have statistical back-up for your power and P-value calculations.

To round out the course, Dr. John Wong took us through his crystal ball on the future of evidence-based medicine. Because RCTs are expensive and comprise less than 2.5% of published studies, he proposed the analysis of observational studies as RCTs. Using patient-centered outcomes, efficacy data, and multiple providers, we will be better able to inform our patient and our colleagues on the best treatments. Again, as comparative effectiveness broadens policy decision, we must be agile, adaptive, and accountable.

Follow us on Twitter @obgmanagement #SGS14

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OBG Management - 26(3)
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OBG Management - 26(3)
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On-site reporting from the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons (SGS) Scientific Meeting
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On-site reporting from the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons (SGS) Scientific Meeting
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Michael Ehlert,SGS,Society of Gynecologic Surgeons,Scientific Meeting,blog,Evidence-based medicine,EBM,Holly Richter,Peggy Norton,Vivian Sung,Ike Rahn,Cheryl Iglesia,Barbara Levy,Katherine Hartmann,Dee Feener,Mark Walters,John Gebhart,Chifford Ko,Rachel Pauls,Becky Rogers,social media,twitter,#SGS14,Fellows Pelvic Research Network,FPRN,Surgeons Helping Advance Research and Education,SHARE
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Michael Ehlert,SGS,Society of Gynecologic Surgeons,Scientific Meeting,blog,Evidence-based medicine,EBM,Holly Richter,Peggy Norton,Vivian Sung,Ike Rahn,Cheryl Iglesia,Barbara Levy,Katherine Hartmann,Dee Feener,Mark Walters,John Gebhart,Chifford Ko,Rachel Pauls,Becky Rogers,social media,twitter,#SGS14,Fellows Pelvic Research Network,FPRN,Surgeons Helping Advance Research and Education,SHARE
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