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Attend the ACS Taste of the City

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American College of Surgeons (ACS) Clinical Congress 2016 attendees should plan to stay in Washington, DC, through the evening of Wednesday, October 19, to participate in the ACS Taste of the City. Join this fun event, 5:00–7:00 pm in Hall D of the Walter E. Washington Convention Center and enjoy Washington, DC’s diverse dining and cultural scene. Enjoy live music and networking with ACS leaders, staff, friends, and colleagues. The event is free to all attendees and their families. Plan to move seamlessly from Wednesday’s educational sessions to the ACS Taste of the City. The hotel shuttle bus schedule will be extended to accommodate attendees and their family members. Casual dress is encouraged. Visit the ACS website at https://www.facs.org/clincon2016/about/events/engagement for more information on this event.

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American College of Surgeons (ACS) Clinical Congress 2016 attendees should plan to stay in Washington, DC, through the evening of Wednesday, October 19, to participate in the ACS Taste of the City. Join this fun event, 5:00–7:00 pm in Hall D of the Walter E. Washington Convention Center and enjoy Washington, DC’s diverse dining and cultural scene. Enjoy live music and networking with ACS leaders, staff, friends, and colleagues. The event is free to all attendees and their families. Plan to move seamlessly from Wednesday’s educational sessions to the ACS Taste of the City. The hotel shuttle bus schedule will be extended to accommodate attendees and their family members. Casual dress is encouraged. Visit the ACS website at https://www.facs.org/clincon2016/about/events/engagement for more information on this event.

American College of Surgeons (ACS) Clinical Congress 2016 attendees should plan to stay in Washington, DC, through the evening of Wednesday, October 19, to participate in the ACS Taste of the City. Join this fun event, 5:00–7:00 pm in Hall D of the Walter E. Washington Convention Center and enjoy Washington, DC’s diverse dining and cultural scene. Enjoy live music and networking with ACS leaders, staff, friends, and colleagues. The event is free to all attendees and their families. Plan to move seamlessly from Wednesday’s educational sessions to the ACS Taste of the City. The hotel shuttle bus schedule will be extended to accommodate attendees and their family members. Casual dress is encouraged. Visit the ACS website at https://www.facs.org/clincon2016/about/events/engagement for more information on this event.

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ACS Women in Surgery Committee Events at the Clinical Congress

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The American College of Surgeons (ACS) Women in Surgery Committee (WiSC) will sponsor several activities at Clinical Congress 2016. The WiSC will present the inaugural Mary Edwards Walker Inspiring Women in Surgery Award to Mary Maniscalco-Theberge, MD, FACS, department of surgery, National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, MD, during Convocation 6:00−8:00 pm October 16 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Hall D. Alexa I. Canady, MD, FACS, will present the Olga M. Jonasson Lecture, The Journey: Becoming a Neurosurgeon and Back Again, 2:30–3:00 pm, October 18 in the convention center, Room 145. Check the Program Book or meeting app for details. View a complete list of Women in Surgery Committee–sponsored events at Clinical Congress on the ACS website at https://www.facs.org/about-acs/governance/acs-committees/women-in-surgery-committee/activities.

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The American College of Surgeons (ACS) Women in Surgery Committee (WiSC) will sponsor several activities at Clinical Congress 2016. The WiSC will present the inaugural Mary Edwards Walker Inspiring Women in Surgery Award to Mary Maniscalco-Theberge, MD, FACS, department of surgery, National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, MD, during Convocation 6:00−8:00 pm October 16 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Hall D. Alexa I. Canady, MD, FACS, will present the Olga M. Jonasson Lecture, The Journey: Becoming a Neurosurgeon and Back Again, 2:30–3:00 pm, October 18 in the convention center, Room 145. Check the Program Book or meeting app for details. View a complete list of Women in Surgery Committee–sponsored events at Clinical Congress on the ACS website at https://www.facs.org/about-acs/governance/acs-committees/women-in-surgery-committee/activities.

The American College of Surgeons (ACS) Women in Surgery Committee (WiSC) will sponsor several activities at Clinical Congress 2016. The WiSC will present the inaugural Mary Edwards Walker Inspiring Women in Surgery Award to Mary Maniscalco-Theberge, MD, FACS, department of surgery, National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, MD, during Convocation 6:00−8:00 pm October 16 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Hall D. Alexa I. Canady, MD, FACS, will present the Olga M. Jonasson Lecture, The Journey: Becoming a Neurosurgeon and Back Again, 2:30–3:00 pm, October 18 in the convention center, Room 145. Check the Program Book or meeting app for details. View a complete list of Women in Surgery Committee–sponsored events at Clinical Congress on the ACS website at https://www.facs.org/about-acs/governance/acs-committees/women-in-surgery-committee/activities.

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Plan to Attend Surgical History Group Events at Clinical Congress 2016

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History buffs attending the American College of Surgeons (ACS) Clinical Congress 2016, October 16−20, in Washington, DC, should plan to participate in several events sponsored by the College’s Surgical History Group (SHG). Stop by the Archives booth in the ACS Resource Center of the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, and pick up this year’s premium, a packet of baseball-sized cards commemorating the first four ACS Presidents. Start collecting the first cards in this annual series. John A. Weigelt, MD, FACS, Milt & Lidy Lunda/Charles Aprahamian Professor of Trauma Surgery; professor and chief, division of trauma and critical care; and associate dean for quality, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and the 2015 recipient of the ACS Distinguished Service Award, will present a history of the Surgical Education and Self-Assessment Program at the Surgical History Group breakfast session, 7:00-8:00 am, Tuesday, October 18 in Room 204BC of the convention center. Attendees should plan to visit the more than 20 History of Surgery Posters, and attend the Panel Session, Three Pioneering African American Surgeons. Check the Program Book or meeting app for details, and find additional information about other SHG-sponsored events on the ACS website at https://www.facs.org/about-acs/archives/shg-events.

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History buffs attending the American College of Surgeons (ACS) Clinical Congress 2016, October 16−20, in Washington, DC, should plan to participate in several events sponsored by the College’s Surgical History Group (SHG). Stop by the Archives booth in the ACS Resource Center of the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, and pick up this year’s premium, a packet of baseball-sized cards commemorating the first four ACS Presidents. Start collecting the first cards in this annual series. John A. Weigelt, MD, FACS, Milt & Lidy Lunda/Charles Aprahamian Professor of Trauma Surgery; professor and chief, division of trauma and critical care; and associate dean for quality, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and the 2015 recipient of the ACS Distinguished Service Award, will present a history of the Surgical Education and Self-Assessment Program at the Surgical History Group breakfast session, 7:00-8:00 am, Tuesday, October 18 in Room 204BC of the convention center. Attendees should plan to visit the more than 20 History of Surgery Posters, and attend the Panel Session, Three Pioneering African American Surgeons. Check the Program Book or meeting app for details, and find additional information about other SHG-sponsored events on the ACS website at https://www.facs.org/about-acs/archives/shg-events.

History buffs attending the American College of Surgeons (ACS) Clinical Congress 2016, October 16−20, in Washington, DC, should plan to participate in several events sponsored by the College’s Surgical History Group (SHG). Stop by the Archives booth in the ACS Resource Center of the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, and pick up this year’s premium, a packet of baseball-sized cards commemorating the first four ACS Presidents. Start collecting the first cards in this annual series. John A. Weigelt, MD, FACS, Milt & Lidy Lunda/Charles Aprahamian Professor of Trauma Surgery; professor and chief, division of trauma and critical care; and associate dean for quality, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and the 2015 recipient of the ACS Distinguished Service Award, will present a history of the Surgical Education and Self-Assessment Program at the Surgical History Group breakfast session, 7:00-8:00 am, Tuesday, October 18 in Room 204BC of the convention center. Attendees should plan to visit the more than 20 History of Surgery Posters, and attend the Panel Session, Three Pioneering African American Surgeons. Check the Program Book or meeting app for details, and find additional information about other SHG-sponsored events on the ACS website at https://www.facs.org/about-acs/archives/shg-events.

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ACS Now Accepting 2017 Jacobson Promising Investigator Award Applications

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ACS Now Accepting 2017 Jacobson Promising Investigator Award Applications

The American College of Surgeons Surgical Research Committee is accepting applications until February 24 for the 2017 Joan L. and Julius H. Jacobson II Promising Investigator Award. This award recognizes outstanding surgeons engaged in research, advancing the art and science of surgery, and demonstrating early promise of significant contributions to the practice of surgery and the safety of surgical patients.

This award is intended for surgeons who are at the “tipping point” of their research careers with a track record indicative of early promise and potential. Well-established surgeon-scientists are ineligible for the award.

For details on award criteria and nomination procedures, visit the Jacobson Promising Investigator Award website at https://www.facs.org/quality-programs/about/cqi/Jacobson.

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The American College of Surgeons Surgical Research Committee is accepting applications until February 24 for the 2017 Joan L. and Julius H. Jacobson II Promising Investigator Award. This award recognizes outstanding surgeons engaged in research, advancing the art and science of surgery, and demonstrating early promise of significant contributions to the practice of surgery and the safety of surgical patients.

This award is intended for surgeons who are at the “tipping point” of their research careers with a track record indicative of early promise and potential. Well-established surgeon-scientists are ineligible for the award.

For details on award criteria and nomination procedures, visit the Jacobson Promising Investigator Award website at https://www.facs.org/quality-programs/about/cqi/Jacobson.

The American College of Surgeons Surgical Research Committee is accepting applications until February 24 for the 2017 Joan L. and Julius H. Jacobson II Promising Investigator Award. This award recognizes outstanding surgeons engaged in research, advancing the art and science of surgery, and demonstrating early promise of significant contributions to the practice of surgery and the safety of surgical patients.

This award is intended for surgeons who are at the “tipping point” of their research careers with a track record indicative of early promise and potential. Well-established surgeon-scientists are ineligible for the award.

For details on award criteria and nomination procedures, visit the Jacobson Promising Investigator Award website at https://www.facs.org/quality-programs/about/cqi/Jacobson.

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Accredited bariatric surgery centers have fewer postoperative complications

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Accredited bariatric surgery centers have fewer postoperative complications

A recent review of published medical studies indicates that patients who have weight loss operations at nonaccredited bariatric surgery facilities in the United States are up to 1.4 times more likely to experience serious postoperative complications and more than twice as likely to die after the procedure in comparison with patients who undergo these procedures at accredited bariatric surgery centers. The study authors also report that accredited bariatric centers have lower costs than do nonaccredited centers. These results, which are posted on the Journal of the American College of Surgeons (JACS) website in advance of print publication, represent the first comprehensive review of the best available evidence comparing bariatric surgery results in accredited U.S. centers with outcomes at nonaccredited U.S. centers.

“A preponderance of scientific evidence demonstrates that bariatric surgery becomes safer with accreditation of the surgical center,” said principal investigator John Morton, MD, MPH, FACS, FASMBS, chief of bariatric and minimally invasive surgery at Stanford University School of Medicine in California. “Accreditation makes a big difference.” The American College of Surgeons (ACS) and the American Society of Metabolic and Bariatric Surgeons (ASMBS) merged their accreditation programs in 2012 to create the unified Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Accreditation and Quality Improvement Program, and more than 700 centers in the country now hold this accreditation. This credential signifies that a surgical facility has met rigorous standards for high-quality surgical care.

Reducing the odds of complications

In their review article, Dr. Morton and first author Dan Azagury, MD, also a bariatric and general surgeon at Stanford, included 13 studies published between 2009 and 2014, comprising more than 1.5 million patients. Dr. Morton acknowledged that a number of patients might be duplicates because some studies used the same national database.

Eight of 11 studies that evaluated postoperative complications found that undergoing a bariatric operation in an accredited facility reduced the odds of experiencing a serious complication by 9 percent to 39 percent (odds ratios of 1.09 to 1.39), the researchers reported. The difference was reportedly even more pronounced for the risk of death occurring in the hospital or up to 90 days postoperatively. Six of eight studies that reported mortality showed that the odds of dying after a bariatric procedure, while low at an accredited center, were 2.26 to 3.57 times higher at a nonaccredited facility.

Nearly all the studies used risk adjustment, which compensates for different levels of patient risk and which experts believe makes results more accurate. Only three studies (23 percent) failed to show a significant benefit of accreditation.

Reducing costs

Drs. Morton and Azagury also analyzed studies that reported average hospital charges and found lower costs at accredited centers. “Accredited bariatric surgical centers provide not only safer care but also less expensive care,” Dr. Morton said. A systematic review was the best way to study this issue, according to Dr. Morton. He said most insurers today will not cover surgical care at nonaccredited bariatric centers, making it difficult to perform a randomized controlled clinical trial. In 2013, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) stopped requiring Medicare beneficiaries to undergo bariatric operations at accredited bariatric centers as a condition of coverage.

Meanwhile, a growing number of patients are choosing surgical treatment for obesity – widely considered the most effective long-term weight-loss therapy. An estimated 179,000 patients underwent gastric bypass, gastric banding, and other bariatric operations in 2013 compared with 158,000 two years earlier, according to the ASMBS.

“These results provide important information that can be used to guide future policy decisions. Perhaps CMS should revisit this policy again,” Dr. Morton suggested.

Read the JACS article at www.journalacs.org/article/S1072-7515(16)30267-8/fulltext.

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A recent review of published medical studies indicates that patients who have weight loss operations at nonaccredited bariatric surgery facilities in the United States are up to 1.4 times more likely to experience serious postoperative complications and more than twice as likely to die after the procedure in comparison with patients who undergo these procedures at accredited bariatric surgery centers. The study authors also report that accredited bariatric centers have lower costs than do nonaccredited centers. These results, which are posted on the Journal of the American College of Surgeons (JACS) website in advance of print publication, represent the first comprehensive review of the best available evidence comparing bariatric surgery results in accredited U.S. centers with outcomes at nonaccredited U.S. centers.

“A preponderance of scientific evidence demonstrates that bariatric surgery becomes safer with accreditation of the surgical center,” said principal investigator John Morton, MD, MPH, FACS, FASMBS, chief of bariatric and minimally invasive surgery at Stanford University School of Medicine in California. “Accreditation makes a big difference.” The American College of Surgeons (ACS) and the American Society of Metabolic and Bariatric Surgeons (ASMBS) merged their accreditation programs in 2012 to create the unified Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Accreditation and Quality Improvement Program, and more than 700 centers in the country now hold this accreditation. This credential signifies that a surgical facility has met rigorous standards for high-quality surgical care.

Reducing the odds of complications

In their review article, Dr. Morton and first author Dan Azagury, MD, also a bariatric and general surgeon at Stanford, included 13 studies published between 2009 and 2014, comprising more than 1.5 million patients. Dr. Morton acknowledged that a number of patients might be duplicates because some studies used the same national database.

Eight of 11 studies that evaluated postoperative complications found that undergoing a bariatric operation in an accredited facility reduced the odds of experiencing a serious complication by 9 percent to 39 percent (odds ratios of 1.09 to 1.39), the researchers reported. The difference was reportedly even more pronounced for the risk of death occurring in the hospital or up to 90 days postoperatively. Six of eight studies that reported mortality showed that the odds of dying after a bariatric procedure, while low at an accredited center, were 2.26 to 3.57 times higher at a nonaccredited facility.

Nearly all the studies used risk adjustment, which compensates for different levels of patient risk and which experts believe makes results more accurate. Only three studies (23 percent) failed to show a significant benefit of accreditation.

Reducing costs

Drs. Morton and Azagury also analyzed studies that reported average hospital charges and found lower costs at accredited centers. “Accredited bariatric surgical centers provide not only safer care but also less expensive care,” Dr. Morton said. A systematic review was the best way to study this issue, according to Dr. Morton. He said most insurers today will not cover surgical care at nonaccredited bariatric centers, making it difficult to perform a randomized controlled clinical trial. In 2013, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) stopped requiring Medicare beneficiaries to undergo bariatric operations at accredited bariatric centers as a condition of coverage.

Meanwhile, a growing number of patients are choosing surgical treatment for obesity – widely considered the most effective long-term weight-loss therapy. An estimated 179,000 patients underwent gastric bypass, gastric banding, and other bariatric operations in 2013 compared with 158,000 two years earlier, according to the ASMBS.

“These results provide important information that can be used to guide future policy decisions. Perhaps CMS should revisit this policy again,” Dr. Morton suggested.

Read the JACS article at www.journalacs.org/article/S1072-7515(16)30267-8/fulltext.

A recent review of published medical studies indicates that patients who have weight loss operations at nonaccredited bariatric surgery facilities in the United States are up to 1.4 times more likely to experience serious postoperative complications and more than twice as likely to die after the procedure in comparison with patients who undergo these procedures at accredited bariatric surgery centers. The study authors also report that accredited bariatric centers have lower costs than do nonaccredited centers. These results, which are posted on the Journal of the American College of Surgeons (JACS) website in advance of print publication, represent the first comprehensive review of the best available evidence comparing bariatric surgery results in accredited U.S. centers with outcomes at nonaccredited U.S. centers.

“A preponderance of scientific evidence demonstrates that bariatric surgery becomes safer with accreditation of the surgical center,” said principal investigator John Morton, MD, MPH, FACS, FASMBS, chief of bariatric and minimally invasive surgery at Stanford University School of Medicine in California. “Accreditation makes a big difference.” The American College of Surgeons (ACS) and the American Society of Metabolic and Bariatric Surgeons (ASMBS) merged their accreditation programs in 2012 to create the unified Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Accreditation and Quality Improvement Program, and more than 700 centers in the country now hold this accreditation. This credential signifies that a surgical facility has met rigorous standards for high-quality surgical care.

Reducing the odds of complications

In their review article, Dr. Morton and first author Dan Azagury, MD, also a bariatric and general surgeon at Stanford, included 13 studies published between 2009 and 2014, comprising more than 1.5 million patients. Dr. Morton acknowledged that a number of patients might be duplicates because some studies used the same national database.

Eight of 11 studies that evaluated postoperative complications found that undergoing a bariatric operation in an accredited facility reduced the odds of experiencing a serious complication by 9 percent to 39 percent (odds ratios of 1.09 to 1.39), the researchers reported. The difference was reportedly even more pronounced for the risk of death occurring in the hospital or up to 90 days postoperatively. Six of eight studies that reported mortality showed that the odds of dying after a bariatric procedure, while low at an accredited center, were 2.26 to 3.57 times higher at a nonaccredited facility.

Nearly all the studies used risk adjustment, which compensates for different levels of patient risk and which experts believe makes results more accurate. Only three studies (23 percent) failed to show a significant benefit of accreditation.

Reducing costs

Drs. Morton and Azagury also analyzed studies that reported average hospital charges and found lower costs at accredited centers. “Accredited bariatric surgical centers provide not only safer care but also less expensive care,” Dr. Morton said. A systematic review was the best way to study this issue, according to Dr. Morton. He said most insurers today will not cover surgical care at nonaccredited bariatric centers, making it difficult to perform a randomized controlled clinical trial. In 2013, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) stopped requiring Medicare beneficiaries to undergo bariatric operations at accredited bariatric centers as a condition of coverage.

Meanwhile, a growing number of patients are choosing surgical treatment for obesity – widely considered the most effective long-term weight-loss therapy. An estimated 179,000 patients underwent gastric bypass, gastric banding, and other bariatric operations in 2013 compared with 158,000 two years earlier, according to the ASMBS.

“These results provide important information that can be used to guide future policy decisions. Perhaps CMS should revisit this policy again,” Dr. Morton suggested.

Read the JACS article at www.journalacs.org/article/S1072-7515(16)30267-8/fulltext.

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TQIP now in all 50 states and Washington, D.C.

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The American College of Surgeons (ACS) Trauma Quality Improvement Program (TQIP®) is now in all 50 states and Washington, D.C. The ACS TQIP program reached this milestone on Aug. 2 with the addition of Meritus Medical Center in Hagerstown, Md., a Level III TQIP Site.

The TQIP pilot program began in 2009 with 23 centers, and the full TQIP program launched in 2010 with 65 centers. In 2014, Pediatric TQIP was added, and on July 1 of this year, Level III TQIP was launched. TQIP now has 561 enrolled sites (420 Level I and II Adult Sites, 40 Level III Sites, and 101 Pediatric Sites) and anticipates continued growth this year.

TQIP standardizes the collection and measurement of trauma data to generate quality improvement strategies and reduce disparities in trauma care nationwide. TQIP collects data from trauma centers, provides feedback about center performance, and identifies institutional improvements for better patient outcomes. TQIP provides hospitals with risk-adjusted benchmarking for accurate national comparisons. In addition, TQIP provides education and training to help trauma center staff improve the quality of their data and accurately interpret their benchmark reports. The program fosters clinical improvements with the support of Best Practice Guidelines (https://www.facs.org/quality-programs/trauma/tqip/best-practice), which allow enrolled centers to network and share best practice information at the TQIP annual meeting (https://www.facs.org/quality-programs/trauma/tqip/meeting) through the TQIP Google group (https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/trauma-quality-improvement-program---tqip), and in Web conferences.

For more information, visit the TQIP website (www.facs.org/quality-programs/trauma/tqip).

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The American College of Surgeons (ACS) Trauma Quality Improvement Program (TQIP®) is now in all 50 states and Washington, D.C. The ACS TQIP program reached this milestone on Aug. 2 with the addition of Meritus Medical Center in Hagerstown, Md., a Level III TQIP Site.

The TQIP pilot program began in 2009 with 23 centers, and the full TQIP program launched in 2010 with 65 centers. In 2014, Pediatric TQIP was added, and on July 1 of this year, Level III TQIP was launched. TQIP now has 561 enrolled sites (420 Level I and II Adult Sites, 40 Level III Sites, and 101 Pediatric Sites) and anticipates continued growth this year.

TQIP standardizes the collection and measurement of trauma data to generate quality improvement strategies and reduce disparities in trauma care nationwide. TQIP collects data from trauma centers, provides feedback about center performance, and identifies institutional improvements for better patient outcomes. TQIP provides hospitals with risk-adjusted benchmarking for accurate national comparisons. In addition, TQIP provides education and training to help trauma center staff improve the quality of their data and accurately interpret their benchmark reports. The program fosters clinical improvements with the support of Best Practice Guidelines (https://www.facs.org/quality-programs/trauma/tqip/best-practice), which allow enrolled centers to network and share best practice information at the TQIP annual meeting (https://www.facs.org/quality-programs/trauma/tqip/meeting) through the TQIP Google group (https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/trauma-quality-improvement-program---tqip), and in Web conferences.

For more information, visit the TQIP website (www.facs.org/quality-programs/trauma/tqip).

The American College of Surgeons (ACS) Trauma Quality Improvement Program (TQIP®) is now in all 50 states and Washington, D.C. The ACS TQIP program reached this milestone on Aug. 2 with the addition of Meritus Medical Center in Hagerstown, Md., a Level III TQIP Site.

The TQIP pilot program began in 2009 with 23 centers, and the full TQIP program launched in 2010 with 65 centers. In 2014, Pediatric TQIP was added, and on July 1 of this year, Level III TQIP was launched. TQIP now has 561 enrolled sites (420 Level I and II Adult Sites, 40 Level III Sites, and 101 Pediatric Sites) and anticipates continued growth this year.

TQIP standardizes the collection and measurement of trauma data to generate quality improvement strategies and reduce disparities in trauma care nationwide. TQIP collects data from trauma centers, provides feedback about center performance, and identifies institutional improvements for better patient outcomes. TQIP provides hospitals with risk-adjusted benchmarking for accurate national comparisons. In addition, TQIP provides education and training to help trauma center staff improve the quality of their data and accurately interpret their benchmark reports. The program fosters clinical improvements with the support of Best Practice Guidelines (https://www.facs.org/quality-programs/trauma/tqip/best-practice), which allow enrolled centers to network and share best practice information at the TQIP annual meeting (https://www.facs.org/quality-programs/trauma/tqip/meeting) through the TQIP Google group (https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/trauma-quality-improvement-program---tqip), and in Web conferences.

For more information, visit the TQIP website (www.facs.org/quality-programs/trauma/tqip).

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Join Dr. Richardson for TTP Program Meet and Greet at Clinical Congress

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J. David Richardson, MD, FACS, 2015-2016 President of the American College of Surgeons (ACS) and Chair of the ACS Committee on Transition to Practice (TTP) Program in General Surgery, will host an informal Meet and Greet during the ACS Clinical Congress 2016, 12:00 noon – 1:00 pm, Tuesday, October 18, at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center. Dr. Richardson will be available to speak with Clinical Congress attendees at the Division of Education Booth in the ACS Resource Center in Hall B. Residents who are considering careers in general surgery as well as faculty and practicing surgeons may be interested in learning more about the TTP Program at https://www.facs.org/education/program/ttp. Dennis W. Ashley, MD, FACS, FCCM, TTP chief of the Mercer University School of Medicine Program, Cordele, GA, which has successfully incorporated the TTP Program, will join Dr. Richardson at the Meet and Greet. Contact ttp@facs.org for more information or stop by the Division of Education booth at the Clinical Congress and learn more about this growing program.

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J. David Richardson, MD, FACS, 2015-2016 President of the American College of Surgeons (ACS) and Chair of the ACS Committee on Transition to Practice (TTP) Program in General Surgery, will host an informal Meet and Greet during the ACS Clinical Congress 2016, 12:00 noon – 1:00 pm, Tuesday, October 18, at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center. Dr. Richardson will be available to speak with Clinical Congress attendees at the Division of Education Booth in the ACS Resource Center in Hall B. Residents who are considering careers in general surgery as well as faculty and practicing surgeons may be interested in learning more about the TTP Program at https://www.facs.org/education/program/ttp. Dennis W. Ashley, MD, FACS, FCCM, TTP chief of the Mercer University School of Medicine Program, Cordele, GA, which has successfully incorporated the TTP Program, will join Dr. Richardson at the Meet and Greet. Contact ttp@facs.org for more information or stop by the Division of Education booth at the Clinical Congress and learn more about this growing program.

J. David Richardson, MD, FACS, 2015-2016 President of the American College of Surgeons (ACS) and Chair of the ACS Committee on Transition to Practice (TTP) Program in General Surgery, will host an informal Meet and Greet during the ACS Clinical Congress 2016, 12:00 noon – 1:00 pm, Tuesday, October 18, at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center. Dr. Richardson will be available to speak with Clinical Congress attendees at the Division of Education Booth in the ACS Resource Center in Hall B. Residents who are considering careers in general surgery as well as faculty and practicing surgeons may be interested in learning more about the TTP Program at https://www.facs.org/education/program/ttp. Dennis W. Ashley, MD, FACS, FCCM, TTP chief of the Mercer University School of Medicine Program, Cordele, GA, which has successfully incorporated the TTP Program, will join Dr. Richardson at the Meet and Greet. Contact ttp@facs.org for more information or stop by the Division of Education booth at the Clinical Congress and learn more about this growing program.

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ACS Issues Statement on Operating Room Attire

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ACS Issues Statement on Operating Room Attire

The American College of Surgeons (ACS) has finalized a statement on professional attire for surgeons in and out of the operating room (OR). The new ACS guideline for appropriate attire is based on principles of professionalism, common sense, decorum, and the available evidence. It includes the following provisions:

• Soiled scrubs and/or hats should be changed as soon as feasible and certainly before speaking with family members after an operation.

• Scrubs and hats worn during dirty or contaminated cases should be changed prior to subsequent cases even if not visibly soiled.

• Dangling masks should not be worn at any time.

• Operating room scrubs should not be worn in the hospital facility outside of the OR area without a clean lab coat or appropriate cover.

• OR scrubs should not be worn at any time outside of the hospital perimeter.

• OR scrubs should be changed at least daily.

• During invasive procedures, the mouth, nose, and hair (skull and face) should be covered to avoid potential wound contamination. Large sideburns and ponytails should be covered or contained. There is no evidence that leaving ears, a limited amount of hair on the nape of the neck or a modest sideburn uncovered contributes to wound infections.

• Jewelry worn on the head or neck, where the items might fall into or contaminate the sterile field, should be removed or appropriately covered during procedures.

• The ACS encourages surgeons to wear clean, appropriate professional attire (not scrubs) during all patient encounters outside of the OR.

The ACS Statement on Operating Room Attire provides detailed guidelines on wearing the skullcap in a way that ensures patient safety and facilitates enforcement of the standard on wearing scrubs only within the perimeter of the hospital by suggesting the adoption of distinctively colored scrub suits for OR personnel.

In addition, the ACS is collaborating with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and The Joint Commission to ensure that their policies and regulatory oversight activities are aligned with the College’s recommendations.

The statement will be published in the October Bulletin.

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The American College of Surgeons (ACS) has finalized a statement on professional attire for surgeons in and out of the operating room (OR). The new ACS guideline for appropriate attire is based on principles of professionalism, common sense, decorum, and the available evidence. It includes the following provisions:

• Soiled scrubs and/or hats should be changed as soon as feasible and certainly before speaking with family members after an operation.

• Scrubs and hats worn during dirty or contaminated cases should be changed prior to subsequent cases even if not visibly soiled.

• Dangling masks should not be worn at any time.

• Operating room scrubs should not be worn in the hospital facility outside of the OR area without a clean lab coat or appropriate cover.

• OR scrubs should not be worn at any time outside of the hospital perimeter.

• OR scrubs should be changed at least daily.

• During invasive procedures, the mouth, nose, and hair (skull and face) should be covered to avoid potential wound contamination. Large sideburns and ponytails should be covered or contained. There is no evidence that leaving ears, a limited amount of hair on the nape of the neck or a modest sideburn uncovered contributes to wound infections.

• Jewelry worn on the head or neck, where the items might fall into or contaminate the sterile field, should be removed or appropriately covered during procedures.

• The ACS encourages surgeons to wear clean, appropriate professional attire (not scrubs) during all patient encounters outside of the OR.

The ACS Statement on Operating Room Attire provides detailed guidelines on wearing the skullcap in a way that ensures patient safety and facilitates enforcement of the standard on wearing scrubs only within the perimeter of the hospital by suggesting the adoption of distinctively colored scrub suits for OR personnel.

In addition, the ACS is collaborating with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and The Joint Commission to ensure that their policies and regulatory oversight activities are aligned with the College’s recommendations.

The statement will be published in the October Bulletin.

The American College of Surgeons (ACS) has finalized a statement on professional attire for surgeons in and out of the operating room (OR). The new ACS guideline for appropriate attire is based on principles of professionalism, common sense, decorum, and the available evidence. It includes the following provisions:

• Soiled scrubs and/or hats should be changed as soon as feasible and certainly before speaking with family members after an operation.

• Scrubs and hats worn during dirty or contaminated cases should be changed prior to subsequent cases even if not visibly soiled.

• Dangling masks should not be worn at any time.

• Operating room scrubs should not be worn in the hospital facility outside of the OR area without a clean lab coat or appropriate cover.

• OR scrubs should not be worn at any time outside of the hospital perimeter.

• OR scrubs should be changed at least daily.

• During invasive procedures, the mouth, nose, and hair (skull and face) should be covered to avoid potential wound contamination. Large sideburns and ponytails should be covered or contained. There is no evidence that leaving ears, a limited amount of hair on the nape of the neck or a modest sideburn uncovered contributes to wound infections.

• Jewelry worn on the head or neck, where the items might fall into or contaminate the sterile field, should be removed or appropriately covered during procedures.

• The ACS encourages surgeons to wear clean, appropriate professional attire (not scrubs) during all patient encounters outside of the OR.

The ACS Statement on Operating Room Attire provides detailed guidelines on wearing the skullcap in a way that ensures patient safety and facilitates enforcement of the standard on wearing scrubs only within the perimeter of the hospital by suggesting the adoption of distinctively colored scrub suits for OR personnel.

In addition, the ACS is collaborating with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and The Joint Commission to ensure that their policies and regulatory oversight activities are aligned with the College’s recommendations.

The statement will be published in the October Bulletin.

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Register for ACS TQIP Conference, November 5-7, in Orlando, FL

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Register for ACS TQIP Conference, November 5-7, in Orlando, FL

Register online for the seventh annual American College of Surgeons (ACS) Trauma Quality Improvement Program (TQIP®) Scientific Meeting and Training, November 5-7 at the Omni Orlando Resort at ChampionsGate, FL. Register for the conference at https://www.compusystems.com/servlet/ar?evt_uid=785.

The meeting will convene trauma medical directors, program managers, coordinators, and registrars from participating and prospective TQIP hospitals. J. Wayne Meredith, MD, FACS, MCCM, Winston-Salem, NC, the 2014 recipient of the ACS Distinguished Service Award and Past-Medical Director, ACS Trauma Programs, will deliver the keynote address. The program will include sessions for new TQIP centers, new staff at existing centers, and participants in need of a TQIP refresher. Breakout sessions focused on registrar and abstractor concerns, matters that relate to the trauma medical director and trauma program manager-focused issues will enhance the learning experience and instruct participants in their role on the TQIP team.

Visit the TQIP annual meeting website at https://www.facs.org/tqipmeeting to view the conference schedule and obtain information about lodging, transportation, and a social outing to Cirque du Soleil. For more information, contact ACS TQIP staff at acstqipmeeting@facs.org.

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Register online for the seventh annual American College of Surgeons (ACS) Trauma Quality Improvement Program (TQIP®) Scientific Meeting and Training, November 5-7 at the Omni Orlando Resort at ChampionsGate, FL. Register for the conference at https://www.compusystems.com/servlet/ar?evt_uid=785.

The meeting will convene trauma medical directors, program managers, coordinators, and registrars from participating and prospective TQIP hospitals. J. Wayne Meredith, MD, FACS, MCCM, Winston-Salem, NC, the 2014 recipient of the ACS Distinguished Service Award and Past-Medical Director, ACS Trauma Programs, will deliver the keynote address. The program will include sessions for new TQIP centers, new staff at existing centers, and participants in need of a TQIP refresher. Breakout sessions focused on registrar and abstractor concerns, matters that relate to the trauma medical director and trauma program manager-focused issues will enhance the learning experience and instruct participants in their role on the TQIP team.

Visit the TQIP annual meeting website at https://www.facs.org/tqipmeeting to view the conference schedule and obtain information about lodging, transportation, and a social outing to Cirque du Soleil. For more information, contact ACS TQIP staff at acstqipmeeting@facs.org.

Register online for the seventh annual American College of Surgeons (ACS) Trauma Quality Improvement Program (TQIP®) Scientific Meeting and Training, November 5-7 at the Omni Orlando Resort at ChampionsGate, FL. Register for the conference at https://www.compusystems.com/servlet/ar?evt_uid=785.

The meeting will convene trauma medical directors, program managers, coordinators, and registrars from participating and prospective TQIP hospitals. J. Wayne Meredith, MD, FACS, MCCM, Winston-Salem, NC, the 2014 recipient of the ACS Distinguished Service Award and Past-Medical Director, ACS Trauma Programs, will deliver the keynote address. The program will include sessions for new TQIP centers, new staff at existing centers, and participants in need of a TQIP refresher. Breakout sessions focused on registrar and abstractor concerns, matters that relate to the trauma medical director and trauma program manager-focused issues will enhance the learning experience and instruct participants in their role on the TQIP team.

Visit the TQIP annual meeting website at https://www.facs.org/tqipmeeting to view the conference schedule and obtain information about lodging, transportation, and a social outing to Cirque du Soleil. For more information, contact ACS TQIP staff at acstqipmeeting@facs.org.

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National Medical Association honors Patricia L. Turner, MD, FACS

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National Medical Association honors Patricia L. Turner, MD, FACS

Patricia L. Turner, MD, FACS, Director of the American College of Surgeons Division of Member Services, received the 2016 National Medical Association (NMA) Council on Concerns of Women Physicians (CCWP) Service Award. Dr. Turner received the award July 31 at the CCWP Annual Muriel Petioni, MD, Awards Luncheon, which took place during the NMA’s 114th Annual Convention and Scientific Assembly in Los Angeles.

Rachel Villanueva, MD, Patricia Turner, MD, Garfield A.D. Clunie, MD, and the Chair, Council on Concerns of Women Physicians Camille A. Clare, MD

This award honors women physicians who, through research, community service, and activism, strive to eliminate health care disparities, provide people of color with quality health care, and address women’s health and professional issues. The awards program, the most highly attended event of the convention, continues to grow in popularity. This year’s program featured award-winning actress and television director Regina King. Read more about the NMA and the award at http://www.afassanoco.com/nma/ccwpprogram.html.

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Patricia L. Turner, MD, FACS, Director of the American College of Surgeons Division of Member Services, received the 2016 National Medical Association (NMA) Council on Concerns of Women Physicians (CCWP) Service Award. Dr. Turner received the award July 31 at the CCWP Annual Muriel Petioni, MD, Awards Luncheon, which took place during the NMA’s 114th Annual Convention and Scientific Assembly in Los Angeles.

Rachel Villanueva, MD, Patricia Turner, MD, Garfield A.D. Clunie, MD, and the Chair, Council on Concerns of Women Physicians Camille A. Clare, MD

This award honors women physicians who, through research, community service, and activism, strive to eliminate health care disparities, provide people of color with quality health care, and address women’s health and professional issues. The awards program, the most highly attended event of the convention, continues to grow in popularity. This year’s program featured award-winning actress and television director Regina King. Read more about the NMA and the award at http://www.afassanoco.com/nma/ccwpprogram.html.

Patricia L. Turner, MD, FACS, Director of the American College of Surgeons Division of Member Services, received the 2016 National Medical Association (NMA) Council on Concerns of Women Physicians (CCWP) Service Award. Dr. Turner received the award July 31 at the CCWP Annual Muriel Petioni, MD, Awards Luncheon, which took place during the NMA’s 114th Annual Convention and Scientific Assembly in Los Angeles.

Rachel Villanueva, MD, Patricia Turner, MD, Garfield A.D. Clunie, MD, and the Chair, Council on Concerns of Women Physicians Camille A. Clare, MD

This award honors women physicians who, through research, community service, and activism, strive to eliminate health care disparities, provide people of color with quality health care, and address women’s health and professional issues. The awards program, the most highly attended event of the convention, continues to grow in popularity. This year’s program featured award-winning actress and television director Regina King. Read more about the NMA and the award at http://www.afassanoco.com/nma/ccwpprogram.html.

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