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Career

Biofilms in Otolaryngology: Relation to clinical disease needs more study, experts say

October 10, 2011

It is now well recognized that pathogens found in biofilms play a role in many mucosal-based otolaryngologic-related infections, but what that role is and how to prevent or treat biofilms remain unknown, concluded a panel of experts convened here on Sept. 17 at the 2011 American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Annual Meeting.

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A Boost for Research: The Triological Society’s grants help physician-scientists launch investigative careers

September 2, 2011

It can be difficult to launch a career as a physician–scientist, especially when budget cuts are making research funding harder to find—and this is doubly true for a small specialty like otolaryngology. That challenge is the reasoning behind the Triological Society’s grant programs. The society, which has awarded more than $2.5 million in grants since 1994, promotes research into the causes and treatments of ear, nose and throat diseases.

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Return on Investment: 2010 grant winners discuss their research spending

September 2, 2011

The otolaryngology treatments of tomorrow are the research of today, but somebody has to pay for it.

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Sleep Studies Clarified: New guidelines amplify the role of PSG for children with sleep-disordered breathing

August 2, 2011

For otolaryngologists seeing increasing numbers of children with sleep-disordered breathing, whether or not to refer children for a polysomnography (PSG) prior to surgery is not a decision easily made. Currently, only about 10 percent of otolaryngologists request a sleep study in children with sleep-disordered breathing prior to surgery.

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A New Way to Learn: Residency programs use medical simulation to fill training gaps

August 2, 2011

In May, Marcelo Antunes, MD, chief resident of otorhinolaryngology-head and neck surgery at the University of Pennsylvania, was able to practice bilobed flaps on pig’s feet at an ORL Rising Chief Boot Camp held at Penn Medicine Clinical Simulation Center in Philadelphia. While he had previously experienced medical simulation during his otolaryngology residency, the boot camp put the methodology in proper context for Dr. Antunes, who is particularly interested in facial plastics.

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A Prevalent Problem: Studies report sleep deprivation in colleagues, patients

July 4, 2011

Among the issues highlighted here last month at SLEEP 2011, the 25th Annual Meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies, was the effect of inadequate sleep on both the health of the individual and on society at large. Two studies presented at the meeting, for example, looked at the effects of inadequate sleep on health care providers and the risks posed to their health and the health of their patients. Another study put into context just how underreported inadequate sleep and sleep disorders are and elaborated on the challenge this poses to otolaryngologists and others who are on the frontlines managing these disorders.

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British Surgeon Describes Lessons Learned from Trainee Duty Hour Limits

June 9, 2011

Lord Ribeiro gave his presentation at COSM 2011.

TRIO Guest of Honor Shares Career Advice

June 9, 2011

Dr. Harold Pillsbury gave his presentation at COSM 2011.

TRIO President Discusses the Benefits of U.S. Scientific Research

June 9, 2011

Dr. Gerald Berke gave his presentation at COSM 2011.

Training Trends: British surgeon offers cautionary tale about limit on trainee duty hours

June 1, 2011

New limits on doctors in training in the United Kingdom (U.K.) have drastically reduced the amount of training they receive and may put patients in peril, a renowned retired British surgeon told listeners here on April 29 at the Annual Meeting of the Triological Society, held as part of the Combined Otolaryngology Spring Meetings.

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