Early Career
Early Career
Lessons learned as a gastroenterologist on social media
Social media provides a novel opportunity to improve health literacy while humanizing and restoring fading trust in health care.
Early Career
Gastroenterology practice evaluations: Can patients get satisfaction?
It is worth exploring why measuring satisfaction can be important, how patients can rate practitioners, and what to do with the available...
Early Career
Mentoring during fellowship to improve career fit, decrease burnout, and optimize career satisfaction among young gastroenterologists
In a survey of gastroenterology and transplant hepatology fellows, 94% of participants with a mentor reported that the mentor significantly...
Early Career
A career in industry: Is it right for me?
“Industry” includes pharmaceutical and/or biotechnology (discovery, development, manufacture, sales, and marketing of small or large molecules),...
Early Career
Dealing with difficult people
The workplace or hospital is not immune from tragedies that are born out of poor conflict resolution.
Conference Coverage
Eosinophilic esophagitis: Faces and facets of a new disease
While still a young disease, EoE has evolved from esoterica to a leading cause of dysphagia and food impaction worldwide.
Early Career
What does burnout cost?
At greater risk are younger physicians, physicians performing high-risk procedures, and physicians experiencing work-life conflicts.
Early Career
Be Kind to Yourself: Preventing Burnout in New GIs Through Self-Compassion
Physician burnout is a growing epidemic, particularly in the early careers of gastroenterologists. Up to 50% of new physicians and trainees...
Early Career
The AGA Trainee and Early Career Committee – Shaping the Young GI Experience
The committee represents a unique focus group where young GIs from all over the country work collectively to improve the young GI experience.