Commentary

A Message from the Executive Director: ACS continues to take on the issues of concern to surgeons and their patients


 

Trauma

The Committee on Trauma (COT), in collaboration with military partners and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), hosted a conference in April 2017 to advance the recommendations in the National Academies on Science, Engineering, and Medicine report, A National Trauma Care System: Integrating Military and Civilian Trauma Systems to Achieve Zero Preventable Deaths after Injury. The meeting brought together approximately 170 trauma care professionals with the goal of creating the framework for a National Trauma Care System Action Plan.

In light of recent tragedies and the ongoing public debate over how to stop the continuing violence at our nation’s schools, churches, and other public places, the COT Injury Prevention and Control Committee (IPCC) is advocating for a consensus-based, public health/trauma system approach to firearm injury prevention. Furthermore, at its February 2018 meeting the ACS Board of Regents unanimously approved a plan to expand the College’s focus from the successful Stop the Bleed® program to a broader prevention initiative focused on strategies that include research, advocacy, and strategic collaborations. An action plan was in development at press time.

ACS leadership

The ACS Board of Governors (B/G) continues to implement initiatives through its Pillars and Workgroups. Specific examples from this past year include the release of a white paper on out-of-network billing; production of the biannual e-newsletter, The Cutting Edge; conduct of the 2017 Board of Governors Annual Survey, which focuses on the Stop the Bleed campaign, the opioid crisis, work-related injuries/surgical ergonomics, and advanced practice providers in surgery; and development of a standardized letter of recommendation for applicants to surgery training programs.

The ACS Board of Regents approved and updated a number of statements in the last 12 months. New statements cover several topics of concern to the Fellowship, including gender salary equity, the use of anesthetics and sedation drugs in children and pregnant women, the opioid abuse epidemic, lithium batteries, opioids and motor vehicle crash prevention, maintaining surgical access with a locum tenens surgeon, social media, the Uniform Emergency Volunteer Health Practitioners Act, credentialing and privileging, and medical students and the electronic health record.

As these few examples demonstrate, the ACS is constantly moving forward to offer surgeons and the other members of the patient care team the tools, resources, and educational opportunities they need to succeed in practice and to provide optimal patient care. As always, you are encouraged to contact the ACS leadership, and let us know how we can best serve you.

Dr. Hoyt is the Executive Director of the ACS, Chicago, IL.

Pages

Recommended Reading

From the Editors: Unexpected benefits
MDedge Surgery
Expert argues for improving MACRA, not scrapping it
MDedge Surgery
From the Washington Office: Gratifying success for ACS legislative advocacy efforts
MDedge Surgery
Americans support the right to affordable health care
MDedge Surgery
Never too late to operate? Surgery near end of life is common, costly
MDedge Surgery
CMS issues split decision on Arkansas Medicaid waiver
MDedge Surgery
Preparing to respond to workplace violence
MDedge Surgery
Breast cancer care delayed when patients have high deductibles
MDedge Surgery
A health plan ‘down payment’ is one way states are retooling individual mandate
MDedge Surgery
ABS announces new certification exam
MDedge Surgery