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Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

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Page 1: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative

An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Page 2: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

A Message from the Resident Council Chair

"Residents will quickly discover ASCP’s genuine commitment to maximizing the day-to-day resident experience (e.g. educational products, board preparation, and generous support for subspecialty electives).  But it is the lasting feeling of satisfaction with ASCP through its sincere commitments to resident welfare, patient-centric strategies, and international health that makes one’s relationship with the organization distinctly sustainable.“

Christopher (Chris) Cogbill, MD

2011-2012 Resident Council Chair

Page 3: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Mission: The mission of the American Society for Clinical Pathology is to provide excellence in education, certification and advocacy on behalf of patients, pathologists and laboratory professionals.

Founded in 1922

Today ASCP is the world’s largest professional membership organization for pathologists and laboratory professionals

Headquarters are located in Chicago, IL with additional offices in Washington, DC and Indianapolis, IN

About ASCP

Page 4: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

ASCP employs approximately 130 staff members ASCP is a professional organization representing the entire laboratory team with over 100,000 members worldwide. ASCP members include:

Pathologists and pathologists-in-training Medical laboratory scientists & technicians

(including cytotechnologists and histotechnologists) Pathologists’ assistants Phlebotomists Clinical scientists (PHDs) Medical students Lab professional students

About ASCP

Page 5: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

The Four Pillars of ASCP ASCP organizational goals and directives are focused around the 4 pillars.

Page 6: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

A Message from the ASCP President

“ASCP has placed an increasingly high priority on seeking out, listening to, and pursuing opportunities for collaboration with other organizations, both inside and outside the clinical laboratory profession. These efforts have been quite successful due, in part, to increased participation by ASCP members at meetings and on committees, councils, working groups, and boards of other organizations. These “connections” helped the Society become aware of the needs and concerns of other groups and also identify areas of common interest.” C. Bruce Alexander, MD, FASCP

ASCP President

Page 7: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Resident Council

The Resident Council, consisting of 12 members, represents the voice of Resident and Medical Student members.

The Resident Council provides recommendations to the Board of Directors through the Commission on Membership on ways the Society can meet the professional and educational needs of its Resident and Medical Student members.

The Resident Council has a Regional Representative for each of the 8 U.S. regions and 1 for Canada/Puerto Rico/Military who manage their distinct region.

Resident Representatives who fall under these regions bring issues and concerns from the membership to the Resident Council.

Page 8: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

SOUTHWEST

NORTHWEST

SOUTH CENTRAL

NORTH CENTRAL

SOUTHEAST

MIDWEST

MID-ATLANTIC

NORTHEAST

ASCP’s 8 U.S. Regions

Page 9: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

ASCP is Inclusive

“The ASCP is THE inclusive professional organization for pathology and laboratory medicine, that it represents the whole “lab team”, and that the staff and volunteers are truly “special” people, makes the ASCP a unique, exceptional, and dynamic organization.” Fred H. Rodriguez, Jr., MD, FASCP

Past ASCP President

Page 10: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Resident Member Benefits

Professional networking opportunities

Discounts on texts Heavily discounted registration

fees to Educational Courses Weekends of Pathology

Resident specific activities at the Annual Meeting with special pricing just for Residents

Resident Poster sessions

Subspecialty Grants Hill Day Grants Resident Representative Network &

Other Volunteer Opportunities Fellowship & Job Market Survey

Results Free electronic access to:

American Journal of Clinical Pathology

Critical Values LabMedicine

*MEMBERSHIP IS FREE FOR ALL PATHOLOGISTS IN TRAINING!

Page 11: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Resident Member Benefits

The ASCP offers a broad range of outstanding continuing medical education programs in anatomical and clinical pathology and all subspecialty areas for practicing pathologists and pathologists in training.

• You will have online access to over 599 CME activities (623 total CME credits), including more than 486 SAM activities (510 total SAM credits) from areas including anatomic pathology, clinical pathology, cytology, hematology, and molecular diagnostics.

• PRISE (Pathologist Recertification Individualized Self-Assessment Exam) allows access to a bank of 725 practice questions.

Page 12: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Resident Member Benefits: Discounted Publications

Page 13: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Resident Member Benefits:Free Online Access to ASCP Journals

Page 14: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

2012 Educational Courses

October 11-13 Oncologic Pathology: A Review and Update of Diagnostic Problems Montreal, QC, Canada

October 22-25 Contemporary Issues in Urologic Pathology Chicago, IL

November 5-7 Diagnosis and Management of Breast Disease Clearwater Beach, FL

Learn more at www.ascp.org/pathmeetings

Residents Receive a 50% Discount on ASCP Educational Courses

Page 15: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

November 12-16 Practical State-of-the-Art Approach to Diagnostic Hematopathology Las Vegas, NV

December 3-6 Surgical Pathology of the Head and Neck Santa Fe, NM

December 10-13 Cytopathology Update Fort Lauderdale, FL

2012 Educational Courses

Learn more at www.ascp.org/pathmeetings

Residents Receive a 50% Discount on ASCP Educational Courses

Page 16: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Residents Pay $199 to attend the meeting

Page 17: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

• Ashley Judd:  Humanitarian actress and advocate for public health in 13 countries

• Laura Bush & Barbara Bush: A discussion of Global Health Corps efforts to expand breast and cervical cancer treatments around the world

• Donald Berwick, MD:  The 2012 Scientific Address features insights from the former administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services • Guiliana and Bill Rancic: A first-hand perspective on how the Rancics came to grips with Guiliana's breast cancer diagnosis

and subsequent double mastectomy                                                     

Page 18: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

2012 ASCP Annual Meeting October 31-November 3

Resident’s events and activities during the ASCP 2012 Annual Meeting

Mini Resident Review Courses Fellowship Roundtables American Pathology Foundation: Mis-Hires: How To Avoid Making

One and How To Avoid Being One Ethical Dilemmas Facing Physicians-In-Training And much, much more!

Learn more at www.ascp.org/2012annualmeeting.

Page 19: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

ASCP Annual Meeting

"The ASCP Annual Meeting provides a

great avenue for education as well as

networking. Courses cover a wide variety

of topics and are taught by experts in the

field. Also, I have met residents and

attending physicians from around the

country--truly invaluable connections for

my future career.“ Alison Huppmann, MD, FASCP Past ASCP Resident Council Co-Chair

Page 20: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Resident Subspecialty Grant Program

• $22,000 awarded each year

• $500, $1,000 & $2,000 grants for 1, 2, or 4–week externships

• Grants are awarded biannually:• October (apply by August 14, 2012)• March (apply by January 15, 2013)

Learn more at www.ascp.org/Residents/Resident-Grants

Page 21: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Resident Subspecialty Grant Program

The American Society for Clinical Pathology offers resident grants to defray the cost of doing elective rotations at outside institutions in fields of pathology in which the resident desires increased exposure.

Read more about past subspecialty grant recipients:

http://www.ascp.org/Newsroom/ASCP-Resident-Subspecialty-Grant-Shifts-a-Residents-Career-Path.html

http://www.ascp.org/Newsroom/ASCP-Subspecialty-Grant-Recipient-Performs-Many-Diagnoses-with-Few-Resources-in-Kenya.html

Page 22: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Resident In-Service Examination (RISE)

“The RISE helps Residents to assess and track their training progress and medical knowledge, and additionally for Program Directors to evaluate the training program curriculum. This evaluation tool that can be used to assess progress in the areas of Anatomic Pathology, Clinical Pathology, Molecular Pathology and Laboratory Administration. The exam assesses Medical Knowledge, one of six competencies defined in the ACGME Outcomes Project.”

Learn more at www.ascp.org/Residents/RISE

Page 23: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

PRISE

Access a bank of 725 questions

• Q & A Choice of AP/CP or Common area modules, each with 25 multiple choice case based questions

• Additional educational feedback• Questions based on the outline used by the American Board

of Pathology (ABP) for the MOC cognitive examination• Ability to retake the modules an unlimited number of times

www.ascp.org/prise

Page 24: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

2012 ASCP Fellowship and Job Market Survey

New questions this year added to cover graduated sign-out and confidence in the job market

Page 25: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Advocacy

The ASCP Washington Office represents the interests of

pathology and laboratory medicine before Congress, federal

regulatory agencies and state governments through its

advocacy efforts. The Washington Office also interacts with

patient, allied health, lab and medical organizations to build

coalitions to further the goals of ASCP.

Page 26: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Advocacy

“It is imperative that Residents participate in

the political activities that will determine

changes in how medicine is practiced.  ASCP

is pleased to be working with our Residents

in the area of advocacy and public policy to

help shape the future of pathology and

laboratory medicine. Please join us as we

advocate for a bright future for pathology.”

Jeff Jacobs, MAVice President for Public Policy

Page 27: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Hill Day Grant for Residents

Residents have an opportunity to participate in the legislative process on Capitol Hill.

Residents who have an interest in the political process and pathology-related issues on a national scale are encouraged to apply for this grant.

http://www.ascp.org/Residents/Resident-Grants

2012 Hill Day Grant Recipients Melissa C. Austin, MD

University of Washington Tobi Quinto, MD, MPH

Tufts Medical Center

Melissa C. Austin, MD

Tobi Quinto, MD, MPH

Page 28: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Volunteer Opportunities

The Resident Council identifies and addresses the needs and concerns of ASCP Resident members, facilitates communications between the ASCP and its Resident members and recommends new products and services for Resident members.

12 members

Resident Representatives serve as the voice of their program and convey local issues to ASCP to be addressed at a national level.

Multiple Residents in each residency program in the U.S., Canada, Puerto Rico and U.S. Military Programs

Write cases for ASCP Case Reports

Become an Assistant Editor for LabMedicine

There are several ASCP Committees that Residents can participate in as areas such as Finance, Annual Meeting, Communications, Publications, Scientific topics, etc.

14 committees with current Resident participation

If you would like to become an ASCP volunteer, contact [email protected].

Page 29: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Becoming an ASCP Resident Representative

You can become a Resident Representative by contacting

Betty Sanders @ ASCP ([email protected] or 312-541-4978)

Each institution can have multiple Resident Representatives

Resident Representative duties and responsibilities

Serve as a liaison between the Residents in their program and the

ASCP Resident Council

Promote the benefits of ASCP membership to colleagues in their

residency programs

Encourage Resident involvement with ASCP

Convey any local issues to ASCP to be addressed at a national

level

Serve as a mentor to Residents, students interested in the

profession of pathology and other Resident Representatives

Page 30: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

2011 ASCP Resident Representative Leadership Award

Lili Lee, MD New York University Langone

Medical CenterNew York, NY

Stephen Hammond, MD Boston Medical Center

Boston, MA

Awarded to Resident members of ASCP recognized as being engaged in fulfilling the mission of our Society

Page 31: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

ASCP Resident Council

The ASCP Resident Council wants to hear your thoughts and

ideas on what we can do serve your education, your

patients, and your profession!

[email protected]

Website: www.ascp.org

Grants, Awards, and

Volunteer

Opportunities:

[email protected]

Page 32: Presented by Your ASCP Resident Representative An Introduction to the American Society for Clinical Pathology

Thank you!