Association of Women Surgeons

The Association of Women Surgeons is an international organization of women who practice in surgical specialties which remained male dominated for years after women entered medicine in large numbers. The organization was formalized following a strategic planning session in which its mission statement, "To inspire, encourage, and enable women surgeons to achieve their personal and professional goals," was developed and adopted.

History

1981-1985

The Association of Women Surgeons was founded in 1981 when Patricia Numann, M.D, invited as many female surgeons as she could identify to breakfast at the October meeting of the American College of Surgeons (ACS) in the San Francisco Hilton Hotel. Sharing many common experiences, and concerns, this small group of women decided to meet annually. For the next few years, these breakfasts were the first significant contact that many female residents or newly practicing female surgeons had with more professionally advanced surgical women.

1986-1990

1991-1996

1996-2001

2001–2007

Past presidents

Dates Name Speciality Affiliation
Founder Patricia Numann Retired Endocrine Surgeon Syracuse, New York
1988–1990 Tamar Earnest Rabbi Allentown, Pennsylvania
1990–1992 Mary McCarthy Trauma Surgeon Wright State University School of Medicine, Dayton, Ohio
1992–1994 Linda Philips Plastic Surgeon University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas
1994–1995 Margaret Dunn Dean Wright State University School of Medicine, Dayton, Ohio
1995–1996 Joyce Majure General Surgeon St. Joseph Regional Med. Ctr., Lewiston, Idaho
1996–1997 M. Margaret Kemeny Director Queen’s Cancer Center, Jamaica, New York
1997–1998 Leigh Neumayer General Surgeon VA Hospital, Salt Lake City, Utah
1998–1999 Beth Sutton General Surgeon Wichita Falls, Texas
1999–2000 Dixie Mills Breast Surgeon Pacific Palisades, California
2000–2001 Kim Ephgrave General Surgeon and Associate Dean University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa
2001–2002 Myriam Curet Minimally Invasive Surgeon and Associate Dean Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, California
2002–2003 Susan Kaiser Breast Surgeon Jersey City Medical Center, New York, New York
2003–2004 Vivian Gahtan Chief of Vascular Surgery SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, New York
2004–2005 Susan Stuart General Surgeon Phoenix Indian Health Service, Phoenix, Arizona
2005–2006 Hilary Sanfey Transplant Surgeon University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia
2006–2007 Patricia Bergen Professor of Surgery University of Texas SW, Dallas, Texas

Note: beginning with the 1995-1996, presidential terms changed from two years to one year.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, November 16, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.