President's Message

CCAS Board Elections

ARTICLE REVIEW
A contemporary comparison of the effect of shunt type in hypoplastic left heart syndrome on the hemodynamics and outcome at stage 2 reconstruction.

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CCAS Board Elections

By Dean Andropoulos, M.D.

The CCAS Board Elections are being held in September and early October, by email ballot to all current CCAS members. Follow the simple email instructions for voting with your ballot. The deadline for receipt of the ballots will be October 10, 2007, with the election results announced at the CCAS Board of Directors meeting on October 13, 2007.  Election of Board Members to the 3 open positions will complete a full Board of 10 Directors, according to the CCAS Bylaws.  There will be a CCAS Board election every year, with at least 3 positions elected, to allow for continuity of some Board members, and avoid turnover of all the Board members the same year.

In keeping with our major initiative to increase international membership, 2 of the 3 open positions are reserved for international members. As noted below, we have recruited outstanding nominees, who will do an excellent job representing and recruiting international membership. The third position is for the election of a U.S. CCAS Board Member. I wish to thank all of the outstanding nominees for volunteering.

PLEASE VOTE USING OUR ONLINE BALLOT. CLICK HERE:

The 2007 CCAS Board of Directors Nominees are:

United States Director (one position open: vote for one US Director nominee):

1.
VICTOR C. BAUM, MD
Dr. Baum

Vic Baum is Professor of Anesthesiology and Pediatrics, Director of Cardiac Anesthesia and Executive Vice-Chair at the University of Virginia. Prior to that he was at UCLA where he was also President of the Los Angeles County Society of Anesthesiologists. He is board certified in Pediatrics, Pediatric Cardiology, Pediatric Critical Care and Anesthesiology. He is on the editorial boards of The Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia and Seminars in Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia, and is an associate editor of Survey of Anesthesiology. He is a member of the Association of University Anesthesiologists and the Association of Cardiac Anesthesiologists and has been listed in “Best Doctors in America”. He has served on committees of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, the Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists and the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia. He is on the Medical Advisory Board of the International Children’s Heart Foundation, with which he travels to do pediatric cardiac cases abroad in Eastern Europe, Central Asia and China. He has served as a consultant to the Ministry of Health of Uzbekistan. He has published articles and book chapters in areas of pediatric anesthesia, anesthesia for patients with congenital heart disease, adult cardiac anesthesia and pediatric critical care, and is co-author of the book Anesthesia for Genetic, Metabolic and Dysmorphic Syndromes of Childhood. He routinely gets a kick from the fact that as a pediatrician he is chief of cardiac anesthesia. He has long felt that pediatric cardiac anesthesia needs its own home and has been delighted to see the birth of the Congenital Cardiac Anesthesia Society.

2.
SUANNE M. DAVES, MD
Dr. Daves Suanne Daves is a pediatric cardiac anesthesiologist and cardiac intensivist at The University of Chicago Comer Children’s Hospital.  Having originally trained in the care of the adult undergoing cardiac surgery and the neonate undergoing non-cardiac procedures, she eventually realized her true career path and entered the congenital heart arena in 2000.  In 2002, she elected to take a leave of absence from her faculty position to train in pediatric cardiac critical care at Boston Children’s Hospital and The University of Chicago.  She is currently the medical director of the cardiac critical care unit at Comer and continues to actively participate in the anesthetic management of the child and adult with congenital cardiac disease.  She has been involved in the development of a clinical program for an alternative hybrid stage I strategy for the high-risk neonate with hypoplastic left heart syndrome.  Suanne’s academic achievements have been in the development and implementation of curriculums involving care of patients with congenital heart disease.  She is a recognized expert in medical education and has garnered many teaching awards during her career.  She frequently teaches at national meetings using problem-based learning discussions and case-based formats.  Currently, she is interested in participating in the construction of a unified curriculum for the training of the pediatric cardiac anesthesiologist and facilitating the role of the anesthesiologist in the cardiac critical care unit.  She hopes to bring this interest to bear on the educational and organizational mission of the CCAS.
3.
JAMES SPAETH, MD
Dr. Spaeth

James P. Spaeth, M.D., is Director, Cardiac Anesthesia, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, and Associate Professor of Clinical Anesthesia and Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati School of Medicine. He received his MD from the University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, VA, in 1993, and completed his Anesthesiology Residency at the University of California, San Diego Medical Center in 1997. He then completed a Fellowship in Pediatric Anesthesiology at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, in 1998. He was board certified by the American Board of Anesthesiology in 1998. Jim is particularly interested in neurological injury in children with congenital heart disease, and he is the co-author of an important study published in the Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery in 2006: “Brain magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities after the Norwood procedure using regional cerebral perfusion.” He has presented this data and given a number of lectures on this topic in the last several years, including a well received lecture at the CCAS Pediatric Cardiac Anesthesia Conference in December 2005. Other interests include sedation and anesthesia for radiologic procedures, and developing systems in the perioperative environment to improve patient safety. Jim feels that improved collaboration among pediatric cardiac centers through the CCAS now provides an exciting opportunity to develop fellowship training guidelines for congenital heart disease, pursue research on the impact of specific anesthetic techniques on perioperative outcomes, and improve educational programs on congenital heart disease for all types of anesthesiologists.

4. WRITE-IN CANDIDATE

International Director (two positions open, vote for two International  Director nominees):

1. PHILLIP ARNOLD, BM, FRCA
Dr. Arnold

I am a practicing Paediatric Cardiac Anaesthetist at Alder Hey Hospital in Liverpool in the UK.  Having been in my current position for five years, I have also undergone fellowship training in the UK and at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto.  My current interests are in optimal blood usage during paediatric cardiac surgery and intraoperative transoesophageal echo.  During the last few years, I have been fortunate to have the opportunity to lecture on aspects of paediatric anaesthesia both in the UK and abroad.  I have also joined the International Children’s Heart Foundation on trips to developing programs around the world.  The interventions we make are complex, and collaborations such as CCAS will help us clarify the best approaches and will direct research to prominent clinical problems. However, the community of anaesthetists caring for children and adults with congenital heart disease is small and if the organisation were constrained by geographical or national boundaries this would be counterproductive.  There are many high quality paediatric cardiac programs internationally.  Extending such collaboration to doctors working in newly developing programs across the world, would also sit well with the stated objectives of CCAS. 

2. IAN JAMES, MB, ChB, FRCA
Dr. James

I qualified in Medicine at Birmingham University Medical School, England in 1974, became a Fellow of the Royal College of Anaesthetists of England in 1979, and was appointed as Consultant Paediatric Anaesthetist at Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, London in 1982. My clinical workload is predominantly anaesthesia for cardiac surgery and angiography, and I am currently Head of the Cardiac Anaesthesia service. Our cardiac programme is wide-ranging and includes one of the busiest heart and lung transplantation services worldwide, including bridging to transplantation with mechanical support and ECMO. I also have a clinical commitment within the cardiac intensive care unit, of which I was the Director for 12 years, and I am particularly interested in the interface and overlap between the OR and critical care. I have experience in Society and Committee work, and was Council member and subsequently President of the European Society of Paediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care.

3. WRITE-IN CANDIDATE

PLEASE VOTE USING OUR ONLINE BALLOT. CLICK HERE.

 


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