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Articles tagged with "Career development"

The Ins & Outs of Private Rheumatology Practice

Vanessa Caceres  |  July 29, 2024

For a podcast audience, Dr. Sunil Abraham shared pearls for evaluating what setting best fits you and your lifestyle, and what a career in community practice means.

The ACR’s RISE Registry & Rheumatology Research Foundation Launch Award to Support Early Career Professionals

Allison Plitman, MPA  |  August 5, 2022

A new award from the ACR’s RISE Registry and the Rheumatology Research Foundation supports early career rheumatology researchers and clinicians who leverage the registry’s real-world data in research projects.

Medical Professionals Link the Word ‘Career’ with Men

Tamara Mathias  |  August 7, 2019

(Reuters Health)—Researchers who examined implicit and explicit gender biases in the U.S. medical community found professionals of both genders are more likely to associate the word career with men and the word family with women. And U.S. surgeons broadly see surgery as a man’s career and family medicine as a woman’s field, the researchers also…

Women Internists Make 80 Cents for Every Dollar Earned by Men

Lisa Rapaport  |  August 7, 2018

(Reuters Health)—In internal medicine, women earn less than men even when they’re in the same specialty and working the same hours in similar types of medical practices, a U.S. study suggests. Overall, half of male internists have annual salaries of at least $250,000, compared with $200,000 for female internists, the analysis of survey data from…

What Makes an Effective Department Head?

Karen Appold  |  December 8, 2017

If you’re aspiring to lead a rheumatology department, you will need more than what you learned in medical school. Beyond expertly treating patients and participating in research, these leaders must also understand management, mentorship and problem solving, as well as the business of running a successful department…

2017 ACR/ARHP Meeting to Highlight Global Educational Opportunities for Rheumatology Health Professionals

Courtesy of the ARHP Practice Committee  |  October 17, 2017

Efficiently meeting the needs of people with rheumatic disease requires the expertise of a team of health professionals. During their formal education, health professionals acquire the knowledge, skills and attitudes that prepare them to best contribute to a healthcare team. Maintaining and expanding that knowledge happens during continuing education and post-graduate programs, which ensure lifelong…

The ACR Early Career Investigators to Host Sessions at 2017 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Jeffrey Sparks, MD, MMSc  |  October 16, 2017

The ACR Early Career Investigators (ECI) Subcommittee has organized two sessions at the 2017 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting in San Diego. These sessions are devoted to serving the needs of early career investigators including junior faculty, fellows, graduate students and post-docs. Both sessions provide unique opportunities to optimize the research landscape for early career investigators. Mentoring…

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Fellows’ Forum: 6 Tips to Improve Professional Feedback

Bharat Kumar, MD, MME, FACP, FAAAAI, RhMSUS  |  July 13, 2017

I was driving to work one morning when I stopped behind a truck at a red light. The driver had placed several flashy stickers on the bumper and back doors. But what I was drawn to was a more commonplace sign: “How’s my driving? Call this number to give feedback.” It’s routine to find a…

ARHP President Dr. Afton L. Hassett’s Rise from Annual Meeting Attendee to Leadership Role

Erin Latimer Meadows  |  May 18, 2017

Current ARHP President Afton L. Hassett, PsyD—a clinical psychologist and an associate research scientist in the Department of Anesthesiology at the University of Michigan—attended her first ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting in 1999. Dr. Hassett submitted an abstract to the meeting describing her dissertation research exploring the role of pain and depression in rheumatoid arthritis and fibromyalgia. It…

Full Circle: How Becoming an Educator Reenergized a Rheumatologist’s Career

Karen Appold  |  January 27, 2017

Career changes can be difficult. But for Stanford Shoor, MD, leaving clinical practice and becoming an educator in the field of rheumatology has been “a renaissance.”

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