Kansikuva näyttelystä PDs @ SEA

PDs @ SEA

Podcast by Stanford Anesthesia Informatics and Media (AIM)Lab

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Teknologia & tieteet

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PDs @ SEA is a conversation series created for anesthesiology residency leaders, faculty, and trainees who want an honest look into the evolving world of anesthesia education. The show features Residency Program Directors from across the country discussing the decisions, challenges, and real-world considerations behind recruiting, training, and supporting residents.Hosts Bryan and Marianne draw from their own experiences while inviting colleagues to reflect on practical issues such as changes to the interview and application process, transitions in leadership, and shifting expectations in graduate medical education. Each episode offers candid dialogue, shared lessons, and the sense of community that many program directors look for but often find difficult to access in day-to-day work.The series includes in-depth conversations with current and former residency leaders, members of the American Society of Anesthesiologists Medical Student Component, and educators who are shaping how residents learn. Together, these discussions provide insight into how program directors think, how residency decisions are made, and how the field continues to adapt to the needs of students, residents, and institutions.Produced by the Stanford AIM Lab on behalf of the Society for Education in Anesthesiology.For questions, topic suggestions, or to join the conversation, email: pdsatsea@seahq.org

Kaikki jaksot

15 jaksot

jakson Match Day Reflections: What This Year Taught Program Directors kansikuva

Match Day Reflections: What This Year Taught Program Directors

Episode Summary Residency recruitment is often discussed in terms of outcomes, match rates, fill rates, and competitiveness. Less often is it examined as a continuous, year-round process shaped by strategy, signaling, and evolving applicant behavior. In this episode of PDs@SEA, Dr. Marianne Chen and Dr. Bryan Mahoney reflect on the most recent Match, sharing initial reactions and what this recruitment cycle reveals about the current state of anesthesiology training. From the sheer volume of work behind recruitment to the increasing competitiveness of the specialty, the conversation highlights how both programs and applicants are adapting in real time. The discussion explores how signaling continues to shape application review and match outcomes, including emerging trends in gold versus silver signals and the unintended consequences of applicants “gaming” the system. The episode also examines shifts in the applicant pool, including broader interests, growing demand for away rotations, and evolving expectations around career flexibility, innovation, and global health. These themes are grounded in the operational realities of recruitment: how programs screen applicants with limited data, how away rotations influence selection, and how program directors refine their internal processes over time. The conversation also offers practical insight for new program directors, emphasizing rank list integrity, iterative improvement, and the long-term value of investing deeply in recruitment. The episode closes with advice for applicants, including the importance of meaningful exposure to anesthesiology and a realistic understanding of the specialty’s day-to-day demands, particularly the unpredictability of clinical work. Taken together, this discussion captures a specialty in transition, where demand is high, systems are evolving, and both applicants and educators are recalibrating expectations. Key Takeaways From This Episode * The anesthesiology match remains highly competitive, with strong applicant pools and high fill rates across programs. * Signaling continues to improve application review and match alignment, with increasing differentiation between gold and silver signals. * Applicant behavior is evolving, including strategic use of signals and broader interests beyond traditional clinical pathways. * Away rotations remain the most reliable way to assess fit, while also introducing access and equity challenges. * Recruitment is a year-round effort, and early, intentional investment in the process improves downstream outcomes. * There is no single “correct” selection algorithm; programs must define success based on their own priorities and iterate over time. * Applicants benefit from deeper exposure to anesthesiology, including understanding the unpredictability of clinical practice. Especially Useful For Program directors, associate program directors, residency leadership teams, department chairs, and clinician-educators focused on recruitment strategy and the evolving anesthesiology workforce pipeline. Related Episodes * The Truth About Signaling, Letters of Intent, and The Match: A PD’s Unfiltered Guide [https://www.buzzsprout.com/admin/2554558/episodes/18149406-the-truth-about-signaling-letters-of-intent-and-the-match-a-pd-s-unfiltered-guide] A practical deep dive into signaling strategy, applicant behavior, and how programs interpret interest during the match process. * So the Applications Just Dropped: How Program Directors Actually Read Them [https://www.buzzsprout.com/admin/2554558/episodes/18149278-so-the-applications-just-dropped-how-program-directors-actually-read-them] A behind-the-scenes look at how PDs screen applications, manage volume, and make interview decisions.

19. huhti 2026 - 37 min
jakson Global health Opportunities in Anesthesia kansikuva

Global health Opportunities in Anesthesia

Jo Davies, MBBS, FRCA, Professor of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,  University of Washington, Director of the Society for Education in Anesthesia (SEA) and Health Volunteers Overseas (HVO) Traveling Fellowship with the Committee for Global Outreach https://www.seahq.org/sea-hvo-traveling-fellowship [https://www.seahq.org/sea-hvo-traveling-fellowship]  Elizabeth T. Drum, M.D., F.A.A.P., F.C.P.P., F.A.S.A., Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology and Critical Care, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Chair ASA Committee on Global Health, U.S. Program Director for the Resident International Anesthesia Scholarship Program https://www.asahq.org/charity/programs/scholarship [https://www.asahq.org/charity/programs/scholarship] Bryan Mahoney, M.D., F.A.S.A. Vice Chair of Education Director, Residency Training Program Associate Professor, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine Mount Sinai West and Mount Sinai Morningside Hospitals, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Check out the podcast, PD's at SEA (Society for Education in Anesthesia) at: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2554558/episodes [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2554558/episodes]

27. maalis 2026 - 29 min
jakson Early Exposure, Better Advice: Medical Student Education and the Future of Anesthesiology kansikuva

Early Exposure, Better Advice: Medical Student Education and the Future of Anesthesiology

Medical student education in anesthesiology is often treated as peripheral to residency leadership. Less often is it examined as a strategic lever for recruitment, advising quality, and the long-term health of the specialty. In this episode of PDs@SEA, Dr. Marianne Chen is joined by Dr. Mike Hofkamp and Dr. Christine Vo to examine how early exposure to anesthesiology shapes student interest, preparedness, and competitiveness. Drawing from their experiences as long-standing medical student clerkship directors, they reflect on how externships, early electives, interest groups, and even research participation can meaningfully influence career trajectories. The conversation explores how medical school curriculum redesign, shortened preclinical phases, and elective flexibility have created new opportunities for anesthesia engagement. The group compares mandatory versus elective anesthesia rotations, highlighting the tradeoffs between intentional participation and broad exposure, and how each model influences student motivation and perception of the specialty. Attention then turns to the realities of advising in an increasingly competitive match environment. The episode offers candid guidance on away rotations, virtual interviews, and the evolving role of audition rotations as month-long assessments of both programs and applicants. The discussion moves deeply into signaling strategy, unpacking gold versus silver signals, common misconceptions, and how poor advising can inadvertently disadvantage otherwise strong candidates. These themes are grounded in the lived experience of clerkship leadership: variable institutional support, lack of protected time, and the absence of national standardization for medical student directors. The guests reflect on the inaugural medical student education session at the SAAAPM meeting, identifying an advising gap and the growing need for a national community of practice. The episode closes with a forward-looking discussion on advocacy, mentorship, and why investing in medical student education is not optional but foundational to sustaining anesthesiology as a specialty. Key Takeaways From This Episode * Early exposure to anesthesiology strongly influences student interest, preparedness, and application competitiveness. * Externships, early electives, and interest groups are powerful recruitment tools, often with unintended positive downstream effects. * Elective versus mandatory anesthesia rotations each carry benefits and tradeoffs in engagement and discovery. * Audition rotations now serve as critical bidirectional assessments in a virtual interview era. * Gold signals drive match outcomes far more than silver signals, and poor signaling strategy can undermine strong applications. * Advising gaps persist nationally, particularly around signaling, away rotations, and program competitiveness. * Medical student clerkship directors operate with highly variable support, limiting standardization and sustainability. * Building a national advising and education community is essential to the future of the specialty. Especially Useful For Medical student clerkship directors, residency advisors, program directors, associate program directors, vice chairs for education, and anesthesiologists involved in recruitment, mentoring, or undergraduate medical education. Related Episodes Everything You Wanted to Know About Being a Program Director A candid discussion of PD responsibilities, hidden labor, and the structural pressures shaping residency leadership. Recruitment in the Virtual Era: Signals, Interviews, and Applicant Experience Examines how virtual interviews, signaling, and visiting rotations are reshaping anesthesiology recruitment.

3. helmi 2026 - 38 min
jakson Everything You Wanted to Know About Being a Program Director kansikuva

Everything You Wanted to Know About Being a Program Director

Program directorship is often framed as an administrative role or temporary leadership assignment. Less often is it examined as a structurally vulnerable position, balancing the needs of residents, faculty, institutions, and accreditation requirements. In this episode of PDs@SEA, Dr. Marianne Chen and Dr. Bryan Mahoney reflect on the candid “Everything You Wanted to Know” session from the SAAAPM annual meeting, surfacing experiences program directors across the country rarely articulate publicly. The conversation opens with a striking finding: only a small minority of program directors anticipate staying in the role beyond six years, prompting discussion about burnout, identity, and the hidden labor of residency leadership. The discussion explores how artificial intelligence is entering PD workflows, from letters of recommendation and promotion reviews to early scheduling experiments, alongside a clear-eyed assessment of where automation helps and where human judgment remains essential. Recruitment practices are also examined, including signaling, interview volume, second looks, and the tension between efficiency, equity, and applicant experience. These themes are grounded in the daily realities of program leadership: evaluations, duty hours, follow-ups, and persistent administrative load. Practical strategies emerge around organization, delegation, habit formation, and boundary-setting, as well as how perspective shifts with experience. The episode closes by asking whether the growing competitiveness of anesthesiology will translate into a sustainable pipeline of future leaders, and what institutions must do to support those entrusted with raising the next generation professionally. Key Takeaways From This Episode * Program director burnout is largely structural, driven by the role’s position between residents, faculty, institutions, and accreditation requirements. * Short PD tenures signal sustainability challenges that cannot be solved through individual resilience alone. * AI is beginning to reduce administrative burden for PDs, but only when paired with deliberate human oversight. * Recruitment mechanisms such as signaling and second looks improve efficiency while introducing new equity tradeoffs. * Administrative overload remains a central stressor and requires systems-level solutions, not incremental fixes. * Sustainable PD leadership depends on habits, delegation, and boundaries rather than constant availability. * Program directors shape the future of the specialty by “raising residents professionally,” extending their impact beyond individual programs. Especially Useful For Program directors, associate program directors, residency leadership teams, department chairs, and clinician-educators focused on the sustainability of graduate medical education leadership. Related Episodes * Why Residency Leadership Is Burning Out (And Why It Still Matters) [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2554558/episodes/18149288-why-residency-leadership-is-burning-out-and-why-it-still-matters] A direct examination of PD burnout, structural pressures, and why sustaining leadership roles requires institutional support rather than individual endurance. * Passing the Torch: How a Residency Survives (and Grows) Through Leadership Change [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2554558/episodes/18149425-passing-the-torch-how-a-residency-survives-and-grows-through-leadership-change] Explores leadership transitions, continuity, and what departments can do to protect programs during periods of PD turnover.

20. joulu 2025 - 39 min
jakson A New Co-Host and a New Era in Residency Recruitment kansikuva

A New Co-Host and a New Era in Residency Recruitment

This episode marks a major milestone for PDs @ SEA. We celebrate our tenth episode and welcome our new co-host, Dr. Marianne Chen, Residency Program Director at Stanford. Marianne joins host Dr. Bryan Mahoney to talk about leadership transitions, the realities of running a residency, and how signaling and recent ERAS changes are reshaping recruitment across anesthesiology. Together, they compare early data, share how signaling is affecting the depth and fairness of application review, and reflect on the role of team-based recruitment. They also discuss the value and limits of the new applicant essay prompts and how programs interpret gold and silver tier signals differently. This conversation offers practical insight for program directors, faculty, clerkship directors, and educators navigating this year’s recruitment season. It also highlights the shared commitment across programs to support trainees and build strong, inclusive learning environments. This episode was recorded, produced, edited and published by Larry Chu, MD and the Stanford AIM lab. [http://aim.stanford.edu]

7. marras 2025 - 32 min
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