The 2019 Emile F. Holman Lecture in Surgery and Resident Research Day commemorates the life and accomplishments of Founding Department Chair Emile Frederic Holman, MD.
From 11AM – 5PM, we will showcase the depth and breadth of research by our trainees at poster and abstract presentations.
Following the research symposium, all are invited to attend the 21st Annual Holman Lecture. This year, the Stanford Department of Surgery welcomes Dr. Melina Kibbe, chair of the Department of Surgery at the University of North Carolina. Dr. Kibbe will present: “Translational research: one surgeon’s journey.”
The Poster Session will be held in the Huang Engineering Building’s outdoor amphitheater, while the Scientific Program and Lecture will be held in the Mackenzie Room. Reception to immediately follow on the Huang Building’s 2nd-floor terrace.
Schedule of Events:
12PM Luncheon, Outdoor Amphitheatre
1PM Oral Abstract Presentations, Mackenzie Room
5PM Holman Lecture, Mackenzie Room
6PM Reception, 2nd-floor Terrace
David Chang, MD presents “Lymphedema: Surgery and Management”
Presented by Dr. Arden Morris, MD
Professor of Surgery (General Surgery)
S-SPIRE Director
Stanford University Medical Center
Bio
Presented by Former Professional Development Residents
Department of Surgery
Christopher Stave
INFORMATION SERVICES LIBRARIAN, SCHOOL OF MEDICINE – LANE MEDICAL LIBRARY
Michael Longaker
Deane P. and Louise Mitchell Professor in the School of Medicine and Professor,
by Courtesy, of Materials Science and Engineering
Surgery – Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery
Presented by Amber Trickey, PhD
Biostatistician 3
Stanford-Surgery Policy Improvement Research and Education Center
Health Services Research Unit
Bio
Amber Trickey, PhD, MS, CPH is Senior Biostatistician of the S-SPIRE Center. She supports multidisciplinary teams in research design, implementation, and analysis. In 15 years of health services research, with 8 years focused in surgery, Dr. Trickey has collaborated with diverse investigators, including attending physicians, residents, nurses, psychologists, and engineers. Dr. Trickey obtained degrees in epidemiology and biostatistics, evaluated data quality in trauma care, and led data validation studies using a surgical registry (NSQIP) and administrative claims. Dr. Trickey has contributed to public and private grants on surgical safety, simulation-based training, team communication, error disclosure, and quality metrics.