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Katie Hoffman Abby is executive vice president of VISTA and one of the company’s founders. She’s past president of the National Association of Locum Tenens Organizations, an endurance athlete (who just completed Ironman Wisconsin), and a member of the board of directors of IVUmed, a volunteer organization that provides medical and surgical education to physicians and nurses, and treatment to thousands of suffering men, women, and children throughout the world (www.IVUmed.com).

 

Author Archive

 

IVUmed Traveling Resident Scholar Program—Apply by Feb. 1!

Monday, January 19th, 2009

If more training is on your horizon, please consider applying for a Traveling Resident Scholar Opportunity with our good friends at IVUmed. I have the honor of serving on the board of this amazing non-profit organization, which provides surgical services and training to make advanced urological care available to children and women worldwide. Their motto is, “Teach One. Reach Many.”

The IVUmed Traveling Resident Scholar Program gives residents the opportunity to experience urology in a developing world setting. American residents travel with board-certified urologists to partner hospitals abroad to exchange ideas with their hosts and perform procedures such as open stone surgery, benign prostate surgery, hypospadias repair and incontinence procedures.

If you are in PGY-3 or above you are eligible to apply. Click here for details. The application deadline for travel between July 2009 and June 2010 is February 1, 2009, so please consider this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and act quickly!

I also encourage anyone interested in volunteering with IVUmed to read about recent trips and follow upcoming missions on their blog at http://www.nexuscomputerconsulting.com/clients/IVUmed/blog/.

 

Teach one, reach many

Monday, November 24th, 2008

I have the great pleasure of serving on the board of IVUmed, an organization committed to making quality urological care available to people worldwide. This amazing corps of physicians, nurses, and other assorted volunteers provides medical and surgical education to physicians and nurses, and treatment to thousands of suffering children and adults through outreach programs and surgical workshops. They also sponsor a Resident Scholar program through which they have sent more than 120 urology residents to developing countries to teach surgical techniques and learn what it takes to operate in challenging, resource-limited settings. The 2007-2008 program included residents from 11 programs who traveled to eight countries in Africa and Asia. (The deadline to apply for the next session is Feb. 1, 2009. Watch this space for more information.)

Under the direction of Catherine R. deVries, MD, founder, president, and an amazing pediatric urologist, IVUmed assembles volunteer teams of urologists, urogynecologists, pediatric urologists, anesthesiologists, pediatric anesthesiologists, nurse educators, and surgical nurses for teaching/working missions. Here are the dates of their upcoming trips:

Upcoming IVUmed Surgical Workshops:
West Bank, Palestine – January 9-18, 2009
Dakar, Senegal – February 13-22, 2009
Kumasi, Ghana – February 22-27, 2009
Dharan, Nepal – March 18-31, 2009

Upcoming Resident Scholar Trips:
India – December 19-28, 2008
Haiti – January 23-31, 2009

Volunteers have been recruited for many of these trips. However, if you are interested in possibly adding volunteer service to your locum tenens or international locums career, please contact IVUmed to join their “pool” of potential volunteers so they can match you with future needs. They particularly appreciate the flexibility, energy, and sense of adventure they find in physicians who have worked locum tenens or international locums assignments. Email info@ivumed.org, visit www.ivumed.org, or call 801-524-0201.

Here’s an excerpt from the field notes from their recent trip to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia:

Operation

IVUmed Team:
Catherine deVries, MD—pediatric urologist and team leader
Blake Hamilton, MD—urologist
Sujith Reddy, MD—IVUmed Resident Scholar
Norifumi Kuratani, MD—pediatric anesthesiologist
Janet Vogt, RN—nurse
Pamela St. Louis, RN—nurse
Edd and Ellen Thorp—trip secretaries

Mongolian Partners:
15 physicians
9 Nurses, technicians and other staff

Patients Served:
96 children and adults

Total Value of Service:
$312,935

People

“All of the patients are doing very well, which is great. Dr. deVries is a highly revered person. When we walk down the halls people look at her with gratitude and wonder. As one of the patients wrote on a thank you gift to her, ‘You are an angel sent down to us from heaven.’ The local surgeons were very happy to have mastered some new techniques. They were also pretty thrilled with the donations we were able to leave behind. There is a saying: ‘It’s not where you go, it’s what you do when you get there.’”
–Ellen Thorp, Trip Secretary

You can read field notes and see photos of all IVUmed trips on their blog, http://www.nexuscomputerconsulting.com/clients/ivumed/blog/ . And I encourage you to become a fan on their Facebook page so you can stay abreast of their programs and progress.

 

You’re already a winner, so be a loser!

Monday, November 17th, 2008

Welcome to the crazy time of year! Every year at this time VISTA Staffing Solutions sponsors a Holiday Health Drive to help keep our employees moving, eating as healthfully as possible, and managing their stress so they can provide great service to the physicians and healthcare organizations that rely on us. We award points for exercising, volunteering in the community, quitting smoking, maintaining a healthy weight, bringing a healthy treat to the office instead of cookies, achieving their work goals (the best way to beat stress) and more. Everyone gets into the special “VISTA spirit,” celebrates our successes, and wins prizes.

This year, by popular demand, we added a VISTA Biggest Loser contest to the mix. And what an amazing response! A total of 47 participants from across our divisions—locum tenens, extended locum tenens, international locums, and physician search and consulting—have jumped at the opportunity to learn, sweat, and lose together. We have broken them into teams, and unlike the television show, no one will get weighed in public or kicked out. They have access to a trainer/coach once or twice a week and have team meetings before or after work or during lunch. I’ve never felt such positive energy. The Pink Team was in the office at 7:30 this morning doing resistance training together. Our Travel Manager re-enrolled at her gym and swam for 30 minutes yesterday. Members of the International Team have been on the treadmills in our basement gym every day this week.

So from your locum tenens, physician staffing, and physician search pals at VISTA—we challenge you have a healthy holiday season. We will keep you posted on our progress. Please feel free to drop us a note and tell us how you worked a little more “healthy” into your November and December locum tenens assignments, international travels, or new permanent jobs. We would love to hear from you: facts@vistastaff.com.

 

Getting what you want, in locums and in life

Monday, January 28th, 2008

2007 was a big year for me, in many ways. Tossed in among the momentous and the mundane was my decision to train for the Wisconsin Ironman, which was in September. In retrospect, there couldn’t have been a more perfect way to stay focused on what it really takes to get what you want and need out of life. So I offer some 20/20 hindsight as you contemplate a small career transition, a professional 360, or the launch of a bold new personal venture—be it into locum tenens or beyond.

On goals: You have to have the “big one” clearly in mind. But to get there you have to break it down into a series of smaller goals. You don’t bike a Century (100 miles) until you’ve competed in your share of 20-milers. In locum tenens, that could mean trying out a temporary assignment during a vacation or leave, without cutting ties to your practice completely. Or committing to a shorter temporary medical assignment to start, knowing that if you speak up early enough, you can almost always extend your stay.

On support: No one does this alone. For an endurance athlete it takes family, coaches, books, videos, bike mechanics, riding buddies, and at least one dog who won’t let you sleep in on long-run days. The good news here is that locum tenens is all about support—from the team that finds and screens opportunities, to the people who match your skills and interests with those openings, to the travel agents who get you there, to the associates who call to collect your timesheets so you get paid accurately. All it takes is great two-way communication and responsiveness.

On organization: Imagine how easy it is to NOT jump into a cold mountain reservoir for a training swim. Interestingly though, I found that it wasn’t a lack of motivation that most often derailed my training plans, but poor planning. Not enough time, competing commitments, personal distractions. Just like throwing an Ironman into the life mix, locum tenens is a little more complicated than working in the same medical practice year in and year out. It’s important to have a plan and to be very organized. Prioritize and attack the highest priority areas first. Get that locum tenens application filled out, bite the bullet and collect the documents, build a relationship with a locums team—so you can take the “plunge” when the time is right.

On flexibility: Things happen. Sometimes you crash. It’s important not to get so tied up in your original plan that you can’t change strategies. The first year I qualified to run the Boston Marathon I injured myself overtraining. I had to step back and reframe my entire plan—what I saw myself achieving and how I would define success. That’s probably the lesson that helped me most in training for the Ironman. And oh, what a tie there is to locums work! I have been recruiting locum tenens doctors for more than 20 years, and so often the first phone call is, “I only want to go to warm places and I’ll only stay two weeks.” Can I tell you how many of these physicians later sent me email from places like La Grande, Oregon and Athens, Wisconsin raving about the place and the people?

On fun: No goal is worth achieving if it’s not fun. I even heard this from the professional Ironman athletes who ran training camps leading up to the race. It’s their job to do this crazy stuff and the best ones earn some good money, but they never lose sight of the fun. Locums can be a little stressful—with travel and unfamiliar housing and orientations to new facilities and protocols. But it can be the positive stress that makes you remember why you went into medicine in the first place. It’s FUN. Colleagues and patients truly appreciate you. You get to learn from and teach people from all across the country, even the world if you choose international locums. And there is almost always someone willing to help you find the best Thai food or a take-your-breath-away trail to run around the lake.

On celebration: Everything clicked on the day of the Ironman. I was stronger than I expected in the 2.4-mile swim, so I got off to a great start on the 112-mile bike. I knew the bike would be my most challenging leg of the race, so the little boost was appreciated. The miles flew by and my energy just kept building. As crazy as it sounds, I was euphoric by the start of the 26.2-mile run. I finished in 15 hours, 4 minutes, placing 37th in my category. I knew everyone at VISTA was tracking my progress online, and some even managed to catch the web video of me crossing the finish line. To me, every stroke, pedal, and stride was a celebration. It will stay with me forever. Here’s hoping that locum tenens is a great option for you, and that you join us and have this kind of delirious pleasure to look back on after a long and satisfying run of it.

 

IVUmed Traveling Resident Scholar—apply now for 2008

Monday, December 24th, 2007

IVUmed, formerly International Volunteers in Urology, is a wonderful organization I am honored to support and serve and a member of the board. IVUmed sends medical teams around the world to teach local providers and provide care to patients with a variety of urological problems, including vesico vaginal fistula, hypospadias, and lymphatic filariasis. Our credo is, “Teach One, Reach Many.”

The IVUmed Traveling Resident Scholar Program gives residents the opportunity to experience urology in a developing world setting. American residents travel with board-certified urologists to partner hospitals abroad to exchange ideas with their hosts and perform procedures such as open stone surgery, benign prostate surgery, hypospadias repair and incontinence procedures.

Residents PGY-3 and above are eligible for the program. If you are interested, please submit the necessary application materials to the IVUmed Program Manager. The application deadline for travel between July 2008 and June 2009 is February 1, 2008. You can find the application and more details at www.IVUmed.com.
2007-2008 Resident Scholar Sites include Mongolia, Egypt, Bangladesh, India, Vietnam, Haiti, Nigeria, and Kenya.