Career Transitions: Moving Beyond Traditional Emergency Medicine Roles
This discussion, sponsored by the SAEM Faculty Development Committee, will feature distinguished panelists who have successfully transitioned from traditional academic or clinical emergency medicine (EM) to new career paths.
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Anne Messman, MD, MHPE
Associate Dean, Graduate Medical Education
Wayne State University School of Medicine
Anne Messman, MD, MHPE, is the associate dean of Graduate Medical Education for the Wayne State University School of Medicine. Under Dr. Messman, the Office of GME provides academic oversight for WSU-administered and affiliated residencies. In addition to these roles, she also serves as the medical education fellowship director for the Department of Emergency Medicine, and the Vice Chair of Education for the department.
Dr. Messman received a bachelor's degree in mathematics from the University of Michigan in 2004, her medical degree from the George Washington University School of Medicine in 2008, and a master's of Health Professions Education degree from U-M in 2019. After completing her emergency medicine residency at St. John Hospital and Medical Center, Dr. Messman was certified in medical education research by the Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Directors and the Association of American Medical Colleges, completed the Stanford Faculty Development in Medical Teaching program, and the Academic Life in Emergency Medicine Faculty Incubator faculty development program.
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Pamela Dyne, MD
Professor, Clinical Emergency Medicine
UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine
Dr. Pamela Dyne is Professor of Clinical Emergency Medicine at the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine, a former president of CORD, program director and DIO, a certified life and health coach, a certified chief wellness officer, and director of coaching for the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine. With over 25 years of experience in GME, faculty development, and organized medicine leadership, her current position as Chief Physician Wellness Officer of Olive View-UCLA Medical Center allows her to integrate her leadership experience and knowledge of organizational and individual wellbeing with the human aspect of middle management that is required to create institutional change.
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Andrew King, MD
Associate Professor, Emergency Medicine
Wayne State University School of Medicine
Andrew King, MD, is an Associate Professor at Wayne State University School of Medicine and the Medical Director of the Michigan Poison and Drug Information Center, the Fellowship Director of the Detroit Medical Center/WSU Medical Toxicology Fellowship and the Medical Director of the Tolan Park Research Center Opioid Treatment Program and lead of the inpatient Addiction Medicine Service at the Detroit Medical Center. -
David Barnes, MD
Health Sciences Clinical Professor, Emergency Medicine
UC Davis School of Medicine
David Barnes, MD, is a Health Sciences Clinical Professor of Emergency Medicine at UC Davis School of Medicine and UC Davis Health in Sacramento, CA. He was the Emergency Medicine residency Program Director for 12 years, and now serves as Director of Faculty Development, Alumni Relations, and Sustainability for the Department of Emergency Medicine. He is a member of the Department’s clinical operations team, serves as a Physician Advisor for UC Davis Medical Center, and is a consulting editor for the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality’s Patient Safety Network. -
Bryan Baskin, DO
Vice Chair of Safety, Quality, and Patient Experience
Cleveland Clinic Department of Emergency Medicine
Bryan Baskin, DO, is the Vice Chair for Safety, Quality, and Patient Experience (SQPE) and Co-Director of Operations of the Cleveland Clinic’s Department of Emergency Medicine. In this role, he oversees quality, patient safety, patient experience, and operations across all Emergency Departments within the Cleveland Clinic Health System. He is also a member of the Cleveland Clinic Corporate Compliance Committee as well as the Cleveland Clinic Risk Management Group. Dr. Baskin has a strong interest in patient safety, quality improvement, operational management, patient outcomes, compliance, medical finance, peer review, and quality assurance. In addition to his leadership roles, Dr. Baskin serves as faculty at Case Western Reserve University’s School of Medicine, focusing on teaching quality, patient safety, and process improvement. He is also faculty for the Cleveland Clinic Foundation’s “To Act As A Unit” Course. Before joining The Cleveland Clinic in 2018, he served as the Associate Operations Director for Emergency Medicine at The Metro Health Medical System in Cleveland Ohio. Dr. Baskin has authored multiple chapters in Emergency Medicine textbooks and papers on risk management, quality, safety, and process improvement. He is a regular contributor to EM Legal Letter. Clinically, Dr. Baskin sees patients in both the General and Pediatric Cleveland Clinic Emergency Departments. He holds the academic rank of Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine and Case Western Reserve University. He is an active member and fellow of the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP).