Call for abstracts: 2018 AAP/ASCI/APSA Joint Meeting

Limited Travel Awards Available — Submit an abstract and apply.

DEADLINE: Wednesday, December 13, 2017, 12:00 Midnight EST

A great opportunity for students and others in the physician-scientist career path

The Association of American Physicians, the American Society for Clinical Investigation, and the American Physician-Scientists Association are pleased to announce this Call for Abstracts for presentation at the 2018 AAP/ASCI/APSA Joint Meeting, April 20-22, 2018, in Chicago, IL. This meeting provides fantastic exposure to leaders in academic medicine and industry. The Joint Meeting keynote speakers will focus on two thematic areas: Human Genetics and Healthy Longevity. Please forward this email to interested colleagues.

The vast majority of poster presenters are students in the physician-scientist career path (MD/PhD programs or MD students in a research year) or early career physician-scientists. Work presented spans the range of medical specialties and biomedicine. While other research areas may be accepted for presentation, they do not represent the majority of the presenter demographic.

Review the following before submitting an abstract:

  • There is no submission fee.
  • The abstract must conform to the Abstract Style and Formatting Guidelines.
  • Do not include any figures, tables, or references in your abstract.
  • Only one abstract submission is allowed per presenter.
  • During the submission process, you will be asked to affirm the following:
    • You have disclosed in the abstract any potential conflicts of interest.
    • The abstract has not been published previously.
    • If the abstract is accepted, an eligible author is prepared to present it.
    • Any animal studies conform with the Guiding Principles in the Care and Use of Animals of the American Physiological Society.
    • Any human experimentation was conducted according to a protocol approved by an Institutional Review Board on ethics of human investigation
  • Submitted abstracts will be confirmed to presenting authors by email.
  • Abstracts that are incomplete as of the deadline will not be considered.
  • No submissions after the deadline will be considered.

The Joint Meeting offers a $750 Travel Award to select submitters. Check this option during submission if you wish to be considered. Preference is given to submitters outside the Chicago area.

Oral presentation: There will be a small number of top scoring abstracts chosen for an oral presentation on Saturday, April 21. Presenters selected must be available Saturday to present their work.

We also offer competitive $1,000 Best Poster Awards, given on the basis of scientific novelty, quality, and clarity of presentation.

Click here to submit an abstract for the 2018 AAP/ASCI/APSA Joint Meeting

POSTER SESSION SCHEDULE

Friday, April 20
1:00 pm – 3:00 pm: Poster Setup
6:15 pm – 9:30 pm: Informal Viewing presenters do not need to be at poster

Saturday, April 21: Two Poster Presentation Sessions
8:00 am – 9:00 am: Poster Session
11:45 am – 1:30 pm: Poster Session

  • Poster submitters are required to be at their posters on Saturday at the appointed poster presentation session.
  • Posters must be dismantled on Saturday, April 21, 1:30 pm – 2:00 pm.
  • Presentation of Best Poster Awards will be during the Saturday, April 21, Dessert Reception, 9:45 pm – 11:30 pm.

If you have any questions please contact Angie Spearman at 858-774-4503 or email aspearman@hpnglobal.com.

The AAP/ASCI/APSA look forward to receiving your submission!

2017 Annual Appeal

As the end of a busy year approaches, we at the American Society for Clinical Investigation hope to share with you our enthusiasm about and commitment to encouraging and recognizing excellence within the physician-scientist community.

Over the past several months, the ASCI has been increasing efforts to raise awareness of and financial support for ASCI programs designed to assist physician-scientists on their career paths. We hope you will consider joining these efforts and make a contribution today.

The ASCI has established a program for every stage in a physician-scientist’s career – Early Career Path Development (Medical Fellows Initiative); Early Career Recognition (Young Physician-Scientist Awards and the Donald Seldin~Holly Smith Award for Pioneering Research); and Career Recognition (the Stanley J. Korsmeyer Award and the ASCI/Harrington Prize for Innovation in Medicine). We are continually looking to build on these programs, which requires funding beyond what we can achieve through member dues.

Early Career Path Development. The Medical Fellows Initiative brought many bright young scientists to the Joint Meeting this past April. It is encouraging to witness their enthusiasm in presenting their work and gaining exposure to the ASCI and its members. The Medical Fellows Initiative provides career panels and mentor workshops for these students, giving them valuable information and support as they plan their careers. The ASCI’s goal is to encourage these fellows to pursue careers that combine patient care and research, with a focus on excellence that we hope will lead them to ASCI membership.

The ASCI’s Young Physician-Scientists Awards brought many early-career faculty members to the meeting to present their research; the awardees are rising stars in the field, and indeed potential ASCI members. We must do all we can to encourage these young colleagues.

Early Career Recognition. The Donald Seldin~Holly Smith Award for Pioneering Research realized its inaugural year, culminating in a talk by the first awardee, Christian P. Schaaf, MD, PhD, and recognition of the second award recipient, Omar Abdel-Wahab, MD, at the 2017 Joint Meeting. Each year, the Seldin~Smith Award provides meaningful financial support to a promising young physician-scientist during a career period when there can be a dearth of support. Over time, we envision that the Award will create a network of engaged physician-scientists to carry on the legacies of Drs. Seldin and Smith in mentoring and fostering scientific excellence.

Career Recognition. This coming year marks the 20th anniversary of the Stanley J. Korsmeyer Award: two decades of celebrating excellence across a spectrum of science. The Harrington Prize, a collaboration between the ASCI and the Harrington Discovery Institute, will recognize its 5th recipient this coming year. Through these programs, we are excited to continue celebrating the extraordinary work of physician-scientists.

We know that the obstacles to becoming a physician-scientist are many, and that great fortitude is needed to excel on this path. With your help, we endeavor to help our scientific family members to attain excellence at every stage in their careers. Join us on the path today to support and encourage excellence within the physician-scientist community.

Sincerely,


Benjamin L. Ebert, MD, PhD
2017-2018 President
The American Society for Clinical Investigation


Kieren Marr, MD
2017-2018 President-Elect
The American Society for Clinical Investigation

Call for nominations: 2018 Young Physician-Scientist Awards

The American Society for Clinical Investigation is pleased to call for nominations for the ASCI’s 2018 Young Physician-Scientist Awards. This is an excellent opportunity for a young faculty member to be recognized at the 2018 Joint Meeting.

The ASCI seeks nominations of outstanding physician-scientists who have recently received their first faculty appointment (preferably in the last 5 years).

Nominees must be funded by a current NIH K or equivalent career-development award (in or outside the United States). However, we welcome nominations of NIH intramural physician-scientists on the basis of their appointment only.

Those selected for this Awards program will:

  • receive a $500 travel award to attend the 2018 Joint Meeting, April 20-22, at the Fairmont Chicago
  • attend the invitation-only ASCI President’s Reception on Friday, April 20
  • present their work at the ASCI’s Food & Science Evening, Saturday, April 21

The following materials are required for nominations:

Nominations must be submitted by ASCI members, through their member accounts, by the extended deadline of January 12, 2018, at 11:59 pm, U.S. Eastern. Up to 40 Awards will be given for 2018.

JCI Editor’s update: November 2017

I am pleased to be providing this first ASCI member update on Journal activity since my tenure as Editor of the Journal of Clinical Investigation began on July 1. It is an honor for me, along with the distinguished JCI Editorial Board based at Johns Hopkins University, to serve the ASCI in publishing the best research across biomedicine.

A byword for the Board is flexibility, providing a venue for a variety of cutting-edge stories to be told. Starting November 1, authors will be able to publish in the JCI’s Concise Communication category, a flexible format for brief, elegant, and captivating scientific pieces. Submissions in this category, which replaces Brief Reports, have a higher word limit of 4,000 and more liberal treatment of display items. I encourage you to use this category to submit your definitive but short-form papers. For details, see my recent Editorial.

In its Research and Clinical Medicine categories, the JCI continues to be a home to full-story science. The recommended length for these submissions is 9,000 words (maximum 12,000). JCI submission types are described in detail here.

ASCI members are, as ever, a mainstay of the JCI. We are fortunate to have Society members well represented on the Board. Deputy Editors Rexford Ahima and Arturo Casadevall, as well as the majority of Associate Editors, are members of the ASCI. We are also fortunate to have many members serving on our expert team of Consulting Editors.

Highlighted below are recent articles with ASCI members as corresponding authors, in a wide range of specialties, such as neuroscience, oncology, immunology, hematology, and metabolism. I’d also like to take this opportunity to remind you that any current ASCI member who is a corresponding author of a first-round submission to the JCI may designate one submission per calendar year to be guaranteed for external peer review. See Information for authors for details on submitting a manuscript.

Thank you, as always, for your interest in the JCI.

Gordon F. Tomaselli, MD
Editor, The Journal of Clinical Investigation

ASCI members in the JCI

The following articles published in recent months have corresponding authors who are ASCI members (in bold):

AIDS/HIV

BONE BIOLOGY

CARDIOLOGY

DERMATOLOGY

ENDOCRINOLOGY

HEMATOLOGY

HEPATOLOGY

IMMUNOLOGY

INFECTIOUS DISEASE

METABOLISM

NEPHROLOGY

NEUROSCIENCE

ONCOLOGY

PULMONOLOGY

TRANSPLANTATION

VIROLOGY

The Journal of Clinical Investigation (JCI) is a premier venue for discoveries in basic and clinical biomedical science that will advance the practice of medicine. The JCI publishes across all medical specialties and provides public access, without subscription, to all research it publishes. Founded in 1924, the JCI is published by the American Society for Clinical Investigation, a nonprofit honor society of physician-scientists. The JCI’s 2016 Impact Factor is 12.784.