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For Richard S. Rosenberg, PhD, the director of professional education and training for the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, which along with the Sleep Research Society, helps put on the conference each year, the change is somewhat bittersweet. Gone are the heady days of being one of just a few hundred people charting the course of sleep medicine. However, in its place is a much larger and more professional event, which carries its own form of excitement. “I think I’ve been very lucky to get in on the ground floor,” he said. Outgoing AASM president Lawrence Epstein, MD, said he found the conference to be “excellent” this year, and attributed its success to the quality of the scientific information offered (122 sessions were included), the location, and the variety of offerings the event included. “There is something for everybody, and I think that is a good thing,” he said. Next year’s SLEEP conference will be held in Minneapolis from June 9 to 14. Silber, a graduate of the University of Cape Town, South Africa, and a researcher and neurologist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn, took the opportunity of his first presidential remarks to both praise the leadership of his predecessor, Lawrence Epstein, MD, and display some bold leadership of his own. Under Epstein, sleep medicine became recognized as a true subspecialty of medicine by the American Board of Medical Specialties and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The AASM also helped to successfully block or create exceptions to state laws requiring a respiratory technologist (RT) credential to work in polysomnography. And it experienced double-digit growth in its number of members and accredited sleep centers. Silber said he would follow Epstein’s lead in pushing for greater recognition of the field by continuing efforts to link insurance reimbursement to being an AASM-accredited sleep center and encouraging every school of medicine to offer sleep education to its students. However, he also said he would take a leadership role in the controversial area of portable monitoring, which is used in home testing. He was setting up a task force headed by Nancy Collop, MD, to examine the issue. “We hope to provide an objective and unbiased approach to this topic,” he said. At 45 years old, the SRS is the oldest professional organization representing sleep scientists in the United States. According to figures from March of this year, its membership has grown 67% in the past 5 years to 1,225. To register your opinions on issues in sleep medicine, please visit us online at www.sleepreviewmag.com. |
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