SPRING 2018 | VOL. 15, ISSUE 1 HeadsUp! News from the UCSF Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery

Singers, actors, news broadcasters, and others who use their voice to perform their jobs are Also in This Issue among the patients of the UCSF Voice and Swallowing Center. 2 Message from the Chair UCSF Voice and Swallowing Center 2 New Faculty Profile: Jacqueline E. Weinstein, MD Enhances Capabilities 4 Children’s Communication Center Update: Making a With the recent addition of two new faculty members in key roles, Difference in Children’s Lives the UCSF Voice and Swallowing Center gains additional expertise in 5 New UCSF Facial Plastic Surgery its mission to diagnose and treat patients with voice, airway, Center Opens Its Doors speech, and swallowing problems. 6 Sound and Music Perception Lab Receives Prestigious Grant In February, OHNS welcomed Clark Rosen, MD, Professor of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery, and VyVy Young, MD, an Associate Professor of Otolaryngology 6 In Memoriam: Richard M. Flower, PhD – Head and Neck Surgery. Dr. Rosen held several notable appointments at the University of Pittsburgh before coming to UCSF to provide leadership as the new 7 José Gurrola II, MD Is Named a Watson Scholar Chief of the Division of Laryngology. Dr. Young, who also held distinguished appoint- 7 2017-2018 Fellows Move Forward ments at the University of Pittsburgh, brings expertise in clinical care and translational research in Laryngology. Both Drs. Rosen and Young are experienced laryngologists 8 Upcoming Events with specialized training in disorders of voice, swallowing, and breathing. Dr. Rosen has also been appointed by UCSF to be the Lewis Francis Morrison, MD Endowed Chair in Laryngology. With his move to UCSF, he becomes the most senior fellowship-trained laryngologist in the West. Continued on page 3

Inspired by our patients, driven by our passion, energized by innovation Message from the Chair New Faculty Profile Bolstering an Already Renowned Jacqueline E. Weinstein, Voice and Swallowing Center MD, joins UCSF OHNS ediatric otolaryngologist Jacqueline E. This issue of Heads Up! includes an article on our outstanding UCSF Voice Weinstein, MD, joined the Department and Swallowing Center, which performs top-notch work in diagnosing and Pof Otolaryngology – Head and Neck treating patients with voice, airway, speech, and swallowing problems. Two Surgery in October 2017 as an assistant new members of our faculty, Clark Rosen, MD, and VyVy Young, MD, will professor. As a member of the Pediatric bring the Voice and Swallowing Center to new heights as they partner with Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery our magnificent speech and language pathology team headed up by Sarah Division, she will be caring for patients at Schneider. Please give Clark or VyVy a call or send an the Department’s Oakland, Brentwood, and email if you have a challenging patient care issue and Walnut Creek clinics. you want their assistance or opinion. They are a truly Awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in fabulous clinical team. Anthropology from Cornell University in As long as I’m boasting, let me point out that our Ithaca, New York, Dr. Weinstein earned her medical degree at the University of department is once again ranked #1 in NIH funding Southern Keck School of among departments of otolaryngology-head and neck Medicine in Los Angeles, where she won surgery. Although we are proud of our funding record, the Walker Foundation Scholarship for we are even more excited by the pipeline of young Outstanding Academic Achievement. scientists who are working hard on discovery. Dr. Weinstein completed both her internship Matthew Spitzer, PhD, will join the department in July, and residency in 2018. He is an immunologist who will partner closely otolaryngology, head on cancer research with Patrick Ha, Daniel Johnson, and neck surgery at Aaron Tward, and Jennifer Grandis. Matt was able to Tulane University School of Medicine in New Andrew H. Murr, MD garner a Chan Zuckerberg award, which will lift off his laboratory in a major way. He will have a joint Orleans, Louisiana. appointment in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology and be She then completed a fellowship at the part of the faculty in the Biomedical Sciences Program. Children’s National The UCSF School of Medicine itself is now ranked #5 among research Medical Center in institutions and #2 among primary care institutions in the new ranking by Washington, D.C., where U.S. News & World Report. It is the only medical school ranked in the top she received dedicated 10 on both lists. The medical center was ranked #5 in the nation and is the pediatric otolaryngology #1 medical center in the West according to the U.S. News ranking. The subspecialty training. Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery itself was ranked Dr. Weinstein #10 on the U.S. News list. values collaborative, Jacqueline E. Weinstein, MD I also want to note that we had a fabulous match this year, bringing patient-centered care, incredibly talented medical students to pursue their OHNS residencies at respecting the individual needs of each UCSF. While we are heavily focused on clinical care and research, the core child. As a former student of anthropology, she has researched extensively the of the department is its educational programs, and we are extremely proud cultural factors affecting successful of the extraordinary people that are part of our strong team. implementation of public health policy. Finally, we have several exciting events coming up this fall, including Dr. Weinstein has examined and advocated having Theodoros N. Teknos from Case Western Reserve University deliver for community-based approaches to the Roger Boles, MD Lectureship on September 20. I also hope to see you health education, with particular emphasis at our alumni event at the Academy meeting in Atlanta on Sunday night, on HPV vaccination and cancer screening. October 7 or at our Head and Neck and Sialendoscopy CME Course in Her work in the community underscored in November. the critical role of communication in a child’s cognitive development and Warmly, propelled her research on disorders of Andrew H. Murr, MD, FACS the pediatric airway and their surgical Chairman, Professor of Clinical Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery, management. In particular, she has training Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery in endoscopic and open airway surgery, including laryngotracheal reconstruction and laryngeal reinnervation. She is trained in all facets of pediatric ear, nose, and throat surgery. n

2 HeadsUp! Spring 2018 UCSF Voice and Swallowing Center Continued from page 1

Interdisciplinary team The UCSF Voice and Swallowing Center is a leading interdisciplinary team that comprises laryngologists, voice and swallowing specialized speech and language pathologists, vocal trainers, and singing voice specialists who Clark Rosen, MD (left), and VyVy Young, MD, are the newest members of the collaborate to treat a variety of interdisciplinary team at the Voice and conditions and concerns including those Swallowing Center, located at UCSF’s Mount caused by neurological conditions, Zion campus. cancer treatment, swallowing, breathing, and voice problems. received appointments as a professor in Dr. Young is a summa cum laude Singers, actors, news broadcasters, the McGowan Institute for Regenerative graduate of the University of Louisville. and others who use their voice to Medicine and in the Department of During her matriculation at the University perform their jobs are among the Communication Science and Disorders of Louisville School of Medicine, she Center’s patients, as well as those in the University of Pittsburgh School of received the Dean’s Scholarship and whose voice or swallowing problems Health and Rehabilitation Sciences. was elected to Alpha Omega Alpha are caused by neurological conditions After originating the Fellowship in Honor Medical Society. She trained in or the side effect of treatments, such Laryngology and Care of the otolaryngology – head and neck as radiation treatment for cancer. Professional Voice at the University of surgery under Jeffrey M. Bumpous, MD, Upon his move to UCSF, Dr. Rosen Pittsburgh in 2002, Dr. Rosen trained at the University of Louisville. During her noted that “it is a great honor and 17 laryngology fellows over the years. residency, she received the Francis responsibility to follow in the footsteps He is the treasurer of the American Lejeune, Sr. Resident Research Award of great laryngologists who have been Laryngological Association, the oldest from the Southern Section of the here in the past. surgical society in America, and he will Triological Society. Dr. Young completed “The OHNS department’s commit- be president of that organization in a fellowship in Laryngology and Care of ment to supporting the development of 2020. Dr. Rosen co-authored the the Professional Voice at the University the UCSF Voice and Swallowing Center seminal surgical atlas Operative of Pittsburgh Voice Center. as the premier site for clinical care, Techniques in Laryngology, one of education and advancement of the field the core textbooks in otolaryngology, Previous appointments of laryngology was a great attraction which has been translated into Spanish She was previously on the faculty at the for me to move to San Francisco,” and Mandarin and experienced over University of Pittsburgh as an associate he continued. 100,000 chapter downloads. professor as well as the associate “Clark will drive our Laryngology director of the Otolaryngology Residency Division to new accomplishments,” said Restoring quality of life Program and the assistant director of Department Chair Andrew Murr, MD. “He Dr. Young observed that “it always Otolaryngology Medical Student has been a major innovator in our field.” makes me so sad when patients say Education. She was recognized as the that ‘they never knew’ that something Otolaryngology Clerkship Preceptor of A return to California could be done to help them with their the Year in 2014 at the University of Dr. Rosen is originally from Los Gatos, voice, swallowing, breathing, or cough Pittsburgh School of Medicine and was California and is a graduate of UC problem. My constant goal is to bring named one of Pittsburgh’s Best Doctors Berkeley. He obtained his medical the highest level of care to these in 2016 and 2017. degree at Rush University in Chicago, patients and to help restore their Dr. Young is the chair of the Illinois. Dr. Rosen completed his quality of life. Voice Committee and chair-elect of residency in otolaryngology – head and “My research interests are derived the Women in Otolaryngology neck surgery at Oregon Health from my commitment to improving Communications Committee for the Sciences University in Portland and was the outcomes of treatment for patients American Academy of Otolaryngology – selected for a fellowship in Laryngology with voice, swallowing, or breathing Head and Neck Surgery. She has and Upper Airway Physiology at the difficulties,” she said. served the Society of University University of Tennessee in Memphis under In addition to her clinical care focus Otolaryngologists, the national organi- the tutelage of Gayle Woodson, MD. at the UCSF Voice and Swallowing zation for otolaryngology residency He joined the University of Pittsburgh Center, Dr. Young will be the associate program directors, as chair of the in 1995 as an assistant professor and director of the residency program and Website Development Committee, a rose through the academic ranks to will work closely with Residency representative to the Board of become a professor in the Department Program Director Steve Pletcher, MD. Governors, and a member of the of Otolaryngology in 2009. He also Gender Diversity Committee. n

HeadsUp! Spring 2018 3 Children’s Communication Center Update Making a Difference in Children’s Lives

ince its founding in late 2014, the UCSF Children’s Communication S Center (CCC) has addressed the numerous challenges that families experience when trying to understand or manage their child’s hearing loss. Through its multidisciplinary pediatric Hearing Loss Clinic, the CCC offers comprehensive care coordination to address the medical, educational, social, and emotional needs of our patients and their families. In addition to the establishment of this clinic, the CCC has considerably grown its community outreach initiatives and research program, and there are plans for further growth. Creating a Community of Care Noise levels were demonstrated at a CCC educational event during Protect Your Since its inception, the Hearing Loss Hearing month. Clinic has quickly gained recognition within San Francisco and Northern Although hearing loss affects all segments of the population, the California for its interdisciplinary approach to comprehensive care majority of the families cared for come from low-income or underserved coordination and partnerships with communities, and family members are non-native English speakers. community organizations. The need for its services is evident by having local care teams to help families Health, with a goal to help establish now cared for nearly 500 families in advocate for services, even accom- guidelines and best practices that can Northern California, and the influx of panying concerned parents to school be implemented at the local level, the new patients continues. In addition to special individualized education program CCC has made significant progress pediatric otolaryngologists, audiologists, (IEP) meetings or classroom tours. determining the best hearing-screening geneticists, and social workers, the The CCC is building relationships and practices for such age groups. team has expanded to include child-life partnerships with the Center for Early Other research studies have focused specialist Molly Ramey and two Intervention on Deafness, Weingarten on disparities in hearing health care, speech and language pathologists: Children’s Center, the San Francisco language development (an important Sara Cabala, CCC-SLP, and Sayard Department of Public Health, and the area of investigation for our continually Benvenuti, CCC-SLP. San Francisco Unified School District, diversifying population of children in Although hearing loss affects all among others. Through those efforts, California), and understanding and segments of the population, the the CCC aims to bridge cultural, fiscal, measuring the hearing-related quality of majority of the families cared for come and educational barriers by connecting life for deaf and hard-of-hearing infants from low-income or underserved its families to community resources and and their parents. These studies have communities where family members services that will support the overall been presented at national meetings are non-native English speakers. development of their deaf and hard-of- and published in peer reviewed journals. Given the need to coordinate multiple hearing children. In fact, a recent study examining trends disciplines to ensure the proper in hearing loss among adolescents was Researching New Avenues of support for a child with communication published in JAMA-Otolaryngology- Intervention challenges, these populations often Head and Neck Surgery and was struggle to access the essential Ongoing research initiatives are crucial featured in The New York Times. The resource networks that are needed to for the team to better understand how to study was co-authored by Brooke Su, set up these children for success with serve the center’s deaf and hard-of- MD; Dylan Chan, MD, PhD (on the the same opportunities as their typically hearing children. Although objective pediatric otolaryngology faculty); and a hearing peers. testing is the widely accepted standard UCSF medical student. With this goal in mind, the team for newborn hearing screenings, within Engaging the Broader closely follows families to generate its communities the center has identified Community individually-tailored care plans for each a lack of standardized protocols for such child. Team members collaborate screenings for pre/primary school-aged The final goal of the CCC is to promote across disciplines with schools and children. In a partnership with the hearing health and education in the San Francisco Department of Public wider community. The CCC launched

4 HeadsUp! Spring 2018 UCSF Facial Plastic Surgery Elegant and Spacious Office Opens fter years of planning, a dozen outstanding full-time staff dedicated to designs, and six months of the best treatment of the face. A construction, UCSF has opened The new facility is centrally located at its first-ever independent facial plastic the UCSF Mount Zion Campus, and it surgery practice space at the Mount includes on-site free parking and access Zion campus. There, patients can to the UCSF shuttle service. receive specialized, world-class care “Discrete and beautiful on the inside, tailored to their exact aesthetic needs here we can really offer a sophisticated in an elegant and modern setting. and complete experience for our a weekly teen social group in the Long an ambition of the patients with state of the art lasers as summer of 2016 to address the social Department of Otolaryngology – well as easy access to the aesthetic and emotional well-being of local Head and Neck Surgery, the dedicated surgery center at Mount Zion,” said hearing-impaired teens who often center gives UCSF facial plastic and Dr. Seth, co-director of the Facial feel isolated at their respective reconstructive surgeons a space that Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery schools without opportunities to meet is focused on facial consultations, Fellowship program. hearing-impaired peers. treatments, and procedures. The practice takes a refined and In an effort to engage and educate “This represents a new chapter professional approach to restoring the greater community, the CCC in the life of facial plastic surgery at natural form and function through facial joined with UCSF’s Department of UCSF. Despite having excellent facial plastic and aesthetic surgery at the Audiology and the Office of Childhood plastic surgeon-scientists, program center. Major microvascular head and Hearing to host a public event at growth was severely limited by space neck reconstruction and other solutions Benioff Children’s San constraints,” said Daniel Knott, MD, are applicable to a range of patient Francisco during Protect Your Hearing director of Facial Plastic, Aesthetic concerns: from worrisome surgical Month in October 2016. From that, and Reconstructive Surgery. scars, to Mohs skin cancer defects and the CCC devised a Hearing Protection “Full careers worth of research and facial paralysis. curriculum that has been presented innovation meet the latest techniques to UCSF OHNS facial plastic surgeons to third-, fourth-, and fifth-graders at provide our patients with the most offer patients highly-specialized surgical various San Francisco public schools, advanced treatment options,” he added. solutions for reconstruction of the face, as well as to high school students in The new space allows Dr. Knott, head, and neck. Functional and the afterschool program at the Rahul Seth, MD, and Bovey Zhu, MD, cosmetic rhinoplasty as well as California Academy of Sciences. to continue expanding programs in rejuvenation and cosmetic surgery of In addition, the CCC collaborated aging face surgery, facial feminization the face, neck, cheek, brow, eyelids, with the Center for Early Intervention surgery, rhinoplasty, and Mohs and ears are offered as well. Office- on Deafness and Weingarten reconstruction. Also home to a new based injections and laser treatments Children’s Center to present a Facial Nerve Center, the larger space are also offered to help patients day-long conference in November allowed the division to hire an rediscover their best appearance. n 2017 aimed at community stake- holders. The focus was on childhood- onset hearing loss and community collaboration in hearing health care. The CCC has also been awarded a grant from the Mount Zion Health Fund to bring education on hearing and deafness to fourth-graders in San Francisco in collaboration with the San Francisco Unified School District. Above: Rahul Seth, Finally, the CCC has been MD (left), and Daniel fortunate to receive support from the Knott, MD Claire Giannini Fund as well as the Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, and the center looks to continue advancing clinical care, research, and community engagement for deaf and hard-of- hearing children and their families Full-time staff members (from left) Teena Nguyen, Katrina Fernando, Anne Jensen, and Hannah Cranford provide a superlative patient into the future. n care experience at the UCSF Facial Plastic Surgery Center

HeadsUp! Spring 2018 5 Sound and Music Perception Lab Lab Receives Prestigious National In Memoriam Endowment for the Arts Grant Richard M. Flower, PhD: CSF’s Sound and Music Perception Lab, under the direction of 1923-2017 Charles Limb, MD, has received a $150,000 grant from the Richard M. Flower, PhD, who was associated U National Endowment for the Arts (NEA). with UCSF Otolaryngology – Head and The grant will be used to conduct studies to identify neural Neck Surgery for nearly 60 years, passed substrates for creativity across a range of art forms. The lab’s principal away in August 2017 at the age of 95. activity will involve collecting and analyzing data from “genius He was recognized throughout his lengthy improvisers” in music, the visual arts, and comedy. Participants in career for both his dedication and his these three art forms will perform an improvisational task, compared innovative approaches to treating speech with an appropriate control task, while their brains are scanned with a and hearing problems. functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) device. Dr. Flower received his bachelor’s degree In addition, participants will complete a from San Jose State College. After earning battery of assessments, including personality both his MA and PhD at Northwestern University, he joined the faculty of Case measures, tests of creativity, and tests of Western Reserve University in Cleveland, cognitive abilities. Researchers will work with SF where he also served as the coordinator of Jazz, The San Francisco Art Institute, Second professional education at the Cleveland City Improvisation Troupe, and Speechless to Hearing and Speech Center from 1953-1957. design experimental tasks suitable for each He left Cleveland to join UCSF as director of artistic domain and will help recruit participants. the Audiology and Speech Clinic in 1958. The studies will serve as proof-of-concept for While continuing to serve as director of the studying improvisation across artistic domains. Audiology and Speech Clinic, he was named Dr. Limb is the Francis A. Sooy Professor and vice-chair of the Department of Otolaryngology Chief of the Division of Otology, Neurotology, in 1967. Five years later he established a and Skull Base Surgery as well as the Director UCSF doctoral program in the hearing and of the Douglas Grant Cochlear Implant Center at speech sciences. Charles Limb, MD UCSF and the Medical Director of Cochlear Dr. Flower’s service to the profession Implantation at UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital, Oakland. included terms as president of In the Fall 2017 issue of Heads Up!, Dr. Limb said: “Music is the American Speech- abstract, and the meaning of it is unclear, yet the human brain can Language Hearing Association (ASHA) in process it effortlessly. In the case of the disruption of the auditory 1985 and president of nerve, it reveals what an amazing thing the human body is doing when the California Speech- it is interpreting all this complex sound. Language Hearing “To me it’s like a new era of medicine where we are trying to extract Association (CSHA) information from the arts that is relevant to medicine. That intersection in 1960-61. between the arts and medicine is how I got into my other field of work “Dr. Flower was – which has to do with the musical brain and understanding creativity.” critical in establishing The grant to the Sound and Music Perception Lab is one of only UCSF as a collaborative four awarded this year by the NEA, which received 44 applications. center providing key This marks the second year of the NEA Research Labs, which resources to children investigate the value and impact of the arts in both arts and non-arts and adults with hearing sectors via trans-disciplinary teams of researchers grounded in the disabilities,” noted social and behavioral sciences and based at universities. Department Chair As the federal agency of record on arts research, the NEA, Andrew Murr, MD. n Richard M. Flower, PhD through its Office of Research & Analysis, produces accurate, relevant, and timely analyses and reports that reveal the conditions and “Dr. Flower’s work in the 1960s characteristics of the U.S. arts ecosystem and the impact of the arts on our everyday lives. The NEA Research Labs add important cross- helped to build UCSF and the sector resources to the agency’s collection of publications including Department of OHNS into the Rural Arts, Design, and Innovation in America and The Guide to Community-Engaged Research in the Arts and Health, funding major academic center for speech opportunities such as Research: Art Works, and leading the Federal and hearing that it is today.” n Agency Taskforce on Human Development. Andrew Murr, MD

6 HeadsUp! Spring 2018 Diversity Fund Award José Gurrola II, MD, Is Fellow Profiles Named a Watson Scholar 2017-2018 Fellows Move osé Gurrola II, MD, an assistant professor in the OHNS Forward Rhinology and Skull Base Surgery subspecialty, will receive J a Diversity Fund Award and become a John A. Watson Two graduates of UCSF OHNS fellowship Faculty Scholar effective July 1, 2018. programs are moving into new full-time The award is one of eight given annually by the UCSF School positions three thousand miles apart. of Medicine Dean’s Diversity Fund Committee through a competitive process based on a commitment to advancing Georgetown Medical Center in diversity, inclusion, and equity in academic medicine. Washington, DC will gain a faculty Recipients of Diversity Fund Awards are named John A. member focused on ablative, skull Watson Scholars in honor of John A. Watson, PhD, an inspiring base, and microvascular surgery when Jonathan Giurintano, MD, mentor, a pioneer for diversity, and a joins its team in July as an tenacious scientist whose service to assistant professor. Dr. Giurintano the UCSF School of Medicine spanned served as the Bryan Hemming 46 years. Endowed Fellow in Head and Neck Diversity Fund grants provide critical Cancer during the past year. He support that allows faculty to develop their received his medical degree from academic interests as well as pursue the University of Mississippi School activities that contribute to the community. of Medicine in 2012. His internship “Jose has a long history of working with and otolaryngology – head and students and residents from diverse neck surgery residency were both backgrounds, and he will continue that completed at the University of Jonathan Giurintano, MD work,” said Andrew Goldberg, MD, director Tennessee Health Science Center. of Rhinology and Sinus Surgery. “He will “I have truly enjoyed my fellow experience at use the award to further his various UCSF, learning advanced techniques in ablative head and José Gurrola II, MD academic activities. Those activities include neck surgery, robotic surgery, anterolateral skull base surgery, sialendoscopy, and microvascular reconstruction research in rhinology in partnership with Steve Pletcher, MD, and under the tutelage of the OHNS department’s world- Patricia Loftus, MD, as we work on human microbiome research renowned surgeons” notes Dr. Giurintano. “I am excited in concert with Susan Lynch, PhD. His academic work also to bring the skills I have learned as a fellow at UCSF to includes skull base anatomical research in partnership with Ivan the East Coast.” El-Sayed, MD and the Skull Base and Cerebrovascular Laboratory, which is jointly supported by OHNS and the Edward Lee, MD, has accepted Department of .” a private practice position at the Dr. Gurrola joined the Department of Otolaryngology – Head San Francisco Ear Nose & Throat Medical Group that will start in July and Neck Surgery in 2017. He specializes in providing medical after completion of his pediatric and surgical treatments to patients with a wide variety of otolaryngology fellowship. rhinologic and skull base disease processes. His research “I am excited to provide care for interests include study of the etiologies and treatments of chronic patients of all ages. I will have a sinusitis, anatomic approaches and surgical outcomes in anterior focus on pediatric cases in my new skull base surgery, and novel education methods in rhinology/ practice. Thank you to the UCSF skull base surgery. OHNS faculty for the high level Dr. Gurrola received his medical degree at the Case Western of training I received as a fellow,” Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland, Ohio, and he Dr. Lee said. Dr. Lee received his completed his internship and otolaryngology residency at the medical degree in 2012 from the University of Iowa and Clinics in Iowa City, followed by Medical College of Wisconsin, a Rhinology and Skull Base Surgery fellowship at Georgia Milwaukee and completed a Edward Lee, MD Regents University in Augusta, Georgia. Prior to joining UCSF, medical surgery internship and Dr. Gurrola was an OHNS Assistant Professor at the University of otolaryngology – head and neck surgery residency at the Virginia in Charlottesville. University of Illinois College of Medicine in Chicago. He is a member of and serves on committees for a number Dr. Lee’s interests include endoscopic ear surgery, pediatric sinusitis management, and health care disparities of national societies, including the American Academy of in otolaryngology. n Otolaryngology, the American Rhinologic Society, and the North American Skull Base Society. n

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Upcoming Events

The Roger Boles, MD, Lectureship HeadsUp! SPRING 2018 | VOL. 15, ISSUE 1 September 20, 2018, 5:00–6:00 PM Department Chairman, Editor-in-Chief: Speaker: Theodoros N. Teknos, MD, Case Western Reserve University Andrew H. Murr, MD UCSF Mission Bay Campus Event and Communications Manager: Katherine Murphy Sooy Society Alumni Reception at the AAO/HNS Design: Laura Myers Design Academy Meeting Photography: Elisabeth Fall, Brad Nakano, Marco Sanchez October 7, 2018, 6:00–8:00 PM © 2018 THE REGENTS OF THE Atlanta, Georgia Contact Us Sialendoscopy and Salivary Duct Surgery Course 2018 General Otolaryngology Pediatric Otolaryngology – HNS November 29, 2018 Otology, Neurotology and Skull Base Surgery JW Marriott, San Francisco, CA Rhinology and Sinus Surgery Sleep Surgery Technology, Innovation and Personalized Care in 415/353-2757 Head and Neck Cancer Cochlear Implant Center 415/353-2464 Facial Plastic and Aesthetic Surgery Practice November 30–December 1, 2018 UCSF Medical Center JW Marriott, San Francisco, CA 415/353-9500 HNS – Facial Plastic and Post-Oncologic The Robert A. Schindler, MD Lectureship Reconstructive Surgery, UCSF Helen Diller December 6, 2018, 5:00–6:00 PM Family Comprehensive Cancer Center 415/885-7528 Speaker: Clough Shelton, MD, University of Utah UCSF Mission Bay Campus Head and Neck Surgery and Oncology Head and Neck Endocrine Surgery Salivary Gland Center Pacific Rim Otolaryngology – Head and Neck 415/885-7528 Surgery Update Balance and Falls Center 415/353-2101 February 16–19, 2019 Voice and Swallowing Center 415/885-7700 Moana Surfrider Hotel, Waikiki Beach, Honolulu, HI Audiology 415/353-2101

For further information about CME courses, please go to http://cme.ucsf.edu. To support the Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery, For information on Ground Rounds and departmental events, please visit please contact Director of Development http://ohns.ucsf.edu or contact Linh Nguyen at [email protected]. Darrell Young at 415/502-8389 or [email protected].

News from the UCSF Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery | http://ohns.ucsf.edu