Advancing Women's Health: Improving Outcomes with Minimally Invasive Surgery

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I came to GW as a first-year resident and completed five years of training, to include four years of residency and a one-year fellowship in minimally invasive gynecologic surgery. Since early on in my training, I was completely devoted to advancing women's health through providing quality care surgical procedure. After graduation, I worked on amassing all the data we had from vast prior experience in the field to share with the scientific community the care we provide at GW and advance surgical practices by evidence showing improved patient outcomes with minimally invasive surgery. To date, we have multiple functional laparoscopic and robotic databases on all the primary gynecologic procedures. We have used those databases to publish several peer-reviewed articles in leading gynecologic journals and are in the process of completing a couple of the largest cohorts on single-site myomectomy and abdominal cerclage in the nation. This practice makes our department at GW a champion in the change achieved in the surgical care provided to women in the …show more content…

One of the more influential committees I serve on is the publication committee of the official journal of the minimally invasive gynecologic surgery, which primary goal is to develop a mission statement to guide future publication decisions. This has proven to be a powerful tool in the hand of expert GYN surgeons in the country to advance surgical practices and guidelines.
I also serve on the Essential of Minimally Invasive Gynecology (EMIG) committee which originated in 2010. Our goal at that time was to develop an assessment tool for awarding specialty certification in minimally invasive gynecology. Our mission is to be the standard setters for MIGS training – to set the benchmark for minimum competency for MIGS in general

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