Presented by Dimitrios Stefanidis, MD, PhD at the SAGES 2014 Meeting; Panel – Concurrent Session SS1 MIS/Solid Organ
identifying funding resources–27 sec
intro slide with citations–1:41 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17287915
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2
Keyword(s): acceptance, agenda update, allocation of limited research funding, anonymity, assess, bariatric surgery, Barretts esophagus, best methods, biliary, call for SAGES grants, candidate for tx, clear hypothesis, collated, competition, complications, concensus of expert opinion, controlled feedback, defect closure, Delphi methodology, Delphi study, Delphi task force, education, efficacy, endoscopic ablation, endoscopic surgery, endoscopy, ergonomics, extraperitoneal mesh placement, failed fundoplication, failure prediction, feasible, flexible endoscopy, foregut, formal group process, funding organizations, genetic, GERD, GI, GI surgery, grant review sessions, grants, group response, healthcare, hernia, hernia factors, hernia repair, hernia size, hormonal changes, impact, indications, industry support, investigators, iteration, knowledge gaps, lap fundoplication, laparoscopy, Likert scale, long-term trends in science & technology, maintain proficiency, metabolic surgery, minimal bias, MIS techniques, non-cliical questions, nonprofit, NOTES, obesity, open surgery, operative results, optimal quality, optimized, outcome measures, page length, paraesophageal hernia repair, patient factors, periodic updating, permanent fixation, physiological changes, policy, poor ergonomic position, priority ratings, proposed research projects, quality of scientific work, RAND coroporation, rapid evolution, rating of questions, re-rating, reasonable budget, recurrence, recurrent GERD, reflux management, rejection criteria, request for money, research agenda, research committee task force, research funding sources, research grant applications, research questions, response rate, review panel, SAGES Board of Governors, SAGES leadership, SAGES membership, SAGES research committee, SAGES research grants, SAGES webmaster, scientific contributions, scientific merit, statistical aggregation, strict criteria, submission of questions, surgeon health, surgical approach, surgical trainees, systematic methodology, task force, technical factors, technique & technology, tool, train, training, U.S. government funded corporation, ventral hernia repair, web-based rounds, web-based survey, weight loss