April 2024 News from the College

Susan E. Sedory, MA, CAE, will step down from her role as ACEP Chief Executive Officer effective June 2025.

Ms. Sedory

Recruited and hired in a completely virtual format, Ms. Sedory took the helm at ACEP as the COVID pandemic accelerated in July 2020 and deftly adapted ACEP staff and strategy to meet member needs in unpredictable times. Under her direction, ACEP shifted to and from virtual meetings, initiated work-from-home protocols and began a comprehensive technology overhaul. Through her tenure, ACEP was repeatedly named an employee-friendly workplace, recognized as a Best Place for Working Parents three years in a row.

Ms. Sedory sharpened ACEP’s focus by establishing a member-centric strategic plan and expanded the association’s capabilities with the launch of the Emergency Medicine Data Institute. She steered ACEP through contentious legislative and policy battles, including efforts to fix the flawed implementation of the surprise billing law, as well as campaigns to prioritize emergency physician leadership when defining scope of practice lanes of medical authority. Ms. Sedory has dedicated her nearly 40-year career to improving health care, from research through organizational leadership, and currently serves as the president of the Council of Medical Specialty Societies.

“It has been an honor to serve ACEP and its members during unprecedented times,” said Ms. Sedory. “I am fiercely proud of our achievements in support of the nation’s emergency physicians and their patients.”

The ACEP Board of Directors will form a search committee and enlist a search firm to identify Ms. Sedory’s successor. Plans for a smooth transition will be implemented and the new leader will be chosen in early 2025, with a transition period of executive overlap to follow.

“We deeply appreciate Sue’s leadership and the significant steps she took to make ACEP stronger during tumultuous times,” said Aisha Terry, MD, MPH, FACEP, president of ACEP. “ACEP’s voice on physician workforce issues has grown louder and more resolute at Sue’s direction. She leaves ACEP well-positioned to be heard by policymakers, regulators, hospital decision-makers and others in the house of medicine. On behalf of the ACEP Board, we thank her as she plans for a well-deserved retirement.”

If you have original research you would like to see showcased at the world’s premier emergency medicine research event, now is the time. ACEP Research Forum—which will take place in conjunction with ACEP24, Sept. 29 to Oct. 2 in Las Vegas—is accepting abstract submissions through April 30. The Research Forum typically selects more than 400 abstracts per year, presented live during the event. Find out more about the criteria, format and submission process online at acep.org/RF.

This all-in-one, online medical education library offers conference content, webinars, podcasts, and more. When time is limited, efficiency matters—trust ACEP Anytime. Subscribe and learn pearls you can use on your next shift at acep.org/anytime.

Make career decisions that are best for you and your needs with the help of ACEP Open Book, developed with Ivy Clinicians. This online resource offers actionable insights about group structure, leadership, policies and more. Explore the tool today at https://openbook.acep.org.

Practice essentials—an online curriculum developed by Emergency Medicine Residents’ Association (EMRA) and ACEP—dives into reimbursement, contracts, operations and risk management, and other topics that may not have been covered in depth during medical school or residency. Free for EMRA and ACEP members at acep.org/practiceessentials.

The figure for fascia iliaca block in the February 2020 issue incorrectly labeled the location of the femoral vasculature. The femoral artery lies between the femoral nerve (lateral) and the femoral vein (medial).