Highlights from Kellogg Eye Center at AUPO annual meeting

Association of University Professors of Ophthalmology recognizes Kellogg residency program director

Author | Shantell M. Kirkendoll

At the 52nd meeting of the Association of University Professors of Ophthalmology, Kellogg Eye Center joins vision specialists as they advance the three missions of academic departments: research, education and patient care.

For decades, the University of Michigan Kellogg Eye Center has trained clinicians and researchers to provide compassionate care and advance ophthalmology.

Kellogg faculty members, residents and fellows will participate in AUPO symposia, workshops and sessions for chairs, residency program directors, research directors and directors of medical student education, administrators, residency program coordinators, as well as other faculty members.

The president of AUPO is Keith Carter, M.D., a Kellogg alumni and chair of the Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences at the University of Iowa.

He will lead the annual meeting as AUPO members gather for the four-day event in Austin, Texas.

Awards

Shahzad Mian, M.D., earned the AUPO and American Academy of Ophthalmology Straatsma Award for Excellence in Resident Education. The award recognizes and celebrates an outstanding program director in ophthalmology. Mian is a professor of ophthalmology and visual sciences at the University of Michigan and has been director of the residency training program at Kellogg Eye Center since 2004. During the award ceremony, he delivered the address  "Defining surgical competency in residency and beyond." He was honored at the AAO annual meeting in November.

Lectures and Forums

  • Nakul Shekhawat, M.D., earned a 2018 AUPO/Research to Prevent Blindness Resident & Fellow award. His talk, “Topiramate-induced angle closure glaucoma: Far more common than previously reported,” was one of four presentations given during the research forum Friday.
  • Thomas Wubben, M.D., Ph.D., a fellow in vitreoretinal diseases, presented a talk on photoreceptor metabolic reprogramming, during the AUPO/RPB Resident & Fellow Research Forum. He has a Ph.D. in drug discovery and design and is a fellow in the prestigious Society of Heed Fellows.
  • Daniel Kasprick, M.D., graduate chief resident, presented research at the Educating the Educators session on the continued improvement in surgical efficiency as resident surgeons accumulate phacoemulsification cases. The one-day educational session is developed for program directors, and is one of the meeting’s most anticipated events.
Media Contact Public Relations

Department of Communication at Michigan Medicine

[email protected]

734-764-2220

Featured News & Stories Illustration of a microscope
Health Lab
Researchers uncover distinct molecular subgroups of kidney disease for personalized treatment
Researchers have used advanced computer algorithms to uncover distinct molecular subgroups of kidney diseases, independent of clinical classifications. These findings have significant implications for personalized treatment approaches.
infertilityawareness_Morrisons
Health Lab
Nurse shares IVF journey that led to her son
Malinda and David Morrison III welcomed their son in 2022 after years of trying to conceive
Illustration of doctor pictured outside a pill bottle that houses a bent-over figure with pills lying on the ground
Health Lab
It’s easier now to treat opioid addiction with medication -- but use has changed little
Buprenorphine prescribing for opioid addiction used to require a special waiver from the federal government, but a new study shows what happened in the first year after that requirement was lifted.
Health Lab
Young heart transplant recipient fights off cancer
Young heart transplant recipient develops post-transplant lymphoma, but perseveres
Moving illustration of family at the dinner table eating healthy diet
Health Lab
Playing short order cook, forcing clean plates may sabotage healthy eating habits in kids
While most parents of preschool and elementary aged children strive to give their children a balanced, nutritional diet, some of their strategies to promote healthy eating may backfire.
Pill capsule pushing through a paper with amoxicillin printed on it.
Health Lab
Rise seen in use of antibiotics for conditions they can’t treat – including COVID-19
Overuse of antibiotics can lead bacteria to evolve antimicrobial resistance, but Americans are still receiving the drugs for many conditions that they can’t treat.