2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
APPD 2019Annual Meeting
March 26-29New Orleans
MarriottNew Orleans, LA
Wednesday Plenary Session
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Javier Gonzalez del Rey, MD, MEdAPPD President
Welcome!
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
www.company.com2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Special WelcomeGlobal Health Educator Scholarship Recipients
Bigirimana Zepherin, MDMsandeni Esther Chiume, MBBS, FCPaeds, MScTropPaeds
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
• APPD serves pediatric programs by leading the advancement of education to ensure the health and well-being of children.
MISSION
• Over 200 Residency Programs
• 800 Associated Fellowship Programs
PEDIATRICPROGRAMS
• 3750 individual members• Program Directors (Residency and
Fellowship)• Associate Program Directors• Coordinators• Chief Residents
MEMBERS
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
MISSION VISION VALUESAPPD serves pediatric programs by leading the advancement of education to ensure the health and well-being of children.
Exemplary pediatric education.
The leadership is governed by these principles: Leadership Innovation Collaboration Scholarship Engagement
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
APPDFinancial Report
Javier Gonzalez del Rey, MD, Med, President for
John Mahan, MD, Secretary-Treasurer
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
July 1, 2017 – June 30, 2018 Income
SUPPORT and REVENUEDues 722,710Spring/Fall Meetings 662,810Contributions 10,020LEAD Tuition 110,000Investment 51,847Other 655LEARN & PMAC 356,942
TOTAL INCOME 1,914,984
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
July 1, 2017 – June 30, 2018 Expense
EXPENSEMember Services 145,009Fall/Spring Meetings 564,720LEAD 107,138LEARN & PMAC 447,961Special Projects Program 20,000
• Organizational Support 10,000Admin/Operations 430,787
• TOTAL EXPENSES 1,725,615
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
FY 2018 Operations Bottom Line…
1,914,984 1,725,615
$189,369
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Investment Portfolio
• Value of investments as of 6/30/2018 was $1,147,546
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Statement of Financial PositionAs of June 30, 2018
• Total Net Assets $1,689,411• Total Designated $ 349,716• Total Undesignated $1,339,695• Current Liabilities $ 119,580
• Total Liabilities & Net Assets $1,808,991
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Vision 2020 Update
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
VISION 2020• Engagement of Members• Wellness & Resilience• Enhance Mentoring• Enhance Leadership• Diversity & Inclusion
Development of Programs &
Members
• Future Pediatric GME Training• Optimize Organizational Structure• Technology
Organizational Excellence
• APPD Influence & Representation• Business Model
Leadership & Collaboration
• Research Priorities• Development of Research Capabilities
Research & Scholarship
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Making Connections• Learning Communities• Table to Able• Facilitated Networking• Mentor
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Franklin Trimm, MDImmediate Past President
APPDHolm Award
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Carol Berkowitz Award for Advocacy and Leadership in Pediatric Medical Education
Walter W. Tunnessen, Jr., MD Award for the Advancement of Pediatric Resident Education
Robert S. Holm, MD Leadership Award
APPD Awards
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
The Robert S. Holm, MD Leadership Award honors an APPD member (past or present) for extraordinary contribution in pediatric program leadership and/or support of other program leaders as a mentor, advisor or role model at a national level through APPD.
Robert S. Holm, MD Leadership Award
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Previous Recipients2010 Joseph Gilhooly, MD
Nancy Spector, MD 2009 Richard Shugerman, MD2008 Stephen Ludwig, MD2007 Frederick Lovejoy, Jr., MD2006 Edwin Zalneraitis, MD2005 Kenneth Roberts, MD2004 Carol Berkowitz, MD
Robert S. Holm, MD Leadership Award
2018 Rebecca Swan, MD2017 Cynthia Ferrell, MD, MSEd2016 Aditee Narayan, MD, MPH2015 Robert Vinci, MD2014 Grace Caputo, MD, MPH2013 Franklin Trimm, MD2012 John Frohna, MD2011 Clifton Yu, MD
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Congratulations to the 2019 Holm Award Recipient:
Dena Hofkosh, MD, MEdUniversity of Pittsburgh
School of Medicine
Robert S. Holm, MD Leadership Award
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Introduction by Laura Degnon, CAEAPPD Executive Director
The 2020 Census: The Importance of Ensuring All Kids Are Counted
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Timothy P. OlsonAssociate Director for Field Operations, United States Census Bureau
The 2020 Census: The Importance of Ensuring All Kids Are Counted
Everyone Counts in 2020…including Kids!
Association of Pediatric Program Directors ConferenceMarch 27, 2019
Timothy P. OlsonAssociate Director for Field Operations
The 2020 Census Will Shape Americafor the Next Ten Years
• The U.S. Constitution directs a census to be conducted every ten years to determine state representation in the U.S. Congress.
• Federal funding, currently more than $675 billion every year, is allocated based on the census, affecting transportation, housing, education, healthcare, and many more vital services delivered to the American people.
• These outcomes affect every person and every child in the United States and the count must be accurate.
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The Census will be conducted during 2020 in an environment that is more
challenging than ever before.
Polarized societyDistrust of governmentPresidential PrimariesCitizenship questionFear of retribution
2020 Census
Constrained fiscal
environment
Rapidly changing
use of technolog
y
Information
explosion
Distrust in
governmentDeclining
response rates
Increasingly
diverse populatio
n
Informal, complex
living arrangeme
nts
A mobile populatio
n
Achieving an Accurate 2020 Census Is Challenging
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Counting Kids Is Also ChallengingAn estimated 5 percent of kids under the age of 5 were missed in the 2010 Census. That’s about 1 million young children, the highest of any age group.
Some of the factors that contribute to young children not being counted in the census: • The child is a newborn • The child splits time between two homes• The child lives or stays with another family or another relative such as a grandparent • The child lives in a lower income household • The child lives in a household with young parents or a young, single mom• The child lives in a non-English or limited-English speaking household
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While These Challenges are Big, They Are Not New To The Census
Convincing the American people to participate has always been a challenge.Motivating response is based on three simple truths that have not changed.
The Census is ImportantThe Census is EasyThe Census is Safe
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An Integrated Partnership and Communications Campaign
• Built on prior decades of success using paid advertising and engaging partner organizations
• More than 1,500 professional partnership specialists partnering with 300,000 national and local organizations
• Many campaign components, including heightened social media engagement, digital advertising, Statistics in Schools, and partnerships at the local and national levels.
How Do We Motivate People to Answer the Census?
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Campaign ThemeShape Your Future: Start Here
4 Campaign Phases in 2020Awareness launches in JanuaryMotivation kicks off in MarchReminder starts in MayThank You closes the campaign in August
Multiple ChannelsPrint, radio, TV, digital, out-of-home
Many LanguagesEnglish and 12 non-English languages
Enlisting More than 300,000 Trusted Voice Partners Nationwide to Focus on Hard to Count Populations
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• American Indian and Alaska Native (AIAN) leaders • Foreign born and non-English speaking communities• Renters in rural and urban areas• Children under 5• LGBTQ outreach• Faith-based leader engagement• State, tribal, and local governments• Complete Count Committees in every state and locality• Community leaders, non-profits, and social service
organizations can mobilize their constituents• Partnerships with national NGOs and Fortune 500
companies• Statistics in Schools materials for teacher and students• Census on Campus outreach
46 state-level Complete Count Commissions and more than 1,500 local Complete Count Committees as of March 20, 2019
How Partners Actively Participate in the 2020 Census• Partner organizations actively support an accurate 2020 Census count of all people living in
the United States. https://2020census.gov
• Partners form or join Complete Count Committees in their area and use the Census Bureau’s Response Outreach Area Mapper to inform their strategy to reach every resident in their community. https://www.census.gov/roam
• Partners spread the word about more than 500,000 temporary census jobs that peak in the spring of 2020. https://2020census.gov/jobs
• Partners urge everyone in their sphere of influence to self-respond to the census in late March and April 2020.
1. The Census is Important2. The Census is Easy3. The Census is Safe
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People Can Respond in Four Ways – Online, Phone, Paper, or with a Census Taker (Enumerator)
ESTABLISH WHERE TO COUNT
TABULATE DATA AND RELEASE CENSUS RESULTS
GROUP QUARTERS
MOTIVATE PEOPLE TO RESPOND
NONRESPONSE FOLLOWUP
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We project that 60.5% of American households will self-respond before we begin Nonresponse Followup field operations in late April 2020
We will make it easy for people to respond anytime, anywhere • Materials will be mailed in March 2020 so people can respond on their own• People can respond online, with a paper questionnaire, or over the phone • Online questionnaires and phone support will be offered in English and 12
non-English languages
SELF-RESPONSE
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When Will Households Receive Census Letters and Questionnaires?
What Languages Can People Answer the Census In?Field Enumeration Instrument and Forms, Paper Questionnaires and Mailing Materials
• English• Español
Internet and Phone Response Options Advertising Campaign
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Video and Print Language Guides,Glossaries, Language Identification Cards
• 59 non-English languages• Language guides include
American Sign Language, Braille, and Large Print
• English• Español• 中文• Tiếng Việt• 한국어• Русский• العربیة• Filipino• Polski• Français• Kreyòl ayisyen• Português• 日本語
What to Expect During the Next 24 Months
1. Address Canvassing – 50,000 field employees – August/September 20192. Peak Recruitment Drive – 2.5 million applicants – October 2019 through March 20203. Nation’s first enumeration in rural Alaska – begins January 21, 20204. Letters, questionnaires, and reminder postcards to households – March 12 through April 27, 2020
5. Census Day – April 1, 20206. Peak Field Operations – 500,000 employees – March through July 2020
1. Update Leave – March 20202. Group Quarters Enumeration – April 20203. Nonresponse Followup – May through July 2020
7. State-level apportionment counts delivered to President no later than December 31, 20208. Redistricting data delivered to states no later than April 1, 2021
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How Can Pediatricians Help? Pediatricians are trusted voices in your communities. We need your help in conveying the importance of counting young children to parents and caregivers to ensure an accurate and complete count.
1. Explain to service providers, caregivers, and families that responding to the census helps determine more than $675 billion in federal funding used at the local level for programs such as food stamps (SNAP), the National School Lunch Program, and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). When children are missed in the census, these programs miss out on funding that is based on the number of children counted.
2. Urge parents and caregivers with young children to be sure they include all young children living in their household during the census.
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How Can Pediatricians Help? 3. Emphasize that parents and/or caregivers should include babies on census forms,
even if they are still in the hospital on April 1, 2020.
4. Encourage facilities providing services to newborns to remind parents and/or caregivers about the importance of counting their children on the census form.
5. Explain that the Census Bureau will never share information with immigration enforcement agencies like Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), law enforcement agencies like the police or Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), or allow this information to be used to determine eligibility for government benefits.
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Timothy P. OlsonAssociate Director for Field Operations
In Closing, I Invite You to Be an Active Partner Throughout the 2020 Census.Together, We Can Make a Difference.
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United States Department of CommerceU.S. Census Bureau
More information on the 2020 Census can be found at:
http://www.census.gov/2020Census
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Adam Rosenberg, MD2019 Program Chair
Orientation to the Day
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
Wednesday, March 27
• Grassroots Forums 10:15-12:15– Associate Program Directors – Chief Residents– Coordinators – Fellowship Program Directors – Program Directors
• MPPDA Plenary and Town Hall with Award Ceremony (Tunnessen and Kelley Awards) and MPPDA Presidential Address 10:15-1:45
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
• Facilitated Networking Lunches 12:30-1:45– AAMC/NRMP Focus Group for PDs– Coordinators’ Networking and Table Talks– Facilitated Mentoring Session– Forum for Directors of Small Programs and Affiliate Chairs– LEAD Council– Council of Regional Chairs – Council of Learning Community Chairs
• Enhanced Learning Sessions I 2:00-3:30• Enhanced Learning Sessions II 3:45-5:15• Networking Reception 5:30-6:30
2019 Annual Spring Meeting ~ March 26-29 ~ New Orleans, Louisiana ~ www.appd.org
APPD 2019Annual Meeting
March 26-29New Orleans
MarriottNew Orleans, LA
Enjoy the Meeting!