Attending the AHA Scientific Sessions in the fall is one of the pinnacles of the annual academic calendar cycle for me. A core purpose of such meetings is to learn about the latest medical advances and how I might apply them to my patients, now or in the coming years. However, in this article I’ve elected not to discuss those aspects, which are well covered in the adjoining pages by my colleagues, but rather focus on two other personal highlights from #AHA23.
The first was the impactful presence of UT Southwestern faculty, fellows, and other trainees at this year’s event. To begin, I must recount the pride I felt in watching my close colleague Amit Khera, M.D., M.Sc., skillfully lead the meeting in his role as Chair of the AHA Committee on Scientific Sessions Programming. His opening session video welcoming attendees to #AHA23 was informative and presented in a novel format, one sprinkled with humor that made it fun to be in the room where it happened. Next was the excitement I felt when two of our trainees, Reynaldo Sanchez, M.D. (Laennec Fellow in Training Clinician Award), and Glynnis Garry, M.D. (Melvin L. Marcus Early Career Investigator Award in Basic Cardiovascular Science), were recognized with prominent awards. Equally impressive was the large number of presentations from our current faculty and fellows – it felt like it was hard to wander into any session room and not see a UTSW-affiliated person on the podium. It also was extremely satisfying to see our former fellows in such roles; for example, Rohan Khera, M.D., joined James de Lemos, M.D., as faculty for an informative session about the promise and pitfalls of artificial intelligence in the clinic and lab.