What up yall! This is a quick shout out to those of you headed to the AANA conference this weekend, August 2nd, 2024 in San Diego.
I hope that yall have an incredible time and meet tons of new colleagues, see old friends and have fun gettin’ your learn on.
I was talking to one of the SRNAs from the University of New England this morning in clinical and she’s was getting psyched for the conference this weekend. AANA Annual Congress is one of those times where you can kind of lift your head up from the daily grind and look around & see thousands of other CRNAs & SRNAs or RRNAs from around the nation who are all out there doing their thing in anesthesia. It’s such an inspiring time!
While I will NOT be there reppin’ Anesthesia Guidebook, my clinical team from Maine Medical Center and MaineHealth will be.
So first, why am I not putting up a booth and talking about Anesthesia Guidebook… first & foremost, I’m not trying to sell you something. Anesthesia Guidebook is still anchored in the concept of free open access medical education. There’s no subscription fee and I’m not trying to make money off of CE credits. There’s a hundred other ways out there for you to make Class A credit and that just hasn’t become a professional focus on mine. Which brings up the reminder that any anesthesia related podcast you listen to will qualify for free Class B credit in the CPC program. If you’re a CRNA and you routinely listen to anesthesia podcasts, all you have to do is self-report your credits to the AANA and you’ll rack up those Class B credits super fast.
I actually did a brief podcast on this topic way back in Episode #9 of the podcast if you want to hear more about how to do that.
So while there’s no Anesthesia Guidebook table at AANA Annual Congress, you CAN go meet my good friends and colleagues from Maine Medical Center in the exhibition hall. April Bourgoin, Jill Guzzardo and Danielle Beaumont will be there staffing the MaineHealth booth to tell yall about the amazing career opportunities within MaineHealth. We have everything from level 1 trauma center work with my team at Maine Medical Center where I serve as chief CRNA to a full independent practice location in Conway, NH to several other smaller town medical centers throughout Maine, including Pen Bay Medical Center in Rockland, where Jill is the chief CRNA.
So April Bourgoin will be out there this weekend. Dr April Bourgoin one of our CRNA Supervisors at MMC, and she’s been on the show before talking about OR fires back in episode 93. I actually just recorded an episode that I’m editing now with April and our CRNA Manager, Alison Kent, on how we do interviews as a leadership team at MMC. That show is targeted towards other practice managers out there but is obviously also probably valuable for SRNAs as it gives you a behinds the scenes look at how we plan team interviews for people applying to be on our team. So April’s out there… you can also meet Danielle Beaumont, our SRNA Clinical Coordinator at Maine Medical Center. Danielle is amazing in that role as she supports SRN As from the University of New England and Middle Tennessee School of Anesthesia. Danielle also just helped us establish clinical affiliations with Boston College and Northeastern University. We’re pumped to start welcoming primary anesthesia trainees from BC and NU in 2025. And then last but not least is Jillian Guzzardo. Jill is one of our per diem CRNAs at MMC but she also serves as the Chief CRNA at one of our MaineHealth sister hospitals, Pen Bay Medical Center in Rockland, Maine. If you’re looking for a small town, coastal Maine community hospital to practice at, Jill is your girl! Pen Bay is literally on a bluff overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. You have close up water views from work. It’s amazing…. I mean, you can also see the ocean from the top floors of Maine Medical Center, but at Pen Bay, you can probably see what the lobstermen are having for breakfast as they motor by in the morning… it’s right there. Jill is one of my favorite CRNAs… after a few years of holding down the fort at Pen Bay as the chief CRNA, she reached out to me and asked if she could come work off shifts and weekends at Maine Medical Center to keep her high acuity patient care skills up. She literally asked if I would give her the shifts that my core team doesn’t want to work… nights, evenings and weekends. I was blown away.
All three of this CRNAs – April, Danielle and Jill – are baller clinicians. I would let any of them take care of me or my family and just love working alongside them in the OR. They’re also incredible CRNA leaders with a deep passion for helping SRNAs & CRNAs thrive in their practices. And they’re generally just inspiring, friendly humans… Kind, generous, optimistic people… who are wicked smahat as we say here in New England.
So if you’re headed to AANA Annual Congress, even if you’re not looking to move your practice to Maine, do yourself a favor and go meet these incredible people. April, Danielle and Jill will be pumped to meet you.
So that’s it… just wanted to drop a quick shoutout to those of you headed to AANA Annual Congress this weekend and say I hope it’s an amazing conference. Go get your learn on, meet some new friends and stop by the MaineHealth booth and tell my friends I said hello.
And with that… I’ll see ya next time!
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One reply on “#108 – AANA Annual Congress Shout Out”
I came to find your podcast after I chatted with Mickey about job prospects in the area and this popped up. Love to hear that Jill is loving life up in Maine. Let’s connect soon-I’d love to do some call shifts when I move to Portland in the next 3-6 months.