Mentorship is a critical element in career advancement, professional growth and leadership development. Many mentoring programs are targeted towards junior and mid-career faculty. Yet, the needs and challenges of senior women in transplantation are under-recognized. This webinar will bring together experienced leaders to discuss how mentorship can help to sustain career success and support advancement for women at the later stages of their professional journey. Through shared experiences and novel, implementable strategies, participants will gain knowledge into navigating leadership roles, mentorship and developing succession plans that are vital in shaping the next generation of female leaders in transplantation.
Learning Objectives
Navigating the ‘Politics’! -
Understanding the organization dynamics, dealing with difficult personalities and conflict, and navigating the complex professional environment.
Building a personal brand as ‘Senior Leaders’ - Leveraging expertise and visibility to strengthen leadership identify and impact.
Integration of work-life balance in senior leadership - Strategies to sustain personal well-being alongside very demanding professional responsibilities.
Strategies for networking and building influence - Developing meaningful connections and networks to expand leadership reach.
Dealing with third-generation gender bias - Identifying subtle barriers and prejudice to career advancements, and challenging the unconscious biases placed on women because their leadership styles are different to the traditional models.
Vice President and Chief Medical Officer, LifeGift
Professor of Surgery and Medical Education
TCU School of Medicine
Dr. Becker has served in many roles throughout her career as a Transplant Surgeon. She is currently the Vice President and CMO of LifeGift. She brings to her role a deep understanding of the transplant ecosystem as she has served as President of the OPTN (Organ Procurement and Transplant Network) and participated in the writing of the National Academy of Science, Engineering and Medicine Consensus study report, “Realizing the Promise of Equity in the Organ Transplantation system”. She served on the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) steering committee as the Co-Chair of a workgroup assessing patient factors contributing to kidney graft loss.
Dr. Becker is a member of the CMS Kidney Transplant Measure Technical Expert Panel and is Chairing an ASTS workgroup subcommittee to create training pathways for recovery surgeons. ant Congress program planning committee. She also has served on the board of directors of the National Kidney Registry. Dr Becker earned her medical degree at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore and completed her general surgery training at Vanderbilt University. She finished her multiorgan transplant fellowship at the University of Wisconsin and is proud of training many of the current Surgical Directors of Transplant Programs around the country. She then went on to lead the Adult and Pediatric Kidney and Pancreas programs at the University of Chicago before arriving in Texas. Dr. Becker is the proud mom of 2 recent college graduates. In addition to her newly found love for running, she enjoys cheering on her favorite soccer teams, reading and taking care of her many pets.
Professor of Pediatrics and Interdisciplinary Transplantation
Consultant Pediatric Nephrologist, Dean for Academic Career Development
Hannover Medical School, Germany
Anette Melk, MD PhD is Professor of Pediatrics and Interdisciplinary Transplantation and serves Hannover Medical School as Dean for Academic Career Development. She is the current chair of Pillar 2 of Women in Transplantation.
Dr. Melk’s clinical research aims to decipher factors leading to cardiovascular and renal comorbidity in children with chronic kidney disease and transplantation. She has demonstrated that girls are particularly vulnerable to certain risk factors and experience more severe cardiovascular damage. She showed that female patients have lesser waitlist access and that younger female patients experience greater rates of graft loss and death.
She has organized two international symposia on the topic of sex and gender in transplantation medicine. For her advocacy and work on the topic Dr. Melk received the Future Award of the German Society of Nephrology in 2023.
Dr. Bethany Foster is a Professor of Pediatrics, Chair of the Department of Pediatrics at McGill University and Pediatrician-in-Chief at the McGill University Health Centre. She is a clinical epidemiologist with a primary research interest in the long term outcomes of children and young adults with kidney transplants. Dr. Foster has been funded by CIHR and NIH to study immunosuppressive medication adherence, graft outcomes in adolescent and young adult kidney transplant recipients, whom she has identified to be at particularly high risk of graft loss. She has included patient partners in her adherence studies. She has also highlighted important differences in renal allograft outcomes by recipient sex, the magnitude and direction of which vary by recipient age and by donor sex. Dr. Foster has over 110 peer-reviewed publications and is an Associate Editor of the international journal Transplantation. She is also Past-Chair of The Transplantation Society’s Women in Transplantation initiative.
Professor Pediatrics, Surgery, Immunology, Laboratory Medicine & Pathology
University of Alberta
Dr. Lori West is a Professor of Pediatrics, Surgery, Medical Microbiology/Immunology and Laboratory Medicine/Pathology at the University of Alberta and Director of the Alberta Transplant Institute. A clinician-scientist, she has longstanding interest and expertise in pediatric heart transplantation and transplant immunology, particularly related to ABO glycoimmunology. Her pioneering work on crossing ABO-barriers led to global impact on infant heart transplantation. Dr. West is also the founding Director of the Canadian Donation and Transplantation Research Program, a national research coalition funded since 2013 by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Together with founding co-Director Dr. Marie-Josée Hébert, the CDTRP framework has grown to encompass collaborations in all streams of research with hundreds of investigators at 37 sites across Canada. Dr. West previously held the Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Heart Transplantation. She is past-president of the International Society of Heart and Lung Transplantation and the Canadian Society of Transplantation, recent past-chair of the Women in Transplantation international initiative of The Transplantation Society, and served as a member of the Board of Directors of the American Society of Transplantation. She is also an honorary lifetime member of the British Society of Transplantation. A Fellow of both the Royal Society of Canada and the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences, Dr. West was inducted as an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2022. Dr. West is also the recipient of the 2024 ISHLT Lifetime Achievement Award.
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