NANOS-AAO Co-Sponsorship for the 2021 AAO Annual Meeting


Posted: 12/11/2020
Category: General News


Dear NANOS members:

As you might know, NANOS and the AAO have been offering co-branded courses at the AAO annual meeting.

The following steps are required for you as a senior instructor for an AAO annual meeting course to receive NANOS co-sponsorship:

 1.  Interested NANOS members should send their course outline and topic, titles, and speakers to Prem Subramanian, MD, PhD (PREM.SUBRAMANIAN@CUANSCHUTZ.EDU) and Peter Quiros, MD (Quiros@jsei.ucla.edu) for review by the NANOS AAO Committee by December 20 of the year prior to the proposed AAO annual meeting. 

2.  The AAO-NANOS committee will then circulate among members for review and to make a final recommendation to the NANOS Board by December 25

3.  The NANOS Board will then decide on the results and NANOS will directly contact approved course directors by January 6

4.  The Member can then submit their course to AAO directly. 

5. NANOS members submitting courses to the AAO annual meeting do NOT have to go through NANOS if they do not wish to have NANOS co-sponsorship and this will not impact the independent AAO selection process. 

6. Preference will be given to NANOS courses which are skills transfer based or reach a large target audience and have a proven track record of success as judged by prior AAO evaluations  

7. Co-sponsorship of courses shall be good for three years. However, if the session proposed was approved by NANOS last year, you must submit a written notification that the content of the course has not materially changed to Prem Subramanian, MD, PhD at PREM.SUBRAMANIAN@CUANSCHUTZ.EDU. If your approval is due for renewal, you need to apply for consideration again and provide a detailed summary of the proposed course (e.g. submit a title, instructors, and summary).

8. Courses due for renewal this year are listed below:

  • Diplopia in an Adult: A Guide to Evaluation and Management (The Vertical Diplopia Dilemma, Made Simple)
  • Swollen Discs, Headache, and Vision Loss: A Case-Based Approach to Pseudotumor Cerebri
  • Case Studies on the Use of Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) for Diagnosis of Unknown Causes of Visual Loss: Is it the Retina, Anterior Visual Pathway, or Misinterpretation of Normal?
  • Case-Based Approach to Isolated Eye Pain
  • Diagnostic and Therapeutic Dilemmas in Neuro-Ophthalmology
  • Curbside Consultation in Neuro-Ophthalmology

Please let us know if you have any questions.

Regards, 

Prem Subramanian, MD, PhD & Peter Quiros, MD
AAO Committee Co-Chairs





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