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Our top priority is providing value to members. Your Member Services team is here to ensure you maximize your ACS member benefits, participate in College activities, and engage with your ACS colleagues. It's all here.

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ACS President Exhorts Inclusive Excellence in Surgery

December 6, 2023

ACS President Exhorts Inclusive Excellence in Surgery

In an emotional address to thousands of people at the Boston Convention & Exhibition Center, as well as those watching virtually around the world, newly inducted ACS President Henri R. Ford, MD, MHA, FACS, urged colleagues to rededicate themselves to the 112-year-old ACS motto—To Heal All with Skill and Trust.

For more than a century, this premise has allowed the College to set the highest standards for training and surgical practice to help ensure the best possible outcomes for all patients.

“‘All’ is an inclusive term that precludes discrimination on the basis of race, ethnicity, sex, gender, religion, geography, class, or sexual orientation,” Dr. Ford proclaimed. “The overarching goal of healing all with skill and trust or achieving health equity for all surgical patients creates an imperative not only for inclusive excellence, but also for global engagement.”

Dr. Ford described several decades where the ACS struggled to become an umbrella organization for all surgical specialties and diversify the makeup of its members. He also highlighted the key role that the Board of Regents played in creating the infrastructure for training in surgery by establishing a Committee on Graduate Training for Surgery and the Surgical Specialties in 1932, with representation from OB-GYN, thoracic surgery, ophthalmology, otolaryngology, orthopedic surgery, and neurosurgery.

“Together, these disciplines epitomize the notion that we achieve our best together,” he said, adding that the changing physiognomy of the ACS has coincided with the “most extensive proliferation of initiatives to support the Fellows.”

Dr. Ford described the expansion of educational programs, introduction of numerous quality initiatives and verification programs, and the growing influence that the ACS has in shaping health policy at the state and national levels. He outlined the increasing number of ACS chapters outside of the US and Canada, as well as the growing impact of the ACS Health Outreach Program for Equity in Global Surgery (ACS H.O.P.E., formerly Operating Giving Back).

“I believe that we are stronger and more vibrant today because of our intentional efforts to promote inclusive excellence,” Dr. Ford said. “Despite what some critics and skeptics may argue, the ACS’s bold and courageous embrace of inclusive excellence that began post-World War II and accelerated in the 1990s has allowed it to not only blossom, but also to deliver on the promise of its motto to promote health equity for all surgical patients, with unprecedented success.”

As he concluded his address, Dr. Ford urged his colleagues to “carry the mantle” in the struggle for health equity and never waver from the ACS mission.

The full Convocation ceremony, which includes Dr. Ford’s Presidential Address, is available online at facs.org/convocation. The address also is available as an episode on The House of Surgery podcast at facs.org/houseofsurgery.

Dr. Ford is the dean and chief academic officer of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine in Florida.

Born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Dr. Ford moved with his family to Brooklyn, New York, when he was 13 years old. He received a full scholarship to Princeton University in New Jersey, where he graduated cum laude. He then earned his medical degree from Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts.

Following his surgical internship and residency at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, he also completed a research fellowship in immunology at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and a clinical fellowship in pediatric surgery at the Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, both in Pennsylvania.

Dr. Ford is a prolific researcher and an internationally recognized authority on necrotizing enterocolitis. He has authored more than 300 peer-reviewed articles, book chapters, invited articles, abstracts, and presentations. In 2015, he performed the first successful separation of conjoined twins in Haiti alongside surgeons he helped train.

His long list of accomplishments include election to the National Academy of Medicine in 2022, the same year he received the ACS Owen H. Wangensteen Scientific Forum Award.

Learn more about Dr. Ford’s career and his presidential platform, Achieving Our Best Together: #InclusiveExcellence, in a video that was featured during the Opening Ceremony of Clinical Congress 2023.