ASTRO Members Elect Five New Officers to Board of Directors

ARLINGTON, VA--(Marketwired - July 14, 2016) - Members of the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) have elected five new officers to the Society's Board of Directors, including President-elect, Secretary-Treasurer-elect, and Vice-chairs of three of ASTRO's five councils (Clinical Affairs and Quality, Education and Government Relations). Terms for all positions begin at the Annual Business Meeting at ASTRO's 58th Annual Meeting, to be held September 25-28, 2016 in Boston.

The new Board of Directors members are:

  • President-elect: Paul M. Harari, MD, FASTRO, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin

  • Secretary/Treasurer-elect: Geraldine M. Jacobson, MD, MBA, MPH, FASTRO, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia

  • Clinical Affairs and Quality Council Vice-chair: Todd Pawlicki, PhD, FASTRO, University of California San Diego, San Diego

  • Education Council Vice-chair: Lynn D. Wilson, MD, MPH, FASTRO, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut

  • Government Relations Council Vice-chair: Ronald D. Ennis, MD, Mount Sinai West Hospital, New York

"These new officers all share the virtues of expertise in clinical care and research coupled with long-standing dedication to our Society and profession. As the radiation oncology community faces new realities such as growing numbers of cancer patients and survivors, changing physician payment structures, and a rising need for cross-discipline collaboration, these individuals will help ASTRO continue to provide leadership and support for its more than 10,000 members," said Bruce D. Minsky, MD, FASTRO, Chair of ASTRO's Board of Directors.

Dr. Paul Harari (President-elect) is the Jack Fowler Professor and Chair of the department of human oncology at the University of Wisconsin, where he has served as a professor focused on research and treatment advances for head and neck cancer since 1990. Harari has also served as an associate director of the university's Carbone Cancer Center and he directs the first National Institutes of Health Specialized Programs of Research Excellence (SPORE) grant earned in the state of Wisconsin.

Harari's plans as President-elect include enhancing public awareness of the specialty. "It is important for us to illuminate the tremendous power and precision of radiation to heal, cure, image, and improve human health and quality of life," he said. "I am committed to fostering ASTRO's ability to provide a rich platform for research, education, quality care and practice safety that enables individual members and teams to assemble, communicate and innovate for the future."