American Committee on Clinical Tropical Medicine and Travelers'
Health (ACCTMTH)
The American Committee on Clinical Tropical Medicine and
Travelers' Health (ACCTMTH) is the clinicians' group within ASTMH, and
includes civilian, military and governmental experts in travelers'
health, tropical infection and tropical disease.
Intensive Update Course
September 30 - October 1, 2013
Marines' Memorial Club & Hotel
609 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94102
This course provides a broad overview of the core topics in clinical
tropical medicine and travelers' health. Presented in a two-day
condensed format, it is an excellent review for health care
professionals.
More information will be available in early spring.
CTropMed® - Certificate of Knowledge in
Clinical Tropical Medicine and Travelers' Health
The Society fosters professional development in the fields of
clinical tropical medicine and travelers' health. The Society has
advocated and facilitated the development of new training programs in
these fields and has established a mechanism for accrediting them. In
addition, ASTMH has prepared an examination to assess and recognize
individual excellence in training and knowledge. Passing this
examination leads to a CTropMed®-Certificate of Knowledge in
Clinical Tropical Medicine and Travelers' Health.
The next exam will be held November, 2014 in New Orleans. Click here for details.
ACCTMTH Member Benefits
Clinical Consultants Directory Any
ACCTMTH member in good standing can list in a standardized format
details of their clinical practice in the directory, which is available
to the public on the ASTMH web site.
View the
directory.
To be listed, contact Buffy Finn, Member Services
Administrator at bfinn@astmh.org or
at 111 Deer Lake Road, Suite 100, Deerfield, IL 60015, or fax
+1-847-480-9282.
Awards and Scholarships
Benjamin H. Kean Traveling Fellowship in
Tropical Medicine The American Society of Tropical
Medicine and Hygiene has established a fellowship in Dr. Kean's name,
administered by the American Committee on Clinical Tropical Medicine and
Traveler's Health (ACCTMTH), that will provide travel expenses for
medical students who arrange clinical or research electives in tropical
areas. Round-trip airfare (best-price ticketing) and up to $1,000 for
living expenses will be provided. Kean Fellows will be required to
prepare and present reports describing their activities. View the application
guidelines.
Elsevier Clinical Research Award Clinically oriented abstracts submitted by students
(including residents and fellows) will be judged based on the quality
and impact of the work. The three top abstracts will receive a book
award provided by Elsevier at the annual meeting by the ASTMH Clinical
Group (American Committee on Clinical Tropical Medicine and
Travelers’ Health – ACCTMTH). This award recognizes
excellence in clinically oriented research presented by a student at the
annual meeting. All students and persons in training, including
undergraduate, graduate (Masters and PhD) as well as medical students,
residents and fellows are eligible. View
the application guidelines. Submit your application
online beginning April 3.
Elsevier Clinical Research Award Recipients Else Bijker, 2012
Grace Chan, 2012
Jesica Christensen, 2012
Andrew Brent, 2011
Elizabeth Schlaudecker, 2011
Luther Bartelt, 2011
Paul Krezanoski, 2010
Kevin Esch, 2010
Jennifer Downs, 2010
Marcolongo Lecture
A graduate of the medical school at the University of Rome, Italy,
Vincenzo Marcolongo did his post-graduate training at McGill University
in Montreal, Canada, and obtained his doctorate in tropical medicine
back at the University of Rome. In his late 30s, while practicing in his
native Rome, and with the advent of mass travel, he realized that an
international effort of cooperation was needed to assist ill travelers
all over the world. He realized that travelers needed to be educated
about health risks and tropical diseases they would encounter on trips
to ever more exotic destinations. Of particular interest to him was
malaria, and the prevention of the unnecessary morbidity and mortality
it causes among travelers. So in 1960 he founded the International
Association for Medical Assistance to Travellers (IAMAT), a non-profit
foundation, and organized physicians from all over the world into a
network assisting travelers.
In his own words: “Distinguished physicians and
respected medical institutions, with a sense of solidarity which makes
them like one family, are now working in harmony to assist the traveler
who may require medical assistance on his journey...The need for peace
and understanding between the peoples of the world has never been as
great as now. Peace can come only with understanding, and travel is an
important means of acquiring it. It is, however, only through the full
consciousness of ‘the essence of the human’ that we shall be
able to open the difficult paths of international relationships. As a
traveler you have an excellent opportunity to serve your country and the
world in creating ties of friendship. To you, therefore, we bring this
message, a message sparked with beauty all its own: ‘The search
for the human’.”
Through his foundation and numerous publications he
worked tirelessly to inform and educate the public. Every year tens of
thousands of travelers rely on the advice and information provided by
IAMAT. Vincenzo Marcolongo died at age 66 in February 1988. His
foresight, compassion and generosity serve as inspiration for the
continuation of his work through the Foundation.
The Marcolongo Lecture was instituted in 1990; the list
of speakers follows.
| 2012 |
Gallbladder Carriage of Salmonella: From Chile to
Nepal |
Buddha Basnyat |
| 2011 |
Prevention of Mother To Child Transmission of HIV
Infection and HIV Free Survival: Perspectives From Resource Limited
Settings |
Frederick Sawe |
2010
|
Neonatal Infections- A Global Perspective
|
Anita K.M. Zaidi
|
| 2009 |
Paradigm Shifts in Tuberculosis Drug Susceptibility
Testing: New Dos and Don'ts |
David Moore
|
| 2008 |
Understanding Neurocysticercosis: Advances in the Last
50 Years |
Raul Isturiz
|
| 2007 |
Human African Trypanosomiasis: A Neglected Diseasse
with Low Prevalence but High Impact |
Christian Burri
|
| 2006 |
Severe Malaria: a Moving Target? |
Kevin Marsh
|
| 2005 |
Cystic Echinococcosis: to Treat or not to Treat? |
Enrico Brunetti
|
| 2004 |
Human African Trypanosomiasis: The Past Explains the
Present and is the Key to the Future |
Jacques Pepin
|
| 2003 |
Japanese Encephalitis: West Nile's Ugly Sister |
Tom Solomon
|
| 2002 |
Melioidosis: The Peril in the Paddy Fields |
David Dance
|
| 2001 |
Leishmaniasis in the Sudan |
Edward Zijlstra
|
| 2000 |
Leptospirosis, the Hide and Seek Disease |
Solly Faine
|
| 1999 |
Malaria Prophylaxis: A New Approach |
Eli Schwartz
|
| 1998 |
Puerto Rico Meeting Canceled (Hurricane) |
|
| 1997 |
Clinical Features & Epidemiology of Tick-Borne
Encephalitis in Central and Eastern Europe |
M. Roggendorg
|
| 1996 |
An Infectious Disease Specialist in Hait: AIDS, Typhoid
Fever and Civil Unrest |
Jean Pape
|
| 1995 |
Tuberculosis: Developments in Epidemiology, Diagnosis,
Treatment and Prevention |
JJ Ellner
|
| 1994 |
Management of Severe and Complicated Malaria |
Nick White
|
| 1993 |
Human Rabies: Clinical Features, Pathogenesis and
Potential Treatment |
Thiravat Hemauchuda
|
| 1992 |
HIV and Opportunistic Infections in Northeastern
Brazil |
Anastacio de Queiroz Sousa
|
| 1991 |
Tropical Dermatology |
Anthony Bryceson
|
| 1990 |
Radiological Aspects of Tropical and Parasitic
Disease |
Michael Reeder
|
Clinical Sessions at ASTMH Annual Meeting
Three or four half-day sessions, which are purely clinical in nature,
are organized by ACCTMTH as well as an annual pre-meeting course. For
the 2010 Annual Meeting, efforts were made to group the clinical content
into the first two days of the conference (which follows the Clinical
Pre-Meeting Course). The annual business meeting is preceded by the
Marcolongo Lecture, an invited speaker of international stature, and a
travelers' health and malaria update by CDC.
Clinical and Educational Resources
Only open access, non-profit, quality sites will be posted
here. If you are aware of sites that would be useful to the members
of the clinical group please contact the Clinical Group President with a
request to have posted.
Images in Tropical Medicine Quiz: http://www.astmh.org//Content/NavigationMenu/Education/ClinicalImagesQuiz/CIQ_2.htm
Creepy Dreadful Wonderful Parasites: http://parasitewonders.blogspot.com/
Gorgas Clinical Cases: http://gorgas.dom.uab.edu/2010cases/100809.html
ASTMH-accredited Courses: www.astmh.org/Approved_Diploma_Courses/2543.htm
CDC Travelers Heath: www.cdc.gov/travel
Zaiman Tropical Medicine Slides: www.astmh.org/Zaiman_Slides.htm
Global Health Open Access Library: www.globalhealth.umn.edu/lecturelibrary/home.html
CDC: DPDx (Laboratory identification of Parasites of
Public Health Concern): http://www.dpd.cdc.gov/dpdx/Default.htm
Join
ACCTMTH
To join ACCTMTH (you must also join the parent society, ASTMH) contact:
Buffy Finn
Member Services Administrator
American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
111 Deer Lake Road, Suite 100
Deerfield, IL 60015
Phone: +1-847-480-9592 Fax: +1-847-480-9282
E-mail: bfinn@astmh.org
ACCTMTH Executive Council Members
| Position |
Member |
Term Expires |
| President |
Patricia Joyce |
2014 |
| President Elect |
Richard
Oberhelman |
2015 |
| Past President |
David Hamer |
2013 |
| Secretary/Treasurer |
Beth
Kirkpatrick |
2015 |
| Councilor |
Chandy John |
2013 |
| Councilor |
Michael
Libman |
2014 |
| Councilor |
Brett
Hendel-Paterson |
2015 |
|