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Dr. Ziyad M. Hijazi Installed as 2008-09 President of SCAI
Dr. Ziyad M. Hijazi Installed as 2008-09 President of SCAI
WASHINGTON, May 12 /PRNewswire/ -- Ziyad M. Hijazi, M.D., M.P.H., FSCAI,
FACC, FAAP, has been installed as the 31st President of the Society for
Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions (SCAI). A pioneer in the
nonsurgical repair of congenital heart defects, Dr. Hijazi is an
interventional cardiologist who specializes in treating congenital heart
disease in both children and adults. Dr. Hijazi is Director of the Rush Center
for Congenital and Structural Heart Disease and Professor of Pediatrics and
Internal Medicine at Rush University Medical Center inChicago.
Raised inJordan, Dr. Hijazi is SCAI's first foreign-born president. He is
also the first pediatric cardiologist to head the Society.
Both factors influence the goals Dr. Hijazi has set for his presidency.
One of his top priorities is to enlist every pediatric and congenital
interventional cardiologist as an SCAI member. Dr. Hijazi also plans to expand
the Society's international membership, noting the advantages of broadening
collaboration and partnerships worldwide. "The more diverse the membership,
the stronger the Society," says Dr. Hijazi, noting that SCAI is already an
international organization devoted to all interventional cardiologists
regardless of their subspecialties. "Diversifying our membership even further
is good for the profession and good for patients."
In addition, Dr. Hijazi plans to expand SCAI's focus on structural heart
disease, or heart problems such as mitral valve regurgitation that are
acquired rather than being present from birth. The Society will launch a new
committee focused specifically on the needs of physicians who use
interventional cardiology procedures to treat structural heart disease. The
Society will also develop structural heart disease guidelines, training
recommendations, educational programs, and criteria for device approval. "I
want the field to flourish under SCAI," says Dr. Hijazi.
Dr. Hijazi began his training by completing a medical degree and
internship inJordan, then earned a masters of public health at the Yale
University School of Medicine. He remained atYale for a residency in
pediatrics and a fellowship in pediatric cardiology. Since then, Dr. Hijazi
has had a distinguished career as both an academic and a practitioner. He
spent eight years teaching at Tufts University School of Medicine before
shifting in 1999 to the University of Chicago, where he served as chief of
pediatric cardiology. He assumed his current position at Rush University
Medical Center in 2007.
A renowned clinical investigator, Dr. Hijazi has written more than 200
articles, 25 book chapters, and three books. His work focuses on developing
techniques and devices to address congenital heart problems without open-heart
surgery. As a result of his research, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
approved the first device for closing atrial septal defects in children in
2001. In addition to his work on nonsurgical repair of defects, Dr. Hijazi was
also the first to show how physicians can use intracardiac echocardiography to
guide transcatheter closure of atrial septal defects and another problem
called patent foramen ovale.
Dr. Hijazi has been active in SCAI since the early 1990s, when friends
persuaded him to attend SCAI's Annual Scientific Sessions. "It was hard to
find anything about pediatric cardiology or congenital heart problems in the
annual meetings and journals of bigger organizations," he explains. "Because
SCAI is more focused, you're listened to and your special needs are met."
SCAI, he notes, devotes two days of its annual meeting and a special section
of its journal Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions to pediatric
and congenital issues.
Dr. Hijazi is course director of the annual Pediatric Interventional
Cardiac Symposium (PICS) cosponsored by SCAI. The four-day conference offers
demonstrations, live operations, and the latest research breakthroughs to more
than 700 interventional cardiologists from around the world. Dr. Hijazi has
also served as a member of SCAI's Board of Trustees and is an editorial board
member for the Society's public education website
http://www.seconds-count.org.
About SCAI
Headquartered inWashington, DC, the Society for Cardiovascular
Angiography and Interventions is a 4,000-member professional organization
representing invasive and interventional cardiologists in 70 nations. SCAI's
mission is to promote excellence in invasive and interventional cardiovascular
medicine through physician education and representation, and advancement of
quality standards to enhance patient care. SCAI's educational meetings have
become the leading venues for education, discussion, and debate about the
latest developments in this dynamic medical specialty.
SOURCE Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions
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