
2026 Annual Meeting
Discovery, Mentorship and Adaptive Learning in an Evolving Healthcare Environment
Friday, March 27, 2026 to Sunday, March 29, 2026 The University of Washington Husky Union Building (HUB) – Seattle, Washington (4001 E Stevens Way NE, Seattle, WA 98195 – Directions)
Key Dates to Add to your Calendar:
- Abstracts will be open for submission: July 2025 – November 2, 2025
- Lodging Opens: July 2025
- Registration Opens: October 2025
- Deadline to book your lodging: February 24, 2026 (or when block sells out)
- Annual Meeting: Friday, March 27, 2026 to Sunday, March 29, 2026
We look forward to seeing you in Seattle!
Registration Fees
- AUA Members = $350.00
- Non-Members = $400.00
- Non-Member Trainee = $150.00
- President's Reception Guest = $55.00
Cancellation Policy: Cancellations received through February 27, 2026 will receive a full refund. Cancellations received from February 28, 2026 through March 26, 2026 will receive a refund less a $200 administration fee. Refunds will not be given after March 26, 2026. Cancellation of a meeting registration must be submitted in writing. Refunds will be determined by date written cancellation is received at the AUA Office in Milwaukee, WI.
Agenda
Discovery, Mentorship and Adaptive Learning in an Evolving Healthcare Environment
Friday, March 27, 2026
Pre-Meeting Event: Fundamentals of Professional Mentoring 11:00AM - 1:45PM Harriet W. Hopf, MD Susan Martinelli, MD, FASA Daniel Saddawi-Konefka, MD, MBA
Move beyond instinct-based mentoring to develop a structured, evidence-based approach that transforms relationships. This interactive workshop equips both novice and experienced mentors with coaching skills to avoid the common pitfall of immediate advice-giving, instead fostering mentee-driven goal exploration through curiosity and active listening. You'll learn to distinguish between mentoring, advising, sponsoring, and coaching—and master when to use each approach. Leave with practical frameworks, a comprehensive 60-page workbook, and immediately applicable skills that will deepen trust, increase effectiveness, and make your mentoring more rewarding for both you and your mentees. We encourage all AUA members to take advantage of this opportunity as you all serve as mentors in at least one capacity. There is no additional fee to participate, but advance registration is required.
Design of New Protein Functions Using Deep Learning 2:00PM - 3:00PM
 David Baker, PhD 2024 Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
Proteins mediate the critical processes of life and beautifully solve the challenges faced during the evolution of modern organisms. Our goal is to design a new generation of proteins that address current-day problems not faced during evolution. In contrast to traditional protein engineering efforts, which have focused on modifying naturally occurring proteins, we design new proteins from scratch to optimally solve the problem at hand. Increasingly, we develop and use deep learning methods to design amino acid sequences that are predicted to fold to desired structures and functions. We produce synthetic genes encoding these sequences and characterize them experimentally. In this talk, I will describe several recent advances in protein design.
T32 Program Directors' Roundtable 3:30PM – 4:30PM C. David Mintz, MD Christine Sang
By the end of the session attendees should have a good understanding of how a T32 works and its implications. Attendees will be able to distinguish between the roles of Program Directors, Faculty, and T32 trainees. Attendees will understand the importance of T32 grants and their renewals.
Saturday, March 28, 2026
Sessions to include: Keynote, Panels, Awards, Poster Sessions and Annual Member Reception and Dinner. This year's Annual Member Reception and Dinner will be held at the Burke Museum with private access to their galleries.
Breakfast 7:15AM - 8:00AM
President's Welcome Address 8:10AM - 8:15AM Dolores B. Njoku, MD
Keynote: Don't Stop Believin': Navigating the Mid-Career Science Journey 8:15AM - 9:15AM
 Julie Bastarache, MD Professor of Medicine, Pathology, Microbiology & Immunology; Assistant Vice President for Clinical & Translational Scientist Development; Director, Edge for Scholars; Division of Allergy, Pulmonary, and Critical Care Medicine; Vanderbilt University Medical Center
In this session, Dr. Bastarache will discuss the unique challenges faced by mid-career scientists at academic medical centers. Drawing from the literature and her own experience as both a physician scientist and director of the Edge for Scholars Program, Dr. Bastarache will provide insight on how to thrive during the mid-career while maintaining the joy of scientific discovery. Attendees will leave the session with a new perspective on the mid-career stage.
Educational Advisory Board Panel: The Evolution of Medical Education 9:15AM - 10:15AM Moderator: Arna Banerjee, MD, MMHC, FCCM
Traditional/Conventional Teaching Calvin Gruss, MD, MS, MSACI Technology/Simulation Elizabeth Sinz, MD, MEd Multimedia/Online Learning Lawrence F. Chu, MD
EAB Awards Presentation (Education Innovation Award) & LAB Awards Presentation (Mentoring Award) 10:15AM - 10:30AM
Break and Discussion Time 10:30AM - 11:00AM
Host Program 11:00AM - 12:30PM Moderator: Deepak Sharma MBBS, MD, DM
Devastating Outcomes in Children Following Anesthetic Exposure: The Role of Mitochondria
 Philip G. Morgan, MD Professor, Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine - University of Washington
The Art of Healing: Poetic Inquiry and Creative Methodologies in Medicine
 Heidi van Rooyen, PhD William H. Foege Endowed Chair and Professor, Department of Global Health, Schools of Public Health and Medicine, University of Washington
This presentation explores poetic inquiry and other arts-based methods as transformative approaches to healing, research, and social justice in medicine. Drawing from Arts, Power, and Health: Critical Arts-Based Methods for Global Health, I position poetic inquiry as both a form of research and a political response—a means of attending to pain, inequality, and care through creative expression. Arts-based programs in medicine engage participants’ innate creativity to alleviate suffering, foster empathy, and strengthen connection. By integrating poetry, music, performance, and storytelling into medical education and practice, such approaches revitalize relationships between clinicians and patients, enrich institutional cultures, and open new ways of knowing. This talk invites reflection on how the arts can help medicine listen differently, act ethically, and care more deeply.
Lunch and Networking 12:30PM - 1:00PM
Moderated Poster Session 1:00PM - 2:00PM
Oral Abstract Presentations 2:00PM - 2:45PM Moderator: Christina Pabelick, MD
Long-Term Effects of Repeated Adolescent CBD Exposure on Social-Emotional Behaviors and Dendritic Architecture in Rats Nima Sadrian, MD
Diazepam relaxes mouse peripheral airways in a non-GABAA-receptor dependent manner by directly inhibiting phosphodiesterase-4 and increasing cAMP in airway smooth muscle Julie J. Hwang, MD
Regional and Temporal Transcriptomic Responses to a Single Neonatal Cannabidiol Exposure in Rats Gregory Chinn, MD, PhD
Circuit-specific Tau ablation in medial septum blocks p-tau trafficking to anterior cingulate cortex and reverses delirium-like behavior in mice Siyuan Song
Longitudinal impact of sleep and circadian rhythm disturbances on pain and pain-related disability in adolescents with functional abdominal pain See Wan Tham, MBBS MS
Targeting TLR7-Itgam axis to limit myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury Yijia Li, MD, PhD
SAB Awards Presentation (Top Abstracts) 2:45PM - 3:00PM
Scientific Advisory Board Panel: Funding Your Research Program: There's More Than One Fish in the Sea 3:00PM - 4:15PM Moderators: Creed Stary, MD, PhD and Brant M. Wagener, MD, PhD
Federal Funding – Charles W. Emala, Sr., MD, MS Industry Funding – Michael A. Gropper, MD, PhD Foundations Funding – Max Kelz, MD, PhD Other Funding – Meghan B. Lane-Fall, MD, MSHP, FCCM
MEB Awards Presentation (Lifetime Achievement Award; Active Member of the Year Award) 4:15PM - 4:30PM
Membership Reception, Dinner & Night at the Burke Museum 6:00PM - 9:00PM

There is no additional fee for AUA members to participate. Guest tickets available for $55 each.
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Women in Academic Anesthesiology Breakfast Presentation Executive Coaching: A Strategic Tool for Leadership Development in Academic Anesthesiology 7:30AM - 8:30AM Cynthia A. Wong, MD Elizabeth Duggan, MD MA Karen J. Souter, MB, BS, FRCA, PCC
All are invited, but please RSVP for headcount with your registration.
Breakfast 7:30AM - 8:30AM
President's Session: Getting to Outcomes: The Accreditation, Teaching and Learning Triad 8:30AM - 9:30AM
 Elisa Crouse, MD, MS, FACOG Senior Vice President for Institutional and Program Accreditation at the ACGME
Leadership Advisory Board Panel: Why Mentorship, Coaching, and Sponsorship Matter to Your Academic Career 9:15AM - 10:15AM Moderator: Ted Sakai, MD, PhD, MHA, FASA Robert Whittington, MD Zarah Antongiorgi, MD Joseph Szokol, MD, JD, MBA
Break 10:15AM - 10:45AM
Business Meeting and Open Discussion 10:45AM - 11:15AM Moderator: Dolores B. Njoku, MD
Lodging Information
The AUA has secured discounted lodging for the 2026 AUA Annual Meeting. You can now make your reservations.
 Graduate by Hilton Seattle 4507 Brooklyn Ave NE Seattle, WA, 98105 (Directions to HUB on Google Maps)
Guest Room Rates: Starting from $199 plus tax Group Block Closes: February 24, 2026 Book your reservations online here.
Call for Abstracts
The AUA Annual Meeting focuses on academic anesthesiology and accepts scientific abstract submissions. AUA submissions are eligible for Abstract Award presentations, Top Oral Abstract presentation, or as posters to be viewed in person during the AUA meeting. Note: The AUA Annual Meeting does not accept medically challenging case reports.
Deadlines
July 2025: Abstract site opens December 3, 2025: Abstract submissions due, 11:59 p.m. EST January 2026: Abstract submitters receive submission status notification
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