Feature
SIR’s greatest hits: SIR Connect
By Brian Haefs
This article is the first in a series celebrating the most popular resources SIR makes available to the interventional radiology community, in the words of our members.
compare notes on procedures, share new discoveries and connect. As then SIR Executive Director Susan E. Sedory, MA, CAE, announced in the inaugural communication on this platform, SIR Connect was built to “provide members with direct access to the society’s greatest resource—the thousands of IRs who make up the SIR Membership.”
O
Kicking the tires It wasn’t long before members began trying out this new platform—asking each other questions about IVC compression, hepatocellular carcinoma and more. According to Arun Jagannathan, MD, one of the very first IRs to post on the SIR Connect Open Forum, “There weren’t a lot of good ways to reach out to the broader IR community back then— especially for someone in a small rural practice like I was. Since I wasn’t in an academic setting, it was like I was on a remote island.”
Mary Costantino, MD, FSIR, a frequent user of SIR Connect to this day, also underscores the platform’s value for smaller clinical practices. “For small and rural practices, this is the IR community. Some bigger practices don’t need this kind of resource, but it’s really good for independent labs. It’s a tremendous way for SIR to support practices of all types.”
As helpful as it was to be able to post to the community, the true advantage was in the feedback. “When I started
34 IRQ | SUMMER 2024
n Feb. 12, 2015, SIR announced a new resource that would enable members to interact with each other,
seeing good, educated responses on SIR Connect from IR luminaries, I realized how much value it had,” Dr. Jagannathan said. “I could get feedback from experienced IR colleagues all over the world—some of whom I’d never had the chance to meet before. It was so much more beneficial than my usual outlets, like sending direct messages to colleagues on Twitter.”
By the end of the first year, traffic on SIR Connect had hit “critical mass,” as Dr. Jagannathan puts it, and the frequency of posts accelerated from a few queries or comments per month, to several per day, to multiple posts per hour.
The platform grows According to frequent user Raj Pyne, MD, FSIR, its value is still clear.
“Allowing IRs to communicate and share ideas, exchange thoughts, debate heated controversies, and even crowdsource thoughts not only connects us on a daily basis but also directly improves patient outcomes and advances our field,” he said.
From the time of its launch, Joseph J. Gemmete, MD, FSIR, has found the platform to be an interesting way to discuss complex cases. “I think it is a great forum for information about current relevant topics important to SIR members, and it give us an opportunity to discuss complex cases and post surveys that are relevant to the practice of IR,” he said.
“SIR Connect is the pulse of the IR community,” said Steven J. Citron, MD,
FSIR. “When I have a pressing question or just want to know the answer to something, posting it on SIR Connect allows me to get all sorts of different perspectives from others who are as passionate about our specialty as I am.”
Another SIR member who is often seen on SIR Connect, R. Torrance Andrews, MD, FSIR, notes the particular value of posts on topics that had never occurred to him. “IR is a very dynamic field, and a large percentage of the work that I do now didn’t even exist when I was in training,” he said. “And some of those procedures were first brought to my attention through discussions on SIR Connect.”
Some IRs’ practices have benefited from discussions as well.
“I have even had direct patient referrals from IRs—some that I do not know— allowing them to transfer their patient’s care directly to someone they trust in a different part of the country,” said Dr. Pyne.
Community center The popularity of SIR Connect isn’t limited to the Open Forum. Focused member communities have proliferated, with discussion areas dedicated to the needs of the society’s disparate sections, treatment discussion groups, and areas for committees and work groups to better collaborate and organize their work.
Dr. Jagannathan cites the value of discussions in specific groups like the venous community, though he says he prefers the general forum because of its greater volume of traffic. So does Dr. Andrews, who finds these subgroups less interesting because the conversations in smaller communities are, by design, less diverse.
SIR Connect also offers opportunities for both formal and informal mentoring. Via general forum conversations, Dr. Pyne says, early- or earlier-career IRs can reach out to those more established for advice ranging from procedural techniques to job and financial advice.
Page 1 |
Page 2 |
Page 3 |
Page 4 |
Page 5 |
Page 6 |
Page 7 |
Page 8 |
Page 9 |
Page 10 |
Page 11 |
Page 12 |
Page 13 |
Page 14 |
Page 15 |
Page 16 |
Page 17 |
Page 18 |
Page 19 |
Page 20 |
Page 21 |
Page 22 |
Page 23 |
Page 24 |
Page 25 |
Page 26 |
Page 27 |
Page 28 |
Page 29 |
Page 30 |
Page 31 |
Page 32 |
Page 33 |
Page 34 |
Page 35 |
Page 36 |
Page 37 |
Page 38 |
Page 39 |
Page 40