People

People List

  • Lalena M. Yarris, MD, MCR

    Professor, Emergency Medicine

    Oregon Health & Science University

    Professor of Emergency Medicine, Education Section Director and Vice Chair for Education at Oregon Health & Science University

  • Untitled - Richard Wolfe
    Richard E. Wolfe, MD

    Member-at-Large

    Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School


  • Judd E. Hollander, MD

    Thomas Jefferson University

    Judd E. Hollander, MD, is Senior Vice President of Healthcare Delivery Innovation at TJU and Associate Dean for Strategic Health Initiatives at Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University and Professor & Vice Chair of Finance and Healthcare Enterprises in the Department of Emergency Medicine, where responsibilities include the JeffConnect Telemedicine Program and Jefferson Urgent Care. He graduated from New York University Medical School in 1986, completed an Internal Medicine Residency at Barnes Hospital in 1989, and an Emergency Medicine Residency at Jacobi Hospital in 1992. His research interests include innovative care delivery models (including telemedicine), risk stratification of patients with potential cardiovascular disease; cocaine associated cardiovascular complications; and laceration and wound management. Dr. Hollander has published over 550 peer-reviewed articles, book chapters, and editorials on these and other topics. Dr. Hollander was President of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine, chaired the SAEM Program Committee and Emergency Medicine Foundation Scientific Review Committee and was Deputy Editor for the Annals of Emergency Medicine, and co-chaired the National Quality Forum (NQF) committee to create a framework to support measure development for telehealth. Dr. Hollander was the awarded the ACEP Award for Outstanding Research in 2001, the Hal Jayne SAEM Academic Excellence Award in 2003 and the SAEM Leadership Award in 2011.

  • Angela M. Mills, MD

    Immediate Past President

    Columbia University Vagelos

    Angela M. Mills, MD is the J. E. Beaumont Professor and Chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons and Chief of Emergency Services for NewYork-Presbyterian (NYP) – Columbia. Dr. Mills graduated with Alpha Omega Alpha distinction from Temple University Medical School and completed the University of Pennsylvania Emergency Medicine residency program serving as Chief Resident. As a University of Pennsylvania faculty member, she advanced academically being promoted to Professor of Emergency Medicine and served in several capacities including Medical Director and Vice Chair of Clinical Operations.

    In January 2018, Dr. Mills joined NYP-Columbia as the founding Chair of the newly formed Department of Emergency Medicine leading all academic and operational activities for the four emergency department sites caring for over 240,000 patients annually. As Chair, Dr. Mills has worked to successfully advance education, research, clinical care, and diversity and inclusion efforts while building a premier nationally recognized academic department of emergency medicine.

    For her accomplishments, Dr. Mills has been honored with several prestigious national awards including the Arnold P. Gold Foundation Humanism in Medicine Award from SAEM, the Mid-Career Award from the Academy for Women in Academic Emergency Medicine (AWAEM), and the 2020 Chair of the Year Inaugural Award from the Emergency Medicine Residents’ Association. Under her leadership, the Columbia Department of Emergency Medicine has been awarded the Outstanding Department Award from AWAEM, as well as the Exemplary Commitment to Physician Well-Being Inaugural Award from the New York Chapter of the American College of Emergency Physicians. Dr. Mills has served as an elected member of the SAEM Board of Directors for the past six years, most recently in the position of President-Elect. She has authored over 110 scientific publications, has received federal and industry research funding, and has influenced the careers of numerous faculty and trainees.

  • Robert Hockberger
    Robert S. Hockberger, MD

    SAEMF Secretary-Treasurer

    Los Angeles County Harbor-UCLA Medical Center

     

  • Benjamin Abella, MD, MPhil

    Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

    Benjamin Abella, MD MPhil is the Mount Sinai Endowed Professor and System Chair for the Department of Emergency Medicine at the Mount Sinai Health System. Dr. Abella attended medical school at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and then completed residencies in both internal medicine and emergency medicine at the University of Chicago. He served as Vice Chair for Research and William G. Baxt Endowed Professor at the University of Pennsylvania before moving to Mt. Sinai. Dr. Abella has led numerous clinical studies on cardiac arrest and post-arrest care, having authored over 250 published works including in high impact journals such as Journal of the American Medical Association, New England Journal of Medicine, and Circulation. His work has been continuously funded by the NIH for 20 years. Dr. Abella has served as Chair of the American Heart Association (AHA) national 3CPR Council and has co-authored international guidelines for CPR training. He is the emergency care and CPR consultant to the National Basketball Association, and has worked with the United States Air Force in the development of post-arrest care protocols. His work has been featured on Good Morning America, CNN, the New York Times, and other national media outlets.

  • J. Scott VanEpps
    J. Scott VanEpps, MD, PhD

    President

    University of Michigan

    Dr. VanEpps is an Associate Professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine and the Department of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Michigan. He is also faculty in the Biointerfaces Institute and the Michigan Center for Integrative Research in Critical Care. During his doctoral training, Dr. VanEpps’ research focused on the relationship between cardiovascular biomechanics and the development of coronary artery disease. In addition, he has extensive experience in computational modeling including finite element analysis and computational fluid dynamics. His research is currently focused on life threatening infections, and in particular those related to implantable medical devices.

    Dr. VanEpps has been on the SAEMF Board of Trustees since 2018. He served as the secretary-treasurer from 2018-2020, as a member-at-large 2021-2023, and as president-elect in 2023. He is a prior recipient of a Research Training Grant and is intimately aware of the tremendous impact SAEM grants can have.

    He received bachelor’s degrees from the University of Pittsburgh in Molecular Biology and Chemical Engineering in 2001. He then entered the Medical Scientist Training Program at the University of Pittsburgh and obtained his MD as well as his PhD in Bioengineering in 2009. He completed his residency in Emergency Medicine at the University of Michigan/St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in 2013 and joined the faculty at the University of Michigan. He is board certified in Emergency Medicine.

  • Ryan E. Tsuchida, MD

    Assistant Professor

    University of Wisconsin

    Dr. Ryan Tsuchida is an assistant professor of emergency medicine at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the assistant dean for multicultural affairs for health professions learners at UW School of Medicine and Public Health. Dr. Tsuchida has a long-standing commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives. While attending medical school at the University of Michigan, he founded the transgender M4 elective and created a student-run faculty development seminar on LGBTQ+ Health. While in residency, he organized and participated in several institutional and departmental programs including acting as lead house officer liaison for a multi-site ACGME collaborative on health care disparities and quality improvement. Within the department, he has participated in the residency’s holistic review process for residency applications, been a member of the program director search committee, and published a commentary on the RAND blog on the importance of health system workforce diversity. Now as faculty, Dr. Tsuchida chairs the department's EDI committee and is involved in institutional URiM mentorship programs. Dr. Tsuchida is the inagural and former chair of the equity and inclusion data and metrics subcommittee (2020-22), the current SAEM ADIEM membership committee, and was elected by the ADIEM members to be the 2024-25 secretary-treasurer. Through his various committee works, he has presented didactics at the SAEM 2021-24 annual meetings on resident-driven recruitment and retention of underrepresented minority medical students and has been an unconscious bias workshop facilitator for SAEM committee and academy chairs. His work has been recognized by the University of Michigan Medical School’s award for excellence in institutional change to promote health equity, SAEM’s ADIEM future outstanding academician award, and the University of Wisconsin, Department of Emergency Medicine faculty award for excellence in leadership and service.

  • Kuzel R., Aaron
    Aaron Kuzel

    Emergency Medicine Resident, PGY-II University of Louisville School of Medicine

    Aaron R. Kuzel, DO, MBA is an Emergency Medicine Resident at the University of Louisville School of Medicine and is currently serving as a Member-at-Large on the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine’s (SAEM) Resident and Medical Student’s (RAMS) Board. Dr. Kuzel is a former Forensic Scientist for the United States Department of Justice and currently works on projects related to medical education, rural emergency medicine, health policy, ems, tactical emergency medicine, and forensics. Dr. Kuzel is a graduate of the DO/MBA program at Lincoln Memorial University College of Osteopathic Medicine where he received induction into Sigma Sigma Phi (SSP), the Gold Humanism Honor Society (GHHS), and Omega Beta Iota (OBI) the Osteopathic Health Policy Honor Society. Dr. Kuzel is also a recipient of the commission of Kentucky Colonel and a member of the Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonels.

  • 2025 Vicken Totten
    Vicken Totten, MD, MS

    Retired

    Vicken Totten, MD, MS, is a pioneer in emergency medicine (EM). When she started in medicine, there were ten men for everyone woman physician and there was no specialty of EM. After an internship, two years in the U.S. Public Health Service in remote rural America, she returned to a family practice residency and was "grandmothered" into EM. A few years later she was working full time in rural emergency rooms and raising children as a single mom. She has a passion for academia and started her academic career as faculty in Brooklyn, NY. After spending six months working in Sweden as their first full time emergency physician and the only American-trained board certified EP in the country, she got a degree from the University of Michigan in Research Design and Statistics. Through her career, Dr. Totten has had the experience of helping residents get excited about projects. She finally retired in 2018 but remains engaged in the EM community.

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    Bisan Salhi, MD, PhD

    Assistant Professor, Emergency Medicine

    Emory University School of Medicine

    Dr. Salhi is dual trained in Emergency Medicine and Anthropology, having completed a PhD examining homeless super-utilizers at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta, Georgia. Her research focuses on underserved populations, social determinants of health, and housing deprivation in the Emergency Department.

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