Welcome from Chandy Verghese, MBBS, FRCA

The Society for Airway Management (SAM) is a subspecialty organization established to promote both scientific advances as well as improve the current and future practice of safe airway management with research, education and instruction of airway skills and devices. We have been established for 12 years and our membership continues to increase. SAM encourages and welcomes participation by all medical personnel involved in airway management and our membership reflects this mixture of professionals from various specialties involved in airway care. SAM hosts an annual meeting, has an active website, and a SAM-forum in which members participate in ‘cutting edge’ discussions on the many aspects of safe airway management. An exchange of speakers to the annual meeting of SAM and the Difficult Airway Society, UK (DAS), has been in place over the past 5 years, and forms an important link between these two Societies and a stimulating exchange of ideas and practices. The nominated SAM speaker to DAS, this year is Dr Allan Klock (President-Elect, SAM).

The Society is very fortunate to have members who are eminent specialists in airway management, inventors of current airway devices, and consultants to the ASA Task Force on Difficult Airway Management and Obstructive Sleep Apnea. We also have members from over 34 countries and hope to continue to expand our activities.

Last year, under the stewardship of Professor Carin Hagberg, the Society initiated two annual research grants to investigators performing research on airway related topics. Applications could be made ‘on-line’ at the SAM website. Additionally, SAM will sponsor an international physician from a developing country to attend the annual SAM meeting at no cost, as well as attend an academic institution in the USA or Europe either before or after the annual meeting. The selected candidate will also receive 3 years of free membership.

There has been an ‘explosion’ of supraglottic airway devices, video-laryngoscopes and other devices intended to simplify airway management, simplify tracheal intubation and to overcome the ‘difficult airway’. I hope that with your support all of us, in SAM, will contribute to the assessment of these new devices and formulate a pragmatic approach to their strengths, weaknesses and clinical importance. This would allow us to prioritize our training and research and will be of great benefit to our current and future members of our society.

If you wish to share your expertise or knowledge by serving on one of our many committees, please do let me know. The strength of SAM is with you, and with your help and support I look forward to the next year.
 
Chandy Verghese MBBS, FRCA                                       Tel: +44 322 7065 or +44 118 9310234
SAM President 2007-2008                                            
Consultant in Anaesthesia and Intensive Care              Fax: +44 118 975 3075
Department of Anaesthesia
Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation Trust                           e-mail: chandy.verghese@virgin.net
Reading, Berkshire RG1 5AN
UK
 
Welcome from Carin Hagberg, MD
 
The Society of Airway Management (SAM) is a subspecialty organization whose mission is to promote the scientific advancement and practice of airway management by encouraging research, education, and instruction of airway skills and devices. SAM is an active society and functions as a year-round resource for its members and the medical community in general. It is your continuous support and participation that is making SAM an exciting, growth-oriented organization.
 
The practice of airway management has seemingly become more complex with time, as evidenced by the introduction of a member of new airway devices. Clinicians involved in airway management have an enormous selection of resources to choose from. The various supraglottic airways have revolutionized surgery and videolaryngoscopy may do the same for both inpatient and outpatient surgery.
 
SAM offers many resources that promote safe and effective clinical airway management practiced by the various medical specialties involved. The Annual Meeting, the SAM website, the SAM-forum and the Airway Gazette all provide very useful information to clinicians eager to learn more. Members of our society serve as expert consultants to the ASA’s Task Force on Difficult Airway Management and Obstructive Sleep Apnea. Additionally, there are currently two active consensus panels working on forming a consensus opinion on important issues of airway management, including “Extubation of the Difficult Airway” and “Should Bag Mask Ventilation be Performed During the Application of Cricoid Pressure?”
 
Presently, SAM has grown to include over 400 members from 34 countries. With your continued support, we can accomplish much more in 2007. Thanks for continuing to be an important part of SAM. I am looking forward to another great year! If anyone is interested in becoming more active in SAM, possibly by serving on one of our several committees, I would love to hear from you.
 
Sincerely,
Carin Hagberg, MD
SAM President 2006-2007
 
 
 
Welcome from Will Rosenblatt, MD

Dear new SAM member:
 
Welcome to the Society for Airway Management. SAM is an international group of the finest teachers, investigators and clinicians in the arena of airway management and science! We are in our 10th year, and a time of great change and importance for the Society.  Though SAM has been known for its extraordinary annual meeting, the Society is moving to be a year-round resource for its members and the medical community in general.
 
Apart from attending our annual meeting (and enjoying member discounts for lecture and workshop registration) there are other ways you can benefit and participate in SAM:
  • Use the SAM website  (www.SAMhq.com) as a resource
  • Be active in the SAM-Forum, our list-serve, where you can read & post interesting airway challenges and information
  • Read the SAM Gazette, our quarterly newsletter. You are also encouraged to submit letters, articles and comments for publication in the Gazette
  • Become more involved in the Society: consider serving on one of our many member committees
  • Comment on the activities of our SAM Consensus panels, which work year round to produce opinion papers on important airway issues
  • Submit abstracts for presentation at the annual meeting
We look forward to your participation, and helping SAM to grow.  We trust that you will not only take advantage of SAM resources, but also let us know how we can make them better.
 
Sincerely,
William Rosenblatt, MD
SAM President  2005-2006
 
 
 
Welcome from John Doyle, MD

Few areas in medicine have advanced as quickly and dramatically in the last few decades as clinical airway management. A mere 3 decades ago tracheal intubation by direct laryngoscopy, blind nasal intubation, and possibly surgical methods were the most one could reasonably expect from a clinician experienced in airway management. Fiberoptic intubation, the laryngeal mask airway (LMA), the Bullard laryngoscope, the GlideScope and even the concept of airway management algorithms were all unavailable in those days. Indeed, a mere 75 years ago, around the time of the Great Depression, airway management during general anesthesia consisted primarily of maintaining spontaneous ventilation with the aid of careful head positioning and the use of oropharyngeal airways, although also available were tongue forceps designed to pull the tongue out of an obstructing position. Endotracheal intubation was rarely performed in those days, and positive-pressure ventilation was an exotic technology still in its early experimental phase. Clinical problem solving for the common airway problems were based almost entirely on ad-hoc methods. 

Now clinicians interested in airway management have an enormous selection of resources to choose from. Almost every imaginable form of laryngoscope is available to those with the funds to secure them. The various forms of LMA have practically revolutionized outpatient surgery. Countless books, CD-ROMs, videos and Web pages are available to clinicians eager to learn more. 
 
In this spirit, the Society for Airway Management is eager to be another valuable resource concerned with promoting effective and safe clinical airway management as practiced by the various medical specialties involved.  This includes classical topics such as laryngoscopy and intubation, prevention of aspiration, positive pressure ventilation, as well as more recent developments such as supraglottic airway devices, and methods of awake intubation.  Emphasis is also placed on understanding the various airway management algorithms for the management of expected and unexpected airway difficulties, such as that developed by the American Society of Anesthesiology. 
 
It is my sincere hope that this Web resource is highly effective in promoting the cause of clinical airway management.

D. John Doyle MD PhD FRCPC
SAM President  2004-2005