Mastering the Art of Abstract Submission for Medical Conferences

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Dedicated to assisting researchers in crafting compelling abstracts for conference submissions, this guide by Samir K. Gadepalli, MSc, MD, MBA covers key elements such as understanding the audience, adhering to guidelines, structuring the abstract's anatomy with background, methods, results, and conclusions, and presenting findings effectively to enhance acceptance rates.


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  1. Preparing an abstract for submission at a conference for presentation Samir K. Gadepalli, MSc, MD, MBA Assistant Professor, Pediatric Surgery and Surgical Critical Care University of Michigan Ann Arbor, MI, USA

  2. Who am I? Training General Surgery Surgical Critical Care Pediatric Surgery MBA in Health Care Administration MSc in Health and Health Care Research Current Practice Pediatric Surgery Surgical Intensivist Health Services Researcher I ve been REJECTED a TON!!!

  3. Preparing an abstract Know the audience; APSA, BAPS, PAPS, CAPS, IPEG Follow the guidelines; submitted elsewhere? need a manuscript? Anatomy of an abstract Background/Purpose (Why?) Methods (How?) Results (What?) Conclusions (So what?) Trailer for the movie

  4. Background 1-3 lines First sentence What we know Main character Right altitude Second sentence (sometimes included in first or third for space) Problem you want to solve Third sentence How your solutions will solve problem Hypothesis of research

  5. Example

  6. Methods Length varies Detail matters Key components IRB Population/Data source Definitions Approach Stats used Demographics, intervention, outcomes, stats Be careful not to confuse results/methods

  7. Example

  8. Results This and the methods are what I use to decide if I accept an abstract Start HERE does the whole story make sense Do I want to hear more about this project? Be organized Use your tables/figures wisely Most important findings Interpret but don t judge Complementary with methods Are decimal points necessary? How many?

  9. Results (2) A good results section will get your abstract accepted Not because of the findings but on how it s presented Typically I do it in 3-4 levels Population studied: Demographics mean versus median Comparison of groups: p-values, confidence intervals important Outcomes: make sure to appropriately adjust for regression (present what was used for adjustment in methods) Most important finding: Table/Figure Is it tweetable? The reader should get to the conclusion before reading it!!

  10. Example

  11. Example 2

  12. Example 3

  13. Conclusion Last thing I write but first thing I think about Just by looking at figures/tables, you should be able to tell the takeaways What are the implications/main findings Why should this be the abstract chosen first one , largest , unexpected findings , important problem Keep it simple. Make it easy to read. And Memorable!

  14. Example

  15. Good luck!! Thank you!! Questions??

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