288: You Don't Know What You Don't Know: Expanding Awareness to Restore Autonomy and Access
Sunday, November 15, 2026
4:45 pm - 5:45 pm
Room: BALLRM-ABC
Chairs: Gabrielle T. Whitmore
Faculty:
Description: Despite advances in minimally invasive gynecologic surgery,
patients with endometriosis and uterine fibroids continue to face prolonged
diagnostic delays, fragmented care, and limited autonomy in treatment
decision-making. A major contributor is not a lack of surgical
innovation—but a lack of awareness. As clinicians, we often underestimate
how much patients, referring providers, and even colleagues do not know they
do not know. This talk reframes awareness as a clinical intervention. Using
real-world examples, the session explores how MIGS surgeons can move beyond
the exam room to become catalysts for education, advocacy, and access.
Attendees will learn how to engage their local communities through
patient-centered educational forums, leverage social media responsibly for
evidence-based education, and build intentional partnerships with PCPs,
APPs, and midwives to bridge gaps between symptom recognition and specialty
care. The presentation emphasizes scalable, time-efficient approaches that
are feasible for both early-career and senior faculty—whether practicing in
academic centers or community settings. By improving awareness upstream,
surgeons can help restore patient autonomy, shorten time to diagnosis, and
ensure equitable access to high-quality gynecologic care.
Objective #1: Review key gaps in awareness that delay
diagnosis and limit patient autonomy in endometriosis and fibroid care.
Objective #2: Apply practical strategies to engage
communities through educational forums and digital platforms to improve
public understanding of gynecologic disease.
Objective #3: Strengthen referral pathways by collaborating
with primary care providers (PCPs), advanced practice providers (APPs), and
midwives to improve timely access to specialty care.
Medtalk Presenter: Gabrielle Whitmore
Learning Objectives: At the end of this course, the participant will be able to:
- Review key gaps in awareness that delay diagnosis and limit patient autonomy in endometriosis and fibroid care.
- Apply practical strategies to engage communities through educational forums and digital platforms to improve public understanding of gynecologic disease.
- Strengthen referral pathways by collaborating with primary care providers (PCPs), advanced practice providers (APPs), and midwives to improve timely access to specialty care.
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Boston, MA 02115
United States