Louisville Medicine Volume 65, Issue 1 | Page 7

From the PRESIDENT Robert A. Zaring, MD, MMM GLMS President | [email protected] THE Fleur-de-Lis CONNECTION T wo-time United Kingdom Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli once said, “Change is inevitable. Change is constant.” Those words accurate- ly reflect the climate in the coun- try, especially in health care. The country and the health care community have seen the end of the despised sustainable growth rate given to us by the Balanced Budget Act of 1997. However, out of its demise rose the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) with its Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) contain- ing an array of new quality standards, quality improvement requirements, value-based re- source use evaluations, and electronic health record usage standards. The changes do not end there, and with the election of Donald Trump as President of the United States we face the possibility of once again fundamen- tally changing the delivery of health care. While the country has faced enormous change, so has our own Greater Louisville Medical Society (GLMS). We have made the successful move from the Old Medical School Building to our new home in the Fleur-de-Lis Building on Main. While we look with great reverence on the past we look forward to the great opportunities change allows us. One of the opportunities the move will create is an enhanced integration of the GLMS Foundation into the activities of the society. One of the Foundation’s primary jobs was to maintain the Old Medical School Building but since the sale of the building that duty is now in the hands of the Ronald McDonald House. This will allow the Foundation to devote more time to its other missions including: the promotion of public health, the encouragement and development of scientific activity, the planning and initiation of research activities, and the dissemination of medical knowledge to the general public. I would encourage you to investigate the new and exciting endeavors the Foundation has planned. They have been hard at work with the help of a Louisville IGNITE team to broaden their service to the community. Given the changes that have occurred as well as the potential changes we are working on with the Medical Society Professional Services (MSPS) subsidiary it only seemed appropriate to create a new logo. Therefore, we are proud to introduce the new logo for GLMS (see left page). The new logo signifies the direction we envision for the society and yet still captures our tradition. You might have noticed the new logo on the mailings you have received. The new logo is a fleur-de- lis with a snake wrapped around the center three times and composed of the colors red, blue and purple. Each element of the logo is a reminder of who we are, how our individual parts merge into a unified presence, and how we relate to our state and national societies. The fleur-de-lis has been around since the Greek and Roman cultures but became a symbol of French royalty and symbolized perfection, light and life. In other traditions, the fleur-de-lis has signified such ideas as purity, virtue and rebirth. The connection with the medical society, which has had a fleur-de-lis since the society was known as the Jefferson County Medical Society, is with the city of Louisville. In 1953, the Austrian Victor Hammer designed the seal of the city of Louisville which included three fleur- de-lis, 13 stars and the year 1778 all on a blue background. The fleur-de-lis harkened back to the origin of the city’s name, which was named Louisville to honor King Louis XVI of France. The 13 stars represented the 13 original colonies and 1778 was the year the city of Louisville was founded. The seal changed in 2003 with the merger of Louisville and Jefferson County but still has the fleur-de-lis as its primary symbol. Therefore, the fleur-de-lis reminds us of our connection to our traditions but also to the community we serve. The three leaves of the fleur-de-lis and the three rings the snake forms signifies three aspects of the Society (GLMS, GLMS Foundation, and MSPS) all working together for the community’s health, and bound by a uniform purpose. The goal is to remind us that all elements of the society should be closely aligned and working together to better serve the general community and our members. The colors also have a deep significance. The color blue ties us to our state society, the Kentucky Medical Association; The color red to the city of Louisville and the noble ideals of leadership, passion and courage; and the blended colors forming a purplish hue to our national society, the American Medical Association. I hope you enjoy the new logo and see it as a symbol of how GLMS is changing to meet the demands of a shifting health care landscape. Your Society is hard at work to make the necessary changes to its various functions to meet your ongoing needs and the logo is a reminder and a beacon to how we hope to do that and who we are. The logo signifies change but also forces us to remember our traditions and all those that have contributed to the success of the Society in the past. Dr. Zaring is an anatomic and clinical patholo- gist with Louisville Pathology Associates and practices at Jewish Hospital. JUNE 2017 5