It is a profound honor and privilege to serve as
the 53rd President of PACEP. I do so with a deep
sense of gratitude and with a clear understanding
of the responsibility this role carries. In accepting
this role, I am mindful that no leader stands alone.
Each of us who has the honor to serve in this
capacity does so supported by the vision, courage,
and determination of those who came before. We
all stand on the shoulders of giants.
That phrase is often repeated, but here, rings
especially true. The leaders who preceded us did
not inherit a fully formed specialty or a settled
identity. They built Emergency Medicine into
what it is today, often in the face of skepticism,
limited resources, and evolving expectations.
They advocated for recognition, for standards, for
training, and for the fundamental idea that every
patient, at any hour, deserves expert, immediate
care. They did not wait for permission to lead,
they defined what leadership would look like in
our field.
Because of those who have come before, we
inherit a College that is respected, resilient, and
relevant. But we also inherit the responsibility to
carry that work forward with intention. For a brief
period, the leadership is entrusted with guiding an
organization that must continue to grow, adapt,
and advocate long after our term has ended.
That perspective shapes how I approach this
year. It demands humility, because we are part
of something larger than ourselves. But it also
demands urgency, because the challenges we face
today are complex, consequential, and will shape
the future of Emergency Medicine for the state for
the future.
Among the most important issues before us is
the effort to advance legislation in House Bill
2265, supporting physician led care in Emergency
Departments across Pennsylvania, ensuring the
appropriate care and expertise patients deserve.
Communities across our state, whether urban or
rural, deserve access to the highest standard of
emergency care. We know that outcomes improve
when patients are evaluated and treated by
physicians specifically trained in the breadth and
unpredictability of emergency medicine.
This initiative is not about exclusion; it is about
patient care. It is about ensuring that the standard
continue reading on page 6
EXECUTIVE PRIVILEGE
On the Shoulders of Giants
Blake Bailey, DO, MBA, FACEP
PACEP President 2026-2027
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