- Resource Type:
- Presentation
AQG: Power and Limitations of Virtual Twins in Quality Assurance: The Case of Low Ejection Fraction
May 4, 2025
Edward Soltesz , Speaker , Cleveland Clinic
105th Annual Meeting, Seattle Convention Center | Summit, Seattle, WA, USA
Seattle Convention Center | Summit, Room 447-448, Level 4
Edward Soltesz
Speaker
Edward Soltesz, MD, MPH, is the Donna and Ken Lewis Endowed Chair in Cardiothoracic Surgery and the Surgical Director of the Kaufman Center for Heart Failure and Recovery at the Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, OH. He also is the Course Director for the American Austrian Foundation/Open Medical Institute Cardiac Surgery Medical Seminar held annually in Salzburg, Austria, and the Director of Cardiac Surgery Affiliate Programs at Cleveland Clinic where he oversees quality and outcomes of more than 15 affiliated programs and 45 surgeons.
A native of Cleveland, Dr. Soltesz graduated as valedictorian of St. Ignatius High School in Cleveland and received a full academic scholarship to the College of the Holy Cross. There, he obtained degrees in both Classics and Chemistry, was awarded the British Marshall Scholarship, and graduated summa cum laude as the class valedictorian. Dr. Soltesz then went on to receive his medical degree from Harvard Medical School where he was awarded the Harvard National Scholarship. Dr. Soltesz stayed at Harvard to complete his residences in general surgery and cardiothoracic surgery at the Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. Dr. Soltesz also earned a Master of Public Health from Harvard University School of Public Health with a focus on clinical effectiveness. Dr. Soltesz then returned to Cleveland to complete an additional fellowship in complex aortic and endovascular surgery at Cleveland Clinic, where he was subsequently appointed to the Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery in 2008.
Dr. Soltesz’s research program focuses on large-scale assessment of cardiac surgical outcomes from a public health perspective, quality improvement and safety, clinical outcomes of valve surgery, and heart failure. He has lectured and served as a visiting professor both nationally and internationally.