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Caleb Rogovin received his Bachelors of Science in Nursing at Temple University in Philadelphia, PA. Upon graduation, he attended the Critical Care and Trauma Nurse Internship at Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas, TX. This is where he began his career as a critical care/trauma nurse. After working at the Trauma Center of the South Pacific at the Queen’s Medical Center in Honolulu, HI, Mr. Rogovin relocated to Baltimore, MD to work at the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center. While residing in Baltimore, he completed a Masters of Science in Trauma/Critical Care. During graduate school, he was awarded the Patricia Roberts Harris fellowship, which allowed him to attend graduate school on a full-time basis and fostered his interest in becoming an educator.
Following graduation, Mr. Rogovin worked in the advanced practice roles of educator and clinician for a number of years before realizing that anesthesia was his true interest. He received his anesthesia education at the Minneapolis VA School of Anesthesia. His passion for trauma care lead him to positions at Cook County Hospital in Chicago, IL and San Francisco General Hospital. While working as a staff anesthetist, he held adjunct faculty positions at both Rush University and Samuel Merritt College.
When the opportunity arose to help develop and implement the Nurse Anesthesia Program at the University of Maryland, Mr. Rogovin eagerly returned to the east coast to assume a full-time, education-leadership role as the Assistant Director.
Mr. Rogovin has recently returned home to Philadelphia where he is a Staff CRNA at Temple University Hospital.
Mr. Rogovin has lectured throughout the United States on Trauma, Critical Care and Anesthesia topics to various anesthesia and healthcare audiences. While at San Francisco General Hospital, he was course faculty for the UCSF Fiberoptic/Difficult Airway Workshop. On the international scene, he taught extensively on the use of automated external defibrillators for a major international airline. Mr. Rogovin has also been an invited speaker at multiple AANA Annual Meetings. Mr. Rogovin has served on the Council of Certification as an item writer for the certification exam, and is a current member of the Program Committee for the AANA.

Dr. McCutchen received his B.A. in Medical Ethics from Davidson College in 1991 and his M.D. from the Wake Forest University School of Medicine in 1995. Quinn completed his internship in General Surgery and Neurosurgical residency at the Medical University of South Carolina from 1995 to 2000. He then went on to complete a residency at the Wake Forest University School of Medicine from 2000-2003.
Dr. McCutchen has received multiple teaching awards from anesthesiology residents and student nurse anesthestists. He has lectured on and taught regional anesthesia at several meetings around the country and has multiple publications in anesthesiology and neurosurgical journals and textbooks.
Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology
Sections of Neuroanesthesia, Regional Anesthesia and Acute Pain Management, and Obstetric Anesthesia
Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC

