AOSW Connections
Editorial Team
Editor-in-Chief
Amy Colver, MSSA, MA, LISW
Editor
Katherine Easton, MSW, LCSW, OSW-C
AOSW Communications Director
Brittany Hahn, LCSW
Managing Editor
Patricia Sullivan
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2025 Themes
February: Workplace & Culture
May: Therapeutic Techniques
August: Palliative Care
November: Caregivers
The Annual Conference from the View of a Presenter
Here I am, an oncology social worker standing in front of a room, asking you to learn from me. I’ve presented at AOSW and many other conferences multiple times. But the butterflies of excitement, nervousness, dread, fear and hope still rumble in my stomach every time I get up in front of you.
Presenting at AOSW has evolved over time for me. I first presented at AOSW in 2001. It was a poster and I seriously had no clue what I was doing. I was nervous, uncomfortable and out of my league. Sixteen years later, at the 2017 Annual Conference, I was presenting both a paper and a learning institute. My talks focus on ethics, which has become an area of clinical expertise for me. I’ve transformed over the years into a leader, a content expert and an educator. This is very much due to the mentorship I have received from other leaders in AOSW.
Something else is different too. These people in the audience aren’t just oncology social work colleagues—many of them are close friends. These are folks I call on when I need peer guidance and support.
Presenting at a conference is a leap of faith. It is one I wouldn’t make so willingly for other groups. But presenting to AOSW members inspires me. You are engaged. You are sponges. You want to soak in all the knowledge, take it back to your settings and make change immediately. You push me to elevate my presentations and employ new techniques to make you active participants in your learning. For all of this, I’m grateful to all of you. Thank you for listening, for questioning, for wondering, for challenging, for implementing and for being charged to influence your own practice and the delivery of care at your workplace.
I encourage each one of you to take a leap and submit an abstract to present a session at next year’s Annual Conference in Atlanta. Share your passion, your knowledge and your expertise with your peers. Get inspiration and motivation from your colleagues via SWON. What issues and challenges are you seeing? Turn these into a presentation! Most importantly, connect with others for mentorship and guidance. We “seasoned” presenters want to foster new presenters. I strongly encourage you to use the Abstract Mentorship program (aoswabstractmentor@gmail.com), or connect with another member via SWON and work together on a topic that is of interest to both of you. There is strength and growth in our numbers. We will continue to elevate the content of the conferences, the evidence base of our profession and the services we deliver every day to our patients.
About the Author
Christina Bach, MBE, LCSW, OSW-C, FASOW
Psychosocial Content Editor, Oncolink.org; Chair, Board of Oncology Social Work CertificationPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
Christina.Bach@pennmedicine.upenn.edu
Christina Bach (she/her) holds her master’s degrees in social work and bioethics from the University of Pennsylvania and is a licensed clinical social worker. She is also a Certified Oncology Social Worker and a Fellow of the Association of Oncolo...
Read Full Author Bio
Christina Bach, MBE, LCSW, OSW-C, FASOW
Psychosocial Content Editor, Oncolink.org; Chair, Board of Oncology Social Work CertificationPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
Christina.Bach@pennmedicine.upenn.edu
Christina Bach (she/her) holds her master’s degrees in social work and bioethics from the University of Pennsylvania and is a licensed clinical social worker. She is also a Certified Oncology Social Worker and a Fellow of the Association of Oncology Social Work. Christina is the Chair of the Board of Oncology Social Work Certification.
Christina’s practice is focused in oncology and health care social work. She has worked in inpatient and outpatient physical health and oncology settings and currently works as the Psychosocial Content Editor for OncoLink.org. Here her practice centers on curating accessible patient and caregiver education content in coping with cancer, cancer risk reduction, financial toxicity, and cancer survivorship. She also works closely with her team to research patient experience and outcomes. Currently she is studying the implementation of trauma informed care practices with radiation therapists at Penn Medicine. She also has a keen interest in the use of technology and social media in conveying patient narrative and experience with medical trauma.
Clinically, Christina works as a Financial Specialist with the Cancer Support Community and also facilitates the Philadelphia Multiple Myeloma Networking Group. Christina also has vast experience in Animal Assisted Therapy and works regularly with her certified therapy dogs, Linus, Huckleberry and Eugene (in training). Christina also lectures locally and nationally on the interplay between social work, bioethics and technology as well as the use animals in social work practice.
Articles
2017 Annual Conference: Denver, Here We Come!An Introduction to AI for Oncology Social Workers
Director's Report: Education
Director's Report: Education
Ethics SIG: A New Focus and a New Co-Chair
Ethics SIG: New Updates to the NASW Code of Ethics
Social Workers as Financial Navigators: A Match Often Overlooked
The Annual Conference from the View of a Presenter