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Dr. David Winchester is New ACC Board of Governors Chair

Dr. Winchester will serve a one-year term leading ACC’s grassroots governing body.

By: Michael Barbella

Managing Editor

David E. Winchester, M.D., has been chosen to lead the American College of Cardiology (ACC) Board of Governors (BOG) and serve as secretary to the Board of Trustees. His term will last one year.

Winchester will lead governors from chapters representing all 50 U.S. states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Canada, Mexico, and representatives from U.S. health services. The BOG is the ACC’s grassroots governing body of the ACC. “Being Chair of the Board of Governors is a unique challenge within the American College of Cardiology. Our chapters are incredibly diverse, and I am looking forward to helping them to accomplish their goals of improving heart health in their communities and making an excellent professional home for their members,” he said.

Involvement in the ACC has been a hallmark of Winchester’s career. Before his new role as BOG chair, Winchester started his ACC leadership journey as a member of this ACC Fellow-in-Training Council. He has served in multiple leadership roles within the ACC Florida chapter, most recently as the chapter governor. Winchester credits the ACC Emerging Faculty program, including Rick A. Nishimura, M.D., and Patrick T. O’Gara, M.D., for helping him grow as an educator. Winchester said one of his most rewarding ACC experiences that improved him as both a clinician and leader was chairing the writing group for the appropriate use criteria for imaging in chronic coronary disease.

“The biggest challenge that most clinicians are facing today is the struggle to keep their practice open. Whether that’s in an academic setting, an ownership model or private equity, the lack of adequate reimbursement updates, uncertainty about prior authorization and other administrative headaches makes it difficult to run a practice smoothly. The ACC continues to advocate for reform of those issues at a national level, and our chapters play a crucial role in facilitating change at a state level,” Winchester stated. “The chapters play a critical role in local representation for members and achieving the ACC’S strategic plan at a grassroots level. A strong chapter system is the only way that we can accomplish advocacy across all 50 states effectively.”

Mentorship has been a defining part of Winchester’s experience as an ACC member, starting in fellowship training with successful ACC leaders, including past presidents C. Richard Conti, M.D., and Carl J. Pepine, M.D. The ACC Florida Chapter also gave him the opportunity to grow as a leader through the support of past chapter governors like A. Allen Seals, M.D., and ACC Past President Richard A. Chazal, M.D. Winchester said he owes all these leaders (and many others) his sincere and profound thanks. These experiences drive his excitement to “provide mentorship for our incoming ACC governors and help them get off to a great start of their three-year terms.”

Winchester is a professor of Medicine and Radiology at the University of Florida College of Medicine, assistant chief of Cardiology at the Malcom Randall VA Medical Center and senior medical adviser for the VA Office of Integrated Veterans Care. His work focuses on clinical cardiology, noninvasive imaging, quality improvement, health services research, and appropriateness of care.

He attended medical school at the University of South Florida, and completed his internal medicine residency at the University of Virginia and cardiology fellowship at the University of Florida.

Other new ACC officers for 2025-26 are President Christopher Kramer, M.D.; Vice President Roxana Mehran, M.D.; Board of Trustees Members Samuel O. Jones IV, M.D., and Geoffrey A. Rose, M.D.; and Board of Governors Chair-elect Renuka Jain, M.D.

The American College of Cardiology (ACC) is a cardiovascular organization representing more than 56,000 cardiovascular care professionals worldwide. As the preeminent source of professional medical education for cardiovascular care since 1949, ACC credentials cardiovascular professionals in over 140 countries who meet stringent qualifications and leads in the formation of health policy, standards, and guidelines. Through its family of JACC journals, NCDR registries, ACC Accreditation Services, global network of Member Sections, CardioSmart patient resources and more, the College is committed to ensuring a world where science, knowledge and innovation optimize patient care and outcomes.

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