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Total 83 results found since Jan 2013.

Movers and Shakers, July 2023
Dr. Chudgar Saumil Chudgar, MD, MS, SFHM, a hospitalist at Duke University Hospital, Durham, N.C., and associate professor of medicine and assistant dean for clinical education at Duke University School of Medicine, is the recipient of the School of Medicine Master Clinician/Teacher Award. The award honors faculty for accomplishment and service in the area of teaching in the School of Medicine or Medical Center and recognizes their extraordinary commitment to teaching and students.  Dr. Chudgar earned his medical degree from Duke University School of Medicine and completed his residency at Duke University Medical Center....
Source: The Hospitalist - July 6, 2023 Category: Hospital Management Authors: Lisa Casinger Tags: Career People in HM Source Type: research

SHM 2023 Awards of Excellence and Junior Investigator Award
The HOMERuN COVID-19 Collaborative Group, winner of the Excellence in Teamwork award, included more than 150 members across 80 institutions. SHM’s Awards of Excellence Program honors members who’ve made exceptional contributions to hospital medicine in a variety of categories. Please join The Hospitalist and SHM in congratulating the 2023 award winners. Clinical Leadership for Physicians Benji K. Mathews, MD, MBA, SFHM Dr. Mathews Dr. Mathews is the department chair of hospital medicine and division head at Regions Hospital with HealthPartners in Minnesota and an associate professor of medicine with a passion for ed...
Source: The Hospitalist - June 1, 2023 Category: Hospital Management Authors: Ronda Whitaker Tags: Awards Career Source Type: research

HistoSonics Announces First Ever Kidney Tumor Treatment Using Histotripsy
Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, (UK) Performs Non-Invasive Histotripsy in Patient with Primary Solid Renal Tumor MINNEAPOLIS, March 30, 2023 -- (Healthcare Sales & Marketing Network) -- HistoSonics, (www.histosonics.com), the developer of a non-inv... Devices, Oncology HistoSonics, histotripsy
Source: HSMN NewsFeed - March 30, 2023 Category: Pharmaceuticals Source Type: news

Friday Feature: unCommon Construction
Colleen HroncichAaron Frumin knows what it ’s like to be disengaged at school. He dropped out of college in his third year because he wanted a more purposeful life. And that ’s exactly what he’s created—for himself and for hundreds of students—withunCommon Construction, an innovative program where high school students build houses from the ground up.Aaron ’s path had many twists and turns. After Hurricane Katrina struck in 2005, he took advantage of his flexibility and moved to New Orleans to volunteer with the Red Cross. Before long, he was helping with construction—and found he liked it. After his serv...
Source: Cato-at-liberty - January 13, 2023 Category: American Health Authors: Colleen Hroncich Source Type: blogs

STI Guideline Updates for Pediatric Hospitalists
PHM Session: 2021 Sexually Transmitted Infection (STI) Guideline Updates: What the Pediatric Hospitalist Needs to Know Presenters: Jason Zucker, MD, Columbia University, New York, and Candice McNeil, MD, MPH, Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist, Winston-Salem, N.C. As the assistant director of the New York City STD/HIV Prevention Training Center and co-medical director of the Southeast STD/HIV Prevention Training Center, Drs. Zucker and McNeil shared their expertise on this ever-evolving topic. As of 2020, there were more than 2 million cases of chlamydia and gonorrhea, about 130,000 cases of syphilis, and a 235% increase in...
Source: The Hospitalist - September 23, 2022 Category: Hospital Management Authors: Lisa Casinger Tags: Adolescent Medicine Clinical Guidelines Diagnostic Education HIV Lifestyle Pediatrics STIs Source Type: research

E-198 Transradial embolization of a life-threatening tooth extraction socket hemorrhage and pseudoaneurysm
We present a unique case in which a life-threatening tooth extraction hemorrhage was uncontrollable with local compression or surgical cauterization. The patient underwent emergent transradial coil embolization of the posterior lateral nasal branches of the sphenopalatine artery. However, the patient returned eleven days later with a lower volume bleed at the original site. CTA showed a pseudoaneurysm at the orthognathic surgery crater retrogradely recanalized through the greater palatine arcade. Surgical options were deemed too invasive, and the decision was made to attempt percutaneous direct puncture embolization. This ...
Source: Journal of NeuroInterventional Surgery - July 23, 2022 Category: Neurosurgery Authors: Edhayan, G., Colasurdo, M., Rossi, N., Al-Taweel, A., Coblens, O., Raghuram, K. Tags: SNIS 19th annual meeting electronic poster abstracts Source Type: research

Simplifying Opioid Conversions
by Drew Rosielle (@drosielle)A Satirical Monologue in One Act:“Ok, 3rd year resident, let’s talk about rotating opioids. What do I mean by ‘rotating’ opioids? It’s just therapeutically switching one opioid with another. It’s um, like, a turnstile, I guess? Anyway--first let’s look at this equianalgesic table. Do you know what equianalgesia means? No? It is the concept that different opioids have the same analgesic power but at different milligram doses due to different potencies. That is, the idea that, say, 50 mg of oral morphine has the same analgesic power as 10 mg of hydromorphone. So 50 mg of oral morphi...
Source: Pallimed: A Hospice and Palliative Medicine Blog - May 2, 2022 Category: Palliative Care Tags: opioid rosielle Source Type: blogs

Clinical usefulness of angiogenic factors in women with chronic kidney disease and suspected superimposed preeclampsia
CONCLUSION: In women with CKD and suspected superimposed preeclampsia, severe angiogenic imbalance was associated with confirmed superimposed preeclampsia or progression to superimposed preeclampsia. Patients with no angiogenic imbalance displayed lower rates of progression to superimposed preeclampsia, whereas outcomes were intermediate, supporting a systematic use of sFlt-1/PlGF ratio, and other biomarkers in the clinical management of CKD pregnacies.PMID:35353367 | DOI:10.1007/s40620-022-01299-9
Source: Journal of Nephrology - March 30, 2022 Category: Urology & Nephrology Authors: Carlos Jos é Molina-Pérez Ana Graciela Nolasco-Lea ños Reyes Ismael Carrillo-Ju árez Alfredo Lea ños-Miranda Source Type: research

Opioid Equianalgesic Tables are Broken
by Drew Rosielle (@drosielle)I am proposing we do away with equianalgesic table (EAT) as a tool to inform clinical decisions about opioid rotations/conversions. Fundamentally, EATs create too many problems, and there are simpler and safer ways to teach clinicians how to convert between different opioids.Part 1: New Data Can ' t Fix the EATA couple HPM fellows every year ask me which table do I prefer to use —the old EAT or the new one? By the old one, they refer to the table most of us used or were at least deeply familiar with for the last 10-20 years. By the new one, they mean the one created by Dr. Mary Lynn McPherson...
Source: Pallimed: A Hospice and Palliative Medicine Blog - March 21, 2022 Category: Palliative Care Tags: opioid pain rosielle Source Type: blogs

Student views of racism in medicine a catalyst for change
Echoes of frustration over racism in medicine rebound among students, staff and faculty, as students work for positive change in medical school and health care overall. Monday University of Arizona Health Sciences201907649-com-silent_protest_uoa8490-hero-web.jpg University of Arizona Health Sciences physicians and trainees gathered for a Black Lives Matter silent protest in June 2020 after the death of George Floyd, who had been murdered by a Minneapolis police officer. Courtesy of the Department of SurgeryHealthBlack History MonthCollege of Medicine - PhoenixCollege of Medicine - TucsonCompassionDiversityInclusion ...
Source: The University of Arizona: Health - February 28, 2022 Category: Universities & Medical Training Authors: mittank Source Type: research

Diversity efforts evolve at UArizona Health Sciences colleges
Diversity, equity and inclusion efforts have spread beyond the Colleges of Medicine as the other Health Sciences colleges address racism in health care. Today University of Arizona Health SciencesUAHS-diversity-web.jpg Students, faculty and staff at the five Health Sciences colleges have been active in developing programs to address heightened equity, diversity and inclusion concerns following national social unrest tied to the death of George Floyd in 2020.HealthBlack History MonthCollege of Medicine - PhoenixCollege of Medicine - TucsonCollege of NursingCollege of PharmacyCollege of Public HealthCompassionDiversityI...
Source: The University of Arizona: Health - February 16, 2022 Category: Universities & Medical Training Authors: mittank Source Type: research

Colleges of Medicine take lead on anti-racism in medicine initiatives
Solutions require complex, sustained efforts to move the mountain of historical racism in medicine and the systemic ways it may exhibit itself today. David Mogollon Today University of Arizona Health Sciencesgettyimages-56959507-hero-web.jpg The COVID-19 pandemic further exposed inequities in social determinants of health and wide disparities in health care delivery that are in part tied to historic issues of racism in medicine. Getty ImagesHealthBlack History MonthCollege of Medicine - PhoenixCollege of Medicine - TucsonDiversityInclusion Media contact(s)Stacy Pigott University of Arizona Health Sciencesspigott@a...
Source: The University of Arizona: Health - February 3, 2022 Category: Universities & Medical Training Authors: mittank Source Type: research

Colleges of Medicine lead initiatives focused on anti-racism in medicine
Solutions require complex, sustained efforts to move the mountain of historical racism in medicine and the systemic ways it may exhibit itself today. David Mogollon Today University of Arizona Health Sciencesgettyimages-56959507-hero-web.jpg The COVID-19 pandemic further exposed inequities in social determinants of health and wide disparities in health care delivery that are in part tied to historic issues of racism in medicine. Getty ImagesHealthBlack History MonthCollege of Medicine - PhoenixCollege of Medicine - TucsonCompassionDiversityInclusion Media contact(s)Stacy Pigott University of Arizona Health Scienc...
Source: The University of Arizona: Health - February 3, 2022 Category: Universities & Medical Training Authors: mittank Source Type: research

Minneapolis Institute of Art, Blue Cross partner on health-disparities exhibition
The Minneapolis Institute of Art and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Minnesota are collaborating on a public art exhibition that will highlight the disparities in health care between different races in Minnesota. Titled "Racism as a public health crisis," the project began in September when Blue Cross and MIA worked with various Minneapolis-based artists to teach virtual workshops about idea generation and art collaboration to students from North High School in Minneapolis, Como Park High School in St.…
Source: bizjournals.com Health Care:Physician Practices headlines - October 26, 2021 Category: American Health Authors: Naasir Akailvi Source Type: news