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Hospitalist movers and shakers - June/July 2017

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Three members of the hospital medicine community – Thiruvoipati Nanda Kumar, MD; Anthony Aghenta, MD, MS, FACP; and Angela Aboutalib, MD – recently were honored for their work by the International Association of HealthCare Professionals, earning spots in its publication, The Leading Physicians of the World.

Hospitalist and internist Dr. Nanda Kumar serves patients at Vibra Hospital in Redding, Calif., where he is also a clinical associate professor at the University of California at Davis. He is a member of both the Society of Hospital Medicine and the American Diabetes Association.

Dr. Aghenta is a 17-year veteran internist who currently serves as medical director for Coronado Healthcare Center in Phoenix. There, he also is affiliated with St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center. A member of SHM, Dr. Aghenta also has the title of Fellow of the American College of Physicians.

Dr. Aboutalib, whose experience as an internist includes expertise in hospital medicine, serves as hospitalist and medical director of clinical operations at U.S. Acute Care Solutions, Canton, Ohio. Previously, this member of the American College of Physicians served South Physicians as a hospitalist at Mercy Hospital in Chicago.
 

Andrew Dunn, MD, MPH, FACP, SFHM, recently was named chair-elect of the Board of Regents of the American College of Physicians (ACP), the national organization of internists. He assumed the role at the start of the ACP’s annual scientific meeting held in San Diego, March 30–April 1.

Dr. Andrew Dunn
Dr. Dunn is chief of hospital medicine of the Mount Sinai Health System, New York, and serves as professor of medicine at the Icahn Mount Sinai School of Medicine. He has been an ACP Board of Regents member and was chair of its Board of Governors, as well as governor of the ACP’s Manhattan/Bronx chapter.
 

Susan Herson, MD, has been named the new chief of staff at the Bath, N.Y., Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Dr. Herson comes to Bath from the Sioux Falls (S.D.) VA, where she was a hospitalist, a hospitalist-clinician educator, and medical director of clinical documentation improvement, while also serving as clinical assistant professor for New York Medical College and medical director at Norwalk (Conn.) Hospital.

Dr. Herson served in the U.S. Navy, doing her training at Walter Reed Medical Center, Bethesda, Md. She was a general medical officer while stationed at U.S. Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune in Jacksonville, N.C.
 

Chad Whelan, MD, has been elevated to president of the Loyola (Ill.) University Medical Center, moving up from his chair as senior vice president and chief medical officer. This longtime hospitalist also serves as a professor of medicine in the Loyola Chicago Stritch School of Medicine.

Dr. Chad Whelan
Dr. Whelan is a former director of hospital medicine at Loyola and has held various positions, including associate chief medical officer, at the University of Chicago. He is an associate editor of the Journal of Hospital Medicine.
 

Kevin Tulipana, DO, recently was promoted to medical director of hospital medicine at Cancer Treatment Centers of America’s Southwest Regional Medical Center in Tulsa, Okla. Previously, Dr. Tulipana was a hospitalist in the special care unit at CTCA Tulsa.

Mustafa Sardini, MD, has been named Envision Physician Services’ 2017 Hospital Medicine Physician of the Year. Dr. Sardini is the site medical director as Baylor Scott & White Medical Center, Sunnyvale, Texas. EPS presents the award to a hospitalist who peers deem as a leader in the industry.
 

Business moves

Physicians’ Alliance, (PAL) recently announced plans to partner with Penn State Health. As the largest independent physician group in Lancaster County, Pa., they will bring its more than 120 physicians, hospitalists, and dieticians to central Pennsylvania giant Penn State.

The alliance will allow patients of PAL physicians access to advanced care at Milton S. Hershey Medical Center and Penn State Children’s Hospital in Hershey.
 

Envision Healthcare, Greenwood Village, Colo. has created the Envision Physical Services (EPS) as a result of a merger with AmSurg ambulatory surgical center in December 2016. EPS combines EmCare and Sheridan Healthcare’s physician services divisions.

EPS specializes in hospital medicine, anesthesia, emergency medicine, radiology, and surgical services.

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Three members of the hospital medicine community – Thiruvoipati Nanda Kumar, MD; Anthony Aghenta, MD, MS, FACP; and Angela Aboutalib, MD – recently were honored for their work by the International Association of HealthCare Professionals, earning spots in its publication, The Leading Physicians of the World.

Hospitalist and internist Dr. Nanda Kumar serves patients at Vibra Hospital in Redding, Calif., where he is also a clinical associate professor at the University of California at Davis. He is a member of both the Society of Hospital Medicine and the American Diabetes Association.

Dr. Aghenta is a 17-year veteran internist who currently serves as medical director for Coronado Healthcare Center in Phoenix. There, he also is affiliated with St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center. A member of SHM, Dr. Aghenta also has the title of Fellow of the American College of Physicians.

Dr. Aboutalib, whose experience as an internist includes expertise in hospital medicine, serves as hospitalist and medical director of clinical operations at U.S. Acute Care Solutions, Canton, Ohio. Previously, this member of the American College of Physicians served South Physicians as a hospitalist at Mercy Hospital in Chicago.
 

Andrew Dunn, MD, MPH, FACP, SFHM, recently was named chair-elect of the Board of Regents of the American College of Physicians (ACP), the national organization of internists. He assumed the role at the start of the ACP’s annual scientific meeting held in San Diego, March 30–April 1.

Dr. Andrew Dunn
Dr. Dunn is chief of hospital medicine of the Mount Sinai Health System, New York, and serves as professor of medicine at the Icahn Mount Sinai School of Medicine. He has been an ACP Board of Regents member and was chair of its Board of Governors, as well as governor of the ACP’s Manhattan/Bronx chapter.
 

Susan Herson, MD, has been named the new chief of staff at the Bath, N.Y., Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Dr. Herson comes to Bath from the Sioux Falls (S.D.) VA, where she was a hospitalist, a hospitalist-clinician educator, and medical director of clinical documentation improvement, while also serving as clinical assistant professor for New York Medical College and medical director at Norwalk (Conn.) Hospital.

Dr. Herson served in the U.S. Navy, doing her training at Walter Reed Medical Center, Bethesda, Md. She was a general medical officer while stationed at U.S. Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune in Jacksonville, N.C.
 

Chad Whelan, MD, has been elevated to president of the Loyola (Ill.) University Medical Center, moving up from his chair as senior vice president and chief medical officer. This longtime hospitalist also serves as a professor of medicine in the Loyola Chicago Stritch School of Medicine.

Dr. Chad Whelan
Dr. Whelan is a former director of hospital medicine at Loyola and has held various positions, including associate chief medical officer, at the University of Chicago. He is an associate editor of the Journal of Hospital Medicine.
 

Kevin Tulipana, DO, recently was promoted to medical director of hospital medicine at Cancer Treatment Centers of America’s Southwest Regional Medical Center in Tulsa, Okla. Previously, Dr. Tulipana was a hospitalist in the special care unit at CTCA Tulsa.

Mustafa Sardini, MD, has been named Envision Physician Services’ 2017 Hospital Medicine Physician of the Year. Dr. Sardini is the site medical director as Baylor Scott & White Medical Center, Sunnyvale, Texas. EPS presents the award to a hospitalist who peers deem as a leader in the industry.
 

Business moves

Physicians’ Alliance, (PAL) recently announced plans to partner with Penn State Health. As the largest independent physician group in Lancaster County, Pa., they will bring its more than 120 physicians, hospitalists, and dieticians to central Pennsylvania giant Penn State.

The alliance will allow patients of PAL physicians access to advanced care at Milton S. Hershey Medical Center and Penn State Children’s Hospital in Hershey.
 

Envision Healthcare, Greenwood Village, Colo. has created the Envision Physical Services (EPS) as a result of a merger with AmSurg ambulatory surgical center in December 2016. EPS combines EmCare and Sheridan Healthcare’s physician services divisions.

EPS specializes in hospital medicine, anesthesia, emergency medicine, radiology, and surgical services.

 

Three members of the hospital medicine community – Thiruvoipati Nanda Kumar, MD; Anthony Aghenta, MD, MS, FACP; and Angela Aboutalib, MD – recently were honored for their work by the International Association of HealthCare Professionals, earning spots in its publication, The Leading Physicians of the World.

Hospitalist and internist Dr. Nanda Kumar serves patients at Vibra Hospital in Redding, Calif., where he is also a clinical associate professor at the University of California at Davis. He is a member of both the Society of Hospital Medicine and the American Diabetes Association.

Dr. Aghenta is a 17-year veteran internist who currently serves as medical director for Coronado Healthcare Center in Phoenix. There, he also is affiliated with St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center. A member of SHM, Dr. Aghenta also has the title of Fellow of the American College of Physicians.

Dr. Aboutalib, whose experience as an internist includes expertise in hospital medicine, serves as hospitalist and medical director of clinical operations at U.S. Acute Care Solutions, Canton, Ohio. Previously, this member of the American College of Physicians served South Physicians as a hospitalist at Mercy Hospital in Chicago.
 

Andrew Dunn, MD, MPH, FACP, SFHM, recently was named chair-elect of the Board of Regents of the American College of Physicians (ACP), the national organization of internists. He assumed the role at the start of the ACP’s annual scientific meeting held in San Diego, March 30–April 1.

Dr. Andrew Dunn
Dr. Dunn is chief of hospital medicine of the Mount Sinai Health System, New York, and serves as professor of medicine at the Icahn Mount Sinai School of Medicine. He has been an ACP Board of Regents member and was chair of its Board of Governors, as well as governor of the ACP’s Manhattan/Bronx chapter.
 

Susan Herson, MD, has been named the new chief of staff at the Bath, N.Y., Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Dr. Herson comes to Bath from the Sioux Falls (S.D.) VA, where she was a hospitalist, a hospitalist-clinician educator, and medical director of clinical documentation improvement, while also serving as clinical assistant professor for New York Medical College and medical director at Norwalk (Conn.) Hospital.

Dr. Herson served in the U.S. Navy, doing her training at Walter Reed Medical Center, Bethesda, Md. She was a general medical officer while stationed at U.S. Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune in Jacksonville, N.C.
 

Chad Whelan, MD, has been elevated to president of the Loyola (Ill.) University Medical Center, moving up from his chair as senior vice president and chief medical officer. This longtime hospitalist also serves as a professor of medicine in the Loyola Chicago Stritch School of Medicine.

Dr. Chad Whelan
Dr. Whelan is a former director of hospital medicine at Loyola and has held various positions, including associate chief medical officer, at the University of Chicago. He is an associate editor of the Journal of Hospital Medicine.
 

Kevin Tulipana, DO, recently was promoted to medical director of hospital medicine at Cancer Treatment Centers of America’s Southwest Regional Medical Center in Tulsa, Okla. Previously, Dr. Tulipana was a hospitalist in the special care unit at CTCA Tulsa.

Mustafa Sardini, MD, has been named Envision Physician Services’ 2017 Hospital Medicine Physician of the Year. Dr. Sardini is the site medical director as Baylor Scott & White Medical Center, Sunnyvale, Texas. EPS presents the award to a hospitalist who peers deem as a leader in the industry.
 

Business moves

Physicians’ Alliance, (PAL) recently announced plans to partner with Penn State Health. As the largest independent physician group in Lancaster County, Pa., they will bring its more than 120 physicians, hospitalists, and dieticians to central Pennsylvania giant Penn State.

The alliance will allow patients of PAL physicians access to advanced care at Milton S. Hershey Medical Center and Penn State Children’s Hospital in Hershey.
 

Envision Healthcare, Greenwood Village, Colo. has created the Envision Physical Services (EPS) as a result of a merger with AmSurg ambulatory surgical center in December 2016. EPS combines EmCare and Sheridan Healthcare’s physician services divisions.

EPS specializes in hospital medicine, anesthesia, emergency medicine, radiology, and surgical services.

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New SHM Members – February/March 2017

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The Society of Hospital Medicine welcomes its newest members:

Kwie-Hoa Siem, MD, Alaska

Frank Abene, Alabama

Kayla Maldonado, Alabama

Kenny Murray, MD, Alabama

Shanthan Ramidi, MD, Alabama

Lauren Hancock, APRN, Arkansas

William Hawkins, MD, Arkansas

Matthew Law, Arkansas

Emily Smith, MD, Arkansas

Firas Abbas, MBchB, Arizona

Shahid Ahmad, MD, MBBS, Arizona

Praveen Bheemanathini, Arizona

Atoosa Hosseini, Arizona

William McGrade, DO, Arizona

Konstantin Mazursky, DO, Arizona

Ibrahim Taweel, MD, Arizona

Kevin Virk, MD, FACP, Arizona

Kevin Virk, MD, FACP, Arizona

Mohemmedd Khalid Abbas, Arizona

Hasan Chaudhry, MD, Arizona

Kelly Kelleher, FAAP, Arizona

Priyanka Sultania Dudani, MBBS, Arizona

Krishna Kasireddy, MD, Arizona

Melanie Meguro, Arizona

Puneet Tuli, MD, Arizona

Jonathan Byrdy, DO, Arizona

Sarah Corral, DO, Arizona

Edward Maharam, MD, Arizona

Arvind Satyanarayan, DO, Arizona

Mayank Aggarwal, MD, Arizona

Syed Jafri, Arizona

Bujji Ainapurapu, MD, Arizona

Aaron Fernandes, MD, Arizona

Sonal Gandhi, Arizona

Sudhir Tutiki, Arizona

Navaneeth Kumar, MD, Arizona

Brian T. Courtney, MD, California

Won Jin Jeon, California

Veena Panduranga, MD, California

Jennifer Tinloy, DO, California

Debra Buckland Coffey, MCUSN, MD, California

Kathleen Teves, MD, California

Paul Goebel, MD, ACMPE, California

Shainy Hegde, California

Summaiya Muhammad, California

Desmond Wah, California

Chonn Khristin Ng, California

Almira Yang, DO, California

Salimah Boghani, MD, California

Stella Abhyankar, California

Cherie Ginwalla, MD, California

Armond Esmaili, California

Sarah Schaeffer, MD, MPH, California

Sophia Virani, MD, California

Dipti Munshi, MD, California

Judy Nguyen, DO, California

Daniel Owyang, DO, California

Christian Chiavetta, DO, California

David Reinert, DO, California

Joseph Pawlowski, MD, California

Eleanor Yang, California

Adrian Campo, MD, California

Emerson De Jesus, MD, California

Zachary Edmonds, MD, California

Trit Garg, California

Alexandra G. Ianculescu, MD, PhD, California

Felix Karp, MD, California

Cara Lai, California

Kristen Lew, MD, California

John Mogannam, California

Ameer Moussa, California

Neil Parikh, MD, MBA, California

Priya Reddy, California

Adam Simons, California

Sanjay Vadgama, MD, California

Kristofer Wills, DO, California

Michael Yang, MD, MS, California

Victor Ekuta, California,

Donna Colobong, PA-C, Colorado

Janna B. Dreason, FNP-C, Colorado

Cheryl English, NP-C, Colorado

Melanie Gerrior, MD, Colorado

Marciann Harris, NP, Colorado

Marsha Henke, MD, Colorado

Brett Hesse, Colorado

Naomi J Hipp, MD, Colorado

Aurell Horing, Colorado

Rachel Koch, DO, Colorado

Ed Marino, PA-C, Colorado

Marcus Reinhardt, MD, Colorado

Carol Runge, Colorado

Harshal Shah, Colorado

Leo Soehnlen, DO, Colorado

Anna Villalobos, MD, Colorado

Kathryn Whitfield, PA-C, Colorado

Jonathan Bei-Shing Young, MD, Colorado

Leah Damiani, MD, Colorado

Kathy Lynch, MD, Colorado

Micah Friedman, Colorado

Rachael Hilton, MD, Colorado

Madeline Koerner, Colorado

Chi Zheng, MD, Colorado

Chin-Kun Baw, MD, Connecticut

Alexandra Hawkins, NP, Connecticut

Vasundhara Singh, MD, MBBS, Connecticut

Ryan Quarles, MD, Connecticut

Debra Hernandez, APRN, BC, Connecticut

Karine Karapetyan, MD, Delaware

Choosak Burr, ARNP, Florida

Nelsi Mora, Florida

Mary Quillinan, Florida

Thuntanat Rachanakul, Florida

Samual W. Sauer, MD, MPH, Florida

Jennifer Tibangin, Florida

Keith Williams, MD, Florida

Eric Penedo, MD, Florida

Margaret Webb, Florida

Mark Bender, Florida

Brett Waress, MD, MHA, Florida

Giselle Racho, Florida

Bryan Thiel, Florida

Juan Loor Tuarez, MD, Florida

Christine Stopyra, Florida

Betsy Screws, ARNP, Florida

Jaimie Weber, MD, Florida

Priti Amin, MHA, Georgia

Naga Doddapaneni, Georgia

Stephanie Fletcher, Georgia

Disha Spath, MD, Georgia

Rafaela Wesley, DO, Georgia

Nikky Keer, DO, Georgia

James Kim, Georgia

Todd Martin, Georgia

Eli Mlaver, Georgia

Andrew Ritter, Georgia

Ali Al-Zubaidi, MBchB, Georgia

Deann Bing, MD, Georgia

Tushar Shah, Georgia

Cameron Straughn, DO, Georgia

Nobuhiro Ariyoshi, MEd, Hawaii

Prerna Kumar, Iowa

Jonathan Sebolt, MD, Iowa

Amy Tesar, DO, Iowa

Houng Chea, NP, Idaho

Finnegan Greer, PA-C, Idaho

Thao Nelson, PA, Idaho

Malatesha Gangappa, Idaho

Gloria Alumona, ACNP, Illinois

Ram Sanjeev Alur, Illinois

James Antoon, MD, FAAP, PhD, Illinois

Stefania Bailuc, MD, Illinois

Richard Huh, Illinois

Bhakti Patel, MD, Illinois

Frances Uy, ACNP, Illinois

Fernando Velazquez Vazquez, MD, Illinois

Tiffany White, MD, Illinois

Bryan P. Tully, MD, Illinois

Swati Gobhil, MBBS, Illinois

Lianghe Gao, Illinois

Gopi Astik, MD, Illinois

Marina Kovacevic, MD, Illinois

Abbie Raymond, DO, Illinois

Timothy Yung, Illinois

Ahmed Zahid, MD, Illinois

Cristina Corsini, MEd, Illinois

Faisal Rashid, MD, FACP, Illinois

Mansoor Ahmad, MD, Illinois

Matthew A. Strauch, DO, Illinois

Purshotham Reddy Grinne, Illinois

Nadia Nasreen, MD, Illinois

Maham Ashraf, MD, Indiana

Jennifer Gross, Indiana

Debasmita Mohapatra, MBBS, Indiana

Eric Scheper, Indiana

Katherine Gray, APRNBC, FNP, Indiana

Venkata Kureti, Indiana

Omer Al-Buoshkor, MD, Indiana

David Johnson, FNP, MSN, Indiana

Jonathan Salisbury, MD, Indiana

Debra Shapert, MSN, RN, Iowa

Lisa Carter, ARNP, Iowa

Matthew Woodham, Iowa

Tomoharu Suzuki, MD, Pharm, Japan

Khaldoun Haj, Kansas

Will Rogers, ACMPE, MA, MBA, Kansas

Karen Shumate, Kansas

Lisa Unruh, MD, Kansas

Matthew George, Kansas

Katie Washburn, DO, Kansas

Edwin Avallone, DO, Kentucky

Matthew Morris, Kentucky

Samantha Cappetto, MD, Kentucky

Jaison John, Kentucky

Ammar Al Jajeh, Kentucky

Joseph Bolger, MD, PhD, Louisiana

Clairissa Mulloy, Louisiana

Harish Talla, MD, Louisiana

John Amadon, Louisiana

Karthik Krishnareddy, Louisiana

Cheryl DeGrandpre, PA-C, Maine

Katherine Liu, MD, Maine

Sarah Sedney, MD, Maine

Aksana Afanasenka, MD, Maryland

Syed Nazeer Mahmood, MBBS, Maryland

Joseph Apata, MD, Maryland

Russom Ghebrai, MD, Maryland

Musa Momoh, MD, Maryland

Antanina Voit, Maryland

Dejene Kassaye, MD, MSC, Maryland

Shams Quazi, MD, FACP, MS, Maryland

Dawn Roelofs, FNP, MSN, Maryland

Kirsten Austad, MD, Massachusetts

Yoel Carrasquillo Vega, MD, Massachusetts

Michele Gaudet, NP, Massachusetts

Karina Mejias, Massachusetts

Peter Rohloff, MD, PhD, Massachusetts

Jennifer Schaeffer, Massachusetts

James Shaw, MD, Massachusetts

Renee Wheeler, Massachusetts

Angela Freeman, PA, PA-C, Massachusetts

Supriya Parvatini, MD, Massachusetts

Karen Jiang, MD, Massachusetts

Roula E. Abou-Nader, MD, Massachusetts

Shreekant Vasudhev, MD, Massachusetts

Nivedita Adabala, MD, MBBS, Michigan

Robert Behrendt, RN, BSN, Michigan

Molly Belisle, Michigan

Christine Dugan, MD, Michigan

Baljinder Gill, Michigan

Kellie Herringa, PA-C, Michigan

Christine Klingert, Michigan

Kathy Mitchell, Michigan

Aimee Vos, Michigan

Alyssa Churchill, DO, Michigan

Mailvaganam Sridharan, MD, Michigan

Atul Kapoor, MD, MBBS, Michigan

Anitha Kompally, MD, MBBS, Michigan

Nicole Webb, PA-C, Michigan

Abdulqadir Ahmad, MD, Minnesota

John Patrick Eikens, Minnesota

Bobbi Jo Jensen, PA-C, Minnesota

Rachel Keuseman, Minnesota

Stephen Palmquist, Minnesota

Manit Singla, MD, Minnesota

Douglas Berg, Minnesota

Nathan Palmolea, Minnesota

Molly Tureson, PAC, Minnesota

Mehdi Dastrange, MD, MHA, Minnesota

Kent Svee, Minnesota

Ashley Viere, PA-C, Minnesota

Molly Yang, MD, Minnesota

Paige Sams, DO, Minnesota

Amit Reddy, MBBS, Mississippi

Jacqueline Brooke Banks, FNP-C, Mississippi

Lori Foxworth, CFNP, Mississippi

 

 

Nicki Lawson, FNP-C, Mississippi

Bikash Acharya, Missouri

Zafar Ahmad, PA-C, Missouri

Harleen Chela, MD, Missouri

Jeffrey Chung, MD, Missouri

Daniel Kornfeld, Missouri

Erika Leung, MD, MSc, Missouri

Lisa Moser, PA, Missouri

Mark Stiffler, Missouri

Tushar Tarun, MBBS, Missouri

Nicole McLaughlin, Missouri

Katy Lohmann, PA-C, Missouri

Jayasree Bodagala, MD, Missouri

Ravi Kiran Morumuru, ACMPE, Missouri

Matthew Brown, MD, FAAFP, Missouri

Ravikanth Tadi, Missouri

Bazgha Ahmad, DO, Missouri

Monica Hawkins, RN, Missouri

Karri Vesey, BSN, Montana

Madison Vertin, PA-C, Montana

Urmila Mukherjee, MD, Nebraska

Noah Wiedel, MD, Nebraska

Sidrah Sheikh, MD, MBBS, Nebraska

Mohammad Esmadi, MBBS, Nebraska

Jill Zabih, MD, Nebraska

Jody Frey-Burns, RN, Nevada

Adnan Akbar, MD, Nevada

Peter Gayed, MRCP, New Hampshire

Jonathan T. Huntington, MD, New Hampshire

Meghan Meehan, ACNP, New Hampshire

Saurabh Mehta, MD, New Jersey

Hanaa Benchekroun Belabbes, MD, MHA, New Jersey

Hwan Kim, MD, New Jersey

Mary Tobiasson, USA, New Jersey

Muhammad Khakwani, MD, New Jersey

Amita Maibam, MD, MPH, New Jersey

Kumar Rohit, MBBS, New Jersey

Crystal Benjamin, MD, New Jersey

Rafael Garabis, New Mexico

Sam MacBride, MD, New Mexico

Indra Peram, MD, New Mexico

Sarah Vertrees, DO, New Mexico

Aswani Kumar Alavala, MD, New Mexico

Christopher Anstine, New Mexico

Prathima Guruguri, MD, New Mexico

Diedre Hofinger, MD, FACP, New Mexico

Katharine Juarez, New Mexico

Amtul Mahavesh, MD, New Mexico

Francisco Marquez, New Mexico

Payal Sen, MD, New Mexico

Morgan Wong, DO, New Mexico

Kelly Berchou, New York

Ronald Cho, New York

Nishil Dalsania, New York

Carolyn Drake, MD, MPH, New York

Leanne Forman, New York

Valerie Gausman, New York

Laurie Jacobs, New York

Janice Jang, MD, New York

Sonia Kohli, MD, New York

Nancy Lee, PA, New York

Allen Lee, MD, New York

Matthew McCarthy, FACP, New York

Akram Mohammed, MD, New York

Jennifer Nead, New York

Kristal Persaud, PA, New York

Mariya Rozenblit, MD, New York

Christian Torres, MD, New York

Sasha De Jesus, MD, New York

Gabriella Polyak, New York

Nataliya Yuklyaeva, MD, New York

Riyaz Kamadoli, MD, New York

Ramanuj Chakravarty, New York

Adil Zaidi, MD, New York

Allison Walker, MD, New York

Himali Gandhi, New York

Alexey Yanilshtein, MD, New York

Ramsey Al-Khalil, New York

Latoya Codougan, MD, New York

Khan Najmi, MD, New York

Sara Stream, MD, New York

Bhuwan Poudyal, MD, New York

Khalil Anchouche, New York

Sarah Azarchi, New York

Susana Bejar, New York

Brian Chang, New York

Jonathan Chen, New York

Hailey Gupta, MD, New York

Medhavi Gupta, New York

Ali Khan, New York

Benjamin Kwok, MD, New York

Billy Lin, New York

Katherine Ni, New York

Jina Park, New York

Gabriel Perreault, New York

Luis Alberto Romero, New York

Payal Shah, New York

Punita Shroff, New York

Scott Statman, New York

Maria Sunseri, New York

Benjamin Verplanke, New York

Audrey Zhang, New York

Gaby Razzouk, MD, New York

Pranitha Mantrala, MD, New York

Marsha Antoine, New York

Kanica Yashi, New York

Navid Ahmed, New York

Tasha Richards, PA, New York

Connor Tryon, MD, New York

Naveen Yarlagadda, MD, New York

Alex Hogan, New York

Andrew Donohoe, CCM, MD, North Carolina

Brittany Forshay, MD, North Carolina

Kelly Hammerbeck, FNP, North Carolina

Jennifer Hausman, North Carolina

Babajide Obisesan, North Carolina

Kwadwo Ofori, MD, North Carolina

Eric Ofosu, MD, North Carolina

Kale Roth, North Carolina

Robert Soma, PA-C, North Carolina

Sommany Weber, North Carolina

Ronnie Jacobs, North Carolina

Muhammad Ghani, MD, MACP, MBBS, North Carolina

Madeline Treasure, North Carolina

Andrew McWilliams, MD, North Carolina

Karen Payne, ACNP, MPH, North Carolina

Rafal Poplawski, MD, North Carolina

James Seal, PA-C, North Carolina

Farheen Qureshi, DO, North Carolina

Basavatti Sowmya, MD, MBBS, North Carolina

Eshwar Lal, MD, North Carolina

Catherine Hathaway, MD, North Carolina

Sherif Naguib, FAAFP, North Carolina

Sara Skavroneck, North Carolina

Charles Ofosu, North Carolina

Alex Alburquerque, MD, Ohio

Isha Butler, DO, Ohio

Anne Carrol, MD, Ohio

Scott Childers, MD, Ohio

Philip Jonas, MD, Ohio

Ahmadreza Karimianpour, Ohio

Rahul Kumar, MD, Ohio

George Maidaa, MD, Ohio

Kevin McAninch, Ohio

Jill Mccourt, FNP, Ohio

Roxanne Oliver, Ohio

Farah Hussain, Ohio

Natasha Axton, PA-C, Ohio

Brooke Harris, ACNP, Ohio

Vidhya Murukesan, MD, Ohio

Sara Dong, Ohio

Christie Astor, FNP, Ohio

Sunita Mall, MD, Ohio

Sunita Mall, MD, Ohio

Fouzia Tariq, MD, Ohio

Kaveri Sivaruban, MD, Ohio

Eunice Quicho, Ohio

Smitha Achuthankutty, MD, Ohio

Harmanpreet Shinh, MD, Ohio

Maereg Tesfaye, Ohio

Kalyn Jolivette, MD, Ohio

Richelle Voth, PA-C, Oklahoma

Samuel J. Ratermann, MD, FAAFP, Oklahoma

Richelle Voth, PA-C, Oklahoma

Alden Forrester, MD, Oregon

Nicholas Brown, DO, Oregon

Ian Pennell-Walklin, MD, Oregon

Bruce Ramsey, Oregon

Kyle Brekke, DO, Oregon

Sarah Webber, MD, Oregon

Brian Beaudoin, MD, Pennsylvania

Glenn Bedell, MHSA, Pennsylvania

Cristina Green, AGACNP-DNP, Pennsylvania

Andrew Groff, Pennsylvania

Sulman Masood Hashmi, MBBS, Pennsylvania

Eric Kasprowicz, MD, MPH, Pennsylvania

Laura Leuenberger, Pennsylvania

James Liszewski, MD, Pennsylvania

Caitlyn Moss, Pennsylvania

Paul Seunghyun Nho, Pennsylvania

Rishan Patel, MD, Pennsylvania

Dilli R. Poudel, MBBS, Pennsylvania

Naveen Yellappa, MBBS, Pennsylvania

Usman Zulfiqar, Pennsylvania

Nina Jain, Pennsylvania

Bhumika Patel, DO, Pennsylvania

Jenna M. Diasio, PA-C, Pennsylvania

Malachi Courtney, MD, Pennsylvania

Sonia Arneja, MD, Pennsylvania

Ross Ellis, MD, Pennsylvania

Samreen Siddiqui, Pennsylvania

Jillian Zavodnick, Pennsylvania

Kinan Kassar, MD, Pennsylvania

Maritsa M. Scoulos-Hanson, Pennsylvania

Jennifer Taylor, PA-C, Pennsylvania

Steven Delaveris, DO, Pennsylvania

Danica Buzniak, DO, Rhode Island

Paul Browning, MD, South Carolina

Matt Coones, MD, South Carolina

Cedric Fisher, MD, South Carolina

Aloysius Jackson, MD, South Carolina

Katharine DuPont, MD, South Carolina

Michael Jenkins, MD, South Carolina

Jessica Hamilton, APRN, BC, FNP, South Carolina

Pamela Pyle, DO, South Carolina

Shakeel Ahmed, MBBS, MD, South Dakota

D. Bruce Eaton, MD, South Dakota

Drew Jorgensen, MD, South Dakota

Shelly Turbak, MSN, RN, South Dakota

Tamera Sturm, DO, South Dakota

Peggy Brooks, Tennessee

Joseph Garrido, MD, Tennessee

Lisa Grimes, FNP, Tennessee

Chennakesava Kummathi, MBBS, Tennessee

Victoria Okafor, Tennessee

Ashley Smith, Tennessee

Monisha Bhatia, Tennessee

Belinda Jenkins, APRN-BC, Tennessee

Kim Zahnke, MD, Tennessee

Robert Arias, Texas

Nicolas Batterton, MD, Texas

Scott DePaul, MD, Texas

Nancy Foster, Texas

Larry Hughes, Texas

 

 

Erin Koval, Texas

Femi Layiwola, MD, Texas

Krysta Lin, Texas

James J. Onorato, MD, PhD, Texas

Allison Stephenson, PA-C, Texas

Brandon Stormes, Texas

Rubin Simon, MD, Texas

Brian Anderson, DO, Texas

Hatim Chhatriwala, MD, Texas

Aziz Hammoud, Texas

Haru Yamamoto, MD, Texas

Lauren Schiegg, Texas

Victoria Grasso, DO, Texas

Victor Salcedo, MD, Texas

Rajiv Bhattarai, Texas

Iram Qureshi, DO, Texas

Lisa Hafemeister, FACHE, MHA, Texas

Helena Kurian, MD, Texas

Jessica Lin, Texas

Nathan Nowalk, MD, Texas

Keely Smith, MD, Texas

Jonathan Weiser, MD, Texas

Roland Prezas, DO, FAAFP, Texas

Allan Recto, AHIP, Texas

Regina Dimbo, Texas

Venkata Ghanta, Texas

Richmond Hunt, Texas

Vishal Patel, MD, Texas

Zain Sharif, MD, Texas

Rommel Del Rosario, MD, Texas

Khawer Khadimally, DO, Texas

Diogenes Valderrama, MD, Texas

Charles Ewoh, MD, Texas

Deepika Kilaru, Texas

Tilahun Belay, MD, Texas

Chandra S Reddy Navuluri, MD, Texas

Bradley Goad, DO, FACP, Virginia

Patrick Higdon, MD, Virginia

Gabriella Miller, MD, HMDC, Virginia

Miklos Szentirmai, MD, Virginia

Hyder Tamton, Virginia

Andra Mirescu, MD, Virginia

Olukayode Ojo, Virginia

Robert Szeles, MD, Virginia

Anya Cope, DO, Virginia

OsCiriah Press, MD, Virginia

Rikin Kadakia, MD, Virginia

Bryant Self, DO, Virginia

Sarah Sabo, ACNP, Virginia

Pedro A. Gonzales Alvarez, MD, Virginia

William Best, Virginia

Pushpanjali Basnyat, MD, Washington

Nikki Hartley-Jonason, Washington

Helen Johnsonwall, MD, Washington

Eric LaMotte, MD, Washington

Maher Muraywid, Washington

Evan Neal Paul, MD, Washington

Sarah Rogers, MD, Washington

Lindee Strizich, Washington

Maryam Tariq, MBBS, Washington

Meghaan Walsh, MD, Washington

Oleg Zbirun, MD, Washington

Meeta Sabnis, MD, Washington

James Kuo, MD, Washington

Liang Du, Washington

Syed Farhan Tabraiz Hashmi, MD, Washington

Jessica Jung, MD, Washington

Joshua Pelley, MD, Washington

Alex Yu, MD, Washington

Alfred Curnow, MD, Washington

Duhwan Kang, Washington

Gilbert Daniel, MD, Washington, D.C.

Eleanor Fitall, Washington, D.C.

Vinay Srinivasan, Washington, D.C.

Scott Wine, West Virginia

Trevor Miller, MBA, PA-C, West Virginia

Audrey Hiltunen, Wisconsin

Elina Litinskaya, Wisconsin

John M. Murphy, MD, Wisconsin

Tanya Pedretti, PA, Wisconsin

Adine Rodemeyer, MD, Wisconsin

Oghomwen Sule, MBBS, Wisconsin

Terrence Witt, MD, Wisconsin

Mayank Arora, Wisconsin

John D. MacDonald, MD, Wisconsin

Abigail Cook, Wisconsin

Mohamed Ibrahim, MD, Wisconsin

Aymen Khogali, MD, Wisconsin

Nicholas Haun, Wisconsin

Sandra Brown, Victoria, Australia

Alessandra Gessner, Alberta, Canada

Courtney Carlucci, British Columbia, Canada

Muhanad Y. Al Habash, Canada

Karen Tong, MD, Canada

Taku Yabuki, Japan

Liza van Loon, the Netherlands

Edward Gebuis, MD, the Netherlands

Abdisalan Afrah, MD, Qatar

Akhnuwkh Jones, Qatar

Mashuk Uddin, MBBS, MRCP, FRCP, Qatar

Ibrahim Yusuf Abubeker, MRCP, Qatar

Chih-Wei Tseng, Taiwan

Sawsan Abdel-Razig, MD, FACP, United Arab Emirates

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The Society of Hospital Medicine welcomes its newest members:

Kwie-Hoa Siem, MD, Alaska

Frank Abene, Alabama

Kayla Maldonado, Alabama

Kenny Murray, MD, Alabama

Shanthan Ramidi, MD, Alabama

Lauren Hancock, APRN, Arkansas

William Hawkins, MD, Arkansas

Matthew Law, Arkansas

Emily Smith, MD, Arkansas

Firas Abbas, MBchB, Arizona

Shahid Ahmad, MD, MBBS, Arizona

Praveen Bheemanathini, Arizona

Atoosa Hosseini, Arizona

William McGrade, DO, Arizona

Konstantin Mazursky, DO, Arizona

Ibrahim Taweel, MD, Arizona

Kevin Virk, MD, FACP, Arizona

Kevin Virk, MD, FACP, Arizona

Mohemmedd Khalid Abbas, Arizona

Hasan Chaudhry, MD, Arizona

Kelly Kelleher, FAAP, Arizona

Priyanka Sultania Dudani, MBBS, Arizona

Krishna Kasireddy, MD, Arizona

Melanie Meguro, Arizona

Puneet Tuli, MD, Arizona

Jonathan Byrdy, DO, Arizona

Sarah Corral, DO, Arizona

Edward Maharam, MD, Arizona

Arvind Satyanarayan, DO, Arizona

Mayank Aggarwal, MD, Arizona

Syed Jafri, Arizona

Bujji Ainapurapu, MD, Arizona

Aaron Fernandes, MD, Arizona

Sonal Gandhi, Arizona

Sudhir Tutiki, Arizona

Navaneeth Kumar, MD, Arizona

Brian T. Courtney, MD, California

Won Jin Jeon, California

Veena Panduranga, MD, California

Jennifer Tinloy, DO, California

Debra Buckland Coffey, MCUSN, MD, California

Kathleen Teves, MD, California

Paul Goebel, MD, ACMPE, California

Shainy Hegde, California

Summaiya Muhammad, California

Desmond Wah, California

Chonn Khristin Ng, California

Almira Yang, DO, California

Salimah Boghani, MD, California

Stella Abhyankar, California

Cherie Ginwalla, MD, California

Armond Esmaili, California

Sarah Schaeffer, MD, MPH, California

Sophia Virani, MD, California

Dipti Munshi, MD, California

Judy Nguyen, DO, California

Daniel Owyang, DO, California

Christian Chiavetta, DO, California

David Reinert, DO, California

Joseph Pawlowski, MD, California

Eleanor Yang, California

Adrian Campo, MD, California

Emerson De Jesus, MD, California

Zachary Edmonds, MD, California

Trit Garg, California

Alexandra G. Ianculescu, MD, PhD, California

Felix Karp, MD, California

Cara Lai, California

Kristen Lew, MD, California

John Mogannam, California

Ameer Moussa, California

Neil Parikh, MD, MBA, California

Priya Reddy, California

Adam Simons, California

Sanjay Vadgama, MD, California

Kristofer Wills, DO, California

Michael Yang, MD, MS, California

Victor Ekuta, California,

Donna Colobong, PA-C, Colorado

Janna B. Dreason, FNP-C, Colorado

Cheryl English, NP-C, Colorado

Melanie Gerrior, MD, Colorado

Marciann Harris, NP, Colorado

Marsha Henke, MD, Colorado

Brett Hesse, Colorado

Naomi J Hipp, MD, Colorado

Aurell Horing, Colorado

Rachel Koch, DO, Colorado

Ed Marino, PA-C, Colorado

Marcus Reinhardt, MD, Colorado

Carol Runge, Colorado

Harshal Shah, Colorado

Leo Soehnlen, DO, Colorado

Anna Villalobos, MD, Colorado

Kathryn Whitfield, PA-C, Colorado

Jonathan Bei-Shing Young, MD, Colorado

Leah Damiani, MD, Colorado

Kathy Lynch, MD, Colorado

Micah Friedman, Colorado

Rachael Hilton, MD, Colorado

Madeline Koerner, Colorado

Chi Zheng, MD, Colorado

Chin-Kun Baw, MD, Connecticut

Alexandra Hawkins, NP, Connecticut

Vasundhara Singh, MD, MBBS, Connecticut

Ryan Quarles, MD, Connecticut

Debra Hernandez, APRN, BC, Connecticut

Karine Karapetyan, MD, Delaware

Choosak Burr, ARNP, Florida

Nelsi Mora, Florida

Mary Quillinan, Florida

Thuntanat Rachanakul, Florida

Samual W. Sauer, MD, MPH, Florida

Jennifer Tibangin, Florida

Keith Williams, MD, Florida

Eric Penedo, MD, Florida

Margaret Webb, Florida

Mark Bender, Florida

Brett Waress, MD, MHA, Florida

Giselle Racho, Florida

Bryan Thiel, Florida

Juan Loor Tuarez, MD, Florida

Christine Stopyra, Florida

Betsy Screws, ARNP, Florida

Jaimie Weber, MD, Florida

Priti Amin, MHA, Georgia

Naga Doddapaneni, Georgia

Stephanie Fletcher, Georgia

Disha Spath, MD, Georgia

Rafaela Wesley, DO, Georgia

Nikky Keer, DO, Georgia

James Kim, Georgia

Todd Martin, Georgia

Eli Mlaver, Georgia

Andrew Ritter, Georgia

Ali Al-Zubaidi, MBchB, Georgia

Deann Bing, MD, Georgia

Tushar Shah, Georgia

Cameron Straughn, DO, Georgia

Nobuhiro Ariyoshi, MEd, Hawaii

Prerna Kumar, Iowa

Jonathan Sebolt, MD, Iowa

Amy Tesar, DO, Iowa

Houng Chea, NP, Idaho

Finnegan Greer, PA-C, Idaho

Thao Nelson, PA, Idaho

Malatesha Gangappa, Idaho

Gloria Alumona, ACNP, Illinois

Ram Sanjeev Alur, Illinois

James Antoon, MD, FAAP, PhD, Illinois

Stefania Bailuc, MD, Illinois

Richard Huh, Illinois

Bhakti Patel, MD, Illinois

Frances Uy, ACNP, Illinois

Fernando Velazquez Vazquez, MD, Illinois

Tiffany White, MD, Illinois

Bryan P. Tully, MD, Illinois

Swati Gobhil, MBBS, Illinois

Lianghe Gao, Illinois

Gopi Astik, MD, Illinois

Marina Kovacevic, MD, Illinois

Abbie Raymond, DO, Illinois

Timothy Yung, Illinois

Ahmed Zahid, MD, Illinois

Cristina Corsini, MEd, Illinois

Faisal Rashid, MD, FACP, Illinois

Mansoor Ahmad, MD, Illinois

Matthew A. Strauch, DO, Illinois

Purshotham Reddy Grinne, Illinois

Nadia Nasreen, MD, Illinois

Maham Ashraf, MD, Indiana

Jennifer Gross, Indiana

Debasmita Mohapatra, MBBS, Indiana

Eric Scheper, Indiana

Katherine Gray, APRNBC, FNP, Indiana

Venkata Kureti, Indiana

Omer Al-Buoshkor, MD, Indiana

David Johnson, FNP, MSN, Indiana

Jonathan Salisbury, MD, Indiana

Debra Shapert, MSN, RN, Iowa

Lisa Carter, ARNP, Iowa

Matthew Woodham, Iowa

Tomoharu Suzuki, MD, Pharm, Japan

Khaldoun Haj, Kansas

Will Rogers, ACMPE, MA, MBA, Kansas

Karen Shumate, Kansas

Lisa Unruh, MD, Kansas

Matthew George, Kansas

Katie Washburn, DO, Kansas

Edwin Avallone, DO, Kentucky

Matthew Morris, Kentucky

Samantha Cappetto, MD, Kentucky

Jaison John, Kentucky

Ammar Al Jajeh, Kentucky

Joseph Bolger, MD, PhD, Louisiana

Clairissa Mulloy, Louisiana

Harish Talla, MD, Louisiana

John Amadon, Louisiana

Karthik Krishnareddy, Louisiana

Cheryl DeGrandpre, PA-C, Maine

Katherine Liu, MD, Maine

Sarah Sedney, MD, Maine

Aksana Afanasenka, MD, Maryland

Syed Nazeer Mahmood, MBBS, Maryland

Joseph Apata, MD, Maryland

Russom Ghebrai, MD, Maryland

Musa Momoh, MD, Maryland

Antanina Voit, Maryland

Dejene Kassaye, MD, MSC, Maryland

Shams Quazi, MD, FACP, MS, Maryland

Dawn Roelofs, FNP, MSN, Maryland

Kirsten Austad, MD, Massachusetts

Yoel Carrasquillo Vega, MD, Massachusetts

Michele Gaudet, NP, Massachusetts

Karina Mejias, Massachusetts

Peter Rohloff, MD, PhD, Massachusetts

Jennifer Schaeffer, Massachusetts

James Shaw, MD, Massachusetts

Renee Wheeler, Massachusetts

Angela Freeman, PA, PA-C, Massachusetts

Supriya Parvatini, MD, Massachusetts

Karen Jiang, MD, Massachusetts

Roula E. Abou-Nader, MD, Massachusetts

Shreekant Vasudhev, MD, Massachusetts

Nivedita Adabala, MD, MBBS, Michigan

Robert Behrendt, RN, BSN, Michigan

Molly Belisle, Michigan

Christine Dugan, MD, Michigan

Baljinder Gill, Michigan

Kellie Herringa, PA-C, Michigan

Christine Klingert, Michigan

Kathy Mitchell, Michigan

Aimee Vos, Michigan

Alyssa Churchill, DO, Michigan

Mailvaganam Sridharan, MD, Michigan

Atul Kapoor, MD, MBBS, Michigan

Anitha Kompally, MD, MBBS, Michigan

Nicole Webb, PA-C, Michigan

Abdulqadir Ahmad, MD, Minnesota

John Patrick Eikens, Minnesota

Bobbi Jo Jensen, PA-C, Minnesota

Rachel Keuseman, Minnesota

Stephen Palmquist, Minnesota

Manit Singla, MD, Minnesota

Douglas Berg, Minnesota

Nathan Palmolea, Minnesota

Molly Tureson, PAC, Minnesota

Mehdi Dastrange, MD, MHA, Minnesota

Kent Svee, Minnesota

Ashley Viere, PA-C, Minnesota

Molly Yang, MD, Minnesota

Paige Sams, DO, Minnesota

Amit Reddy, MBBS, Mississippi

Jacqueline Brooke Banks, FNP-C, Mississippi

Lori Foxworth, CFNP, Mississippi

 

 

Nicki Lawson, FNP-C, Mississippi

Bikash Acharya, Missouri

Zafar Ahmad, PA-C, Missouri

Harleen Chela, MD, Missouri

Jeffrey Chung, MD, Missouri

Daniel Kornfeld, Missouri

Erika Leung, MD, MSc, Missouri

Lisa Moser, PA, Missouri

Mark Stiffler, Missouri

Tushar Tarun, MBBS, Missouri

Nicole McLaughlin, Missouri

Katy Lohmann, PA-C, Missouri

Jayasree Bodagala, MD, Missouri

Ravi Kiran Morumuru, ACMPE, Missouri

Matthew Brown, MD, FAAFP, Missouri

Ravikanth Tadi, Missouri

Bazgha Ahmad, DO, Missouri

Monica Hawkins, RN, Missouri

Karri Vesey, BSN, Montana

Madison Vertin, PA-C, Montana

Urmila Mukherjee, MD, Nebraska

Noah Wiedel, MD, Nebraska

Sidrah Sheikh, MD, MBBS, Nebraska

Mohammad Esmadi, MBBS, Nebraska

Jill Zabih, MD, Nebraska

Jody Frey-Burns, RN, Nevada

Adnan Akbar, MD, Nevada

Peter Gayed, MRCP, New Hampshire

Jonathan T. Huntington, MD, New Hampshire

Meghan Meehan, ACNP, New Hampshire

Saurabh Mehta, MD, New Jersey

Hanaa Benchekroun Belabbes, MD, MHA, New Jersey

Hwan Kim, MD, New Jersey

Mary Tobiasson, USA, New Jersey

Muhammad Khakwani, MD, New Jersey

Amita Maibam, MD, MPH, New Jersey

Kumar Rohit, MBBS, New Jersey

Crystal Benjamin, MD, New Jersey

Rafael Garabis, New Mexico

Sam MacBride, MD, New Mexico

Indra Peram, MD, New Mexico

Sarah Vertrees, DO, New Mexico

Aswani Kumar Alavala, MD, New Mexico

Christopher Anstine, New Mexico

Prathima Guruguri, MD, New Mexico

Diedre Hofinger, MD, FACP, New Mexico

Katharine Juarez, New Mexico

Amtul Mahavesh, MD, New Mexico

Francisco Marquez, New Mexico

Payal Sen, MD, New Mexico

Morgan Wong, DO, New Mexico

Kelly Berchou, New York

Ronald Cho, New York

Nishil Dalsania, New York

Carolyn Drake, MD, MPH, New York

Leanne Forman, New York

Valerie Gausman, New York

Laurie Jacobs, New York

Janice Jang, MD, New York

Sonia Kohli, MD, New York

Nancy Lee, PA, New York

Allen Lee, MD, New York

Matthew McCarthy, FACP, New York

Akram Mohammed, MD, New York

Jennifer Nead, New York

Kristal Persaud, PA, New York

Mariya Rozenblit, MD, New York

Christian Torres, MD, New York

Sasha De Jesus, MD, New York

Gabriella Polyak, New York

Nataliya Yuklyaeva, MD, New York

Riyaz Kamadoli, MD, New York

Ramanuj Chakravarty, New York

Adil Zaidi, MD, New York

Allison Walker, MD, New York

Himali Gandhi, New York

Alexey Yanilshtein, MD, New York

Ramsey Al-Khalil, New York

Latoya Codougan, MD, New York

Khan Najmi, MD, New York

Sara Stream, MD, New York

Bhuwan Poudyal, MD, New York

Khalil Anchouche, New York

Sarah Azarchi, New York

Susana Bejar, New York

Brian Chang, New York

Jonathan Chen, New York

Hailey Gupta, MD, New York

Medhavi Gupta, New York

Ali Khan, New York

Benjamin Kwok, MD, New York

Billy Lin, New York

Katherine Ni, New York

Jina Park, New York

Gabriel Perreault, New York

Luis Alberto Romero, New York

Payal Shah, New York

Punita Shroff, New York

Scott Statman, New York

Maria Sunseri, New York

Benjamin Verplanke, New York

Audrey Zhang, New York

Gaby Razzouk, MD, New York

Pranitha Mantrala, MD, New York

Marsha Antoine, New York

Kanica Yashi, New York

Navid Ahmed, New York

Tasha Richards, PA, New York

Connor Tryon, MD, New York

Naveen Yarlagadda, MD, New York

Alex Hogan, New York

Andrew Donohoe, CCM, MD, North Carolina

Brittany Forshay, MD, North Carolina

Kelly Hammerbeck, FNP, North Carolina

Jennifer Hausman, North Carolina

Babajide Obisesan, North Carolina

Kwadwo Ofori, MD, North Carolina

Eric Ofosu, MD, North Carolina

Kale Roth, North Carolina

Robert Soma, PA-C, North Carolina

Sommany Weber, North Carolina

Ronnie Jacobs, North Carolina

Muhammad Ghani, MD, MACP, MBBS, North Carolina

Madeline Treasure, North Carolina

Andrew McWilliams, MD, North Carolina

Karen Payne, ACNP, MPH, North Carolina

Rafal Poplawski, MD, North Carolina

James Seal, PA-C, North Carolina

Farheen Qureshi, DO, North Carolina

Basavatti Sowmya, MD, MBBS, North Carolina

Eshwar Lal, MD, North Carolina

Catherine Hathaway, MD, North Carolina

Sherif Naguib, FAAFP, North Carolina

Sara Skavroneck, North Carolina

Charles Ofosu, North Carolina

Alex Alburquerque, MD, Ohio

Isha Butler, DO, Ohio

Anne Carrol, MD, Ohio

Scott Childers, MD, Ohio

Philip Jonas, MD, Ohio

Ahmadreza Karimianpour, Ohio

Rahul Kumar, MD, Ohio

George Maidaa, MD, Ohio

Kevin McAninch, Ohio

Jill Mccourt, FNP, Ohio

Roxanne Oliver, Ohio

Farah Hussain, Ohio

Natasha Axton, PA-C, Ohio

Brooke Harris, ACNP, Ohio

Vidhya Murukesan, MD, Ohio

Sara Dong, Ohio

Christie Astor, FNP, Ohio

Sunita Mall, MD, Ohio

Sunita Mall, MD, Ohio

Fouzia Tariq, MD, Ohio

Kaveri Sivaruban, MD, Ohio

Eunice Quicho, Ohio

Smitha Achuthankutty, MD, Ohio

Harmanpreet Shinh, MD, Ohio

Maereg Tesfaye, Ohio

Kalyn Jolivette, MD, Ohio

Richelle Voth, PA-C, Oklahoma

Samuel J. Ratermann, MD, FAAFP, Oklahoma

Richelle Voth, PA-C, Oklahoma

Alden Forrester, MD, Oregon

Nicholas Brown, DO, Oregon

Ian Pennell-Walklin, MD, Oregon

Bruce Ramsey, Oregon

Kyle Brekke, DO, Oregon

Sarah Webber, MD, Oregon

Brian Beaudoin, MD, Pennsylvania

Glenn Bedell, MHSA, Pennsylvania

Cristina Green, AGACNP-DNP, Pennsylvania

Andrew Groff, Pennsylvania

Sulman Masood Hashmi, MBBS, Pennsylvania

Eric Kasprowicz, MD, MPH, Pennsylvania

Laura Leuenberger, Pennsylvania

James Liszewski, MD, Pennsylvania

Caitlyn Moss, Pennsylvania

Paul Seunghyun Nho, Pennsylvania

Rishan Patel, MD, Pennsylvania

Dilli R. Poudel, MBBS, Pennsylvania

Naveen Yellappa, MBBS, Pennsylvania

Usman Zulfiqar, Pennsylvania

Nina Jain, Pennsylvania

Bhumika Patel, DO, Pennsylvania

Jenna M. Diasio, PA-C, Pennsylvania

Malachi Courtney, MD, Pennsylvania

Sonia Arneja, MD, Pennsylvania

Ross Ellis, MD, Pennsylvania

Samreen Siddiqui, Pennsylvania

Jillian Zavodnick, Pennsylvania

Kinan Kassar, MD, Pennsylvania

Maritsa M. Scoulos-Hanson, Pennsylvania

Jennifer Taylor, PA-C, Pennsylvania

Steven Delaveris, DO, Pennsylvania

Danica Buzniak, DO, Rhode Island

Paul Browning, MD, South Carolina

Matt Coones, MD, South Carolina

Cedric Fisher, MD, South Carolina

Aloysius Jackson, MD, South Carolina

Katharine DuPont, MD, South Carolina

Michael Jenkins, MD, South Carolina

Jessica Hamilton, APRN, BC, FNP, South Carolina

Pamela Pyle, DO, South Carolina

Shakeel Ahmed, MBBS, MD, South Dakota

D. Bruce Eaton, MD, South Dakota

Drew Jorgensen, MD, South Dakota

Shelly Turbak, MSN, RN, South Dakota

Tamera Sturm, DO, South Dakota

Peggy Brooks, Tennessee

Joseph Garrido, MD, Tennessee

Lisa Grimes, FNP, Tennessee

Chennakesava Kummathi, MBBS, Tennessee

Victoria Okafor, Tennessee

Ashley Smith, Tennessee

Monisha Bhatia, Tennessee

Belinda Jenkins, APRN-BC, Tennessee

Kim Zahnke, MD, Tennessee

Robert Arias, Texas

Nicolas Batterton, MD, Texas

Scott DePaul, MD, Texas

Nancy Foster, Texas

Larry Hughes, Texas

 

 

Erin Koval, Texas

Femi Layiwola, MD, Texas

Krysta Lin, Texas

James J. Onorato, MD, PhD, Texas

Allison Stephenson, PA-C, Texas

Brandon Stormes, Texas

Rubin Simon, MD, Texas

Brian Anderson, DO, Texas

Hatim Chhatriwala, MD, Texas

Aziz Hammoud, Texas

Haru Yamamoto, MD, Texas

Lauren Schiegg, Texas

Victoria Grasso, DO, Texas

Victor Salcedo, MD, Texas

Rajiv Bhattarai, Texas

Iram Qureshi, DO, Texas

Lisa Hafemeister, FACHE, MHA, Texas

Helena Kurian, MD, Texas

Jessica Lin, Texas

Nathan Nowalk, MD, Texas

Keely Smith, MD, Texas

Jonathan Weiser, MD, Texas

Roland Prezas, DO, FAAFP, Texas

Allan Recto, AHIP, Texas

Regina Dimbo, Texas

Venkata Ghanta, Texas

Richmond Hunt, Texas

Vishal Patel, MD, Texas

Zain Sharif, MD, Texas

Rommel Del Rosario, MD, Texas

Khawer Khadimally, DO, Texas

Diogenes Valderrama, MD, Texas

Charles Ewoh, MD, Texas

Deepika Kilaru, Texas

Tilahun Belay, MD, Texas

Chandra S Reddy Navuluri, MD, Texas

Bradley Goad, DO, FACP, Virginia

Patrick Higdon, MD, Virginia

Gabriella Miller, MD, HMDC, Virginia

Miklos Szentirmai, MD, Virginia

Hyder Tamton, Virginia

Andra Mirescu, MD, Virginia

Olukayode Ojo, Virginia

Robert Szeles, MD, Virginia

Anya Cope, DO, Virginia

OsCiriah Press, MD, Virginia

Rikin Kadakia, MD, Virginia

Bryant Self, DO, Virginia

Sarah Sabo, ACNP, Virginia

Pedro A. Gonzales Alvarez, MD, Virginia

William Best, Virginia

Pushpanjali Basnyat, MD, Washington

Nikki Hartley-Jonason, Washington

Helen Johnsonwall, MD, Washington

Eric LaMotte, MD, Washington

Maher Muraywid, Washington

Evan Neal Paul, MD, Washington

Sarah Rogers, MD, Washington

Lindee Strizich, Washington

Maryam Tariq, MBBS, Washington

Meghaan Walsh, MD, Washington

Oleg Zbirun, MD, Washington

Meeta Sabnis, MD, Washington

James Kuo, MD, Washington

Liang Du, Washington

Syed Farhan Tabraiz Hashmi, MD, Washington

Jessica Jung, MD, Washington

Joshua Pelley, MD, Washington

Alex Yu, MD, Washington

Alfred Curnow, MD, Washington

Duhwan Kang, Washington

Gilbert Daniel, MD, Washington, D.C.

Eleanor Fitall, Washington, D.C.

Vinay Srinivasan, Washington, D.C.

Scott Wine, West Virginia

Trevor Miller, MBA, PA-C, West Virginia

Audrey Hiltunen, Wisconsin

Elina Litinskaya, Wisconsin

John M. Murphy, MD, Wisconsin

Tanya Pedretti, PA, Wisconsin

Adine Rodemeyer, MD, Wisconsin

Oghomwen Sule, MBBS, Wisconsin

Terrence Witt, MD, Wisconsin

Mayank Arora, Wisconsin

John D. MacDonald, MD, Wisconsin

Abigail Cook, Wisconsin

Mohamed Ibrahim, MD, Wisconsin

Aymen Khogali, MD, Wisconsin

Nicholas Haun, Wisconsin

Sandra Brown, Victoria, Australia

Alessandra Gessner, Alberta, Canada

Courtney Carlucci, British Columbia, Canada

Muhanad Y. Al Habash, Canada

Karen Tong, MD, Canada

Taku Yabuki, Japan

Liza van Loon, the Netherlands

Edward Gebuis, MD, the Netherlands

Abdisalan Afrah, MD, Qatar

Akhnuwkh Jones, Qatar

Mashuk Uddin, MBBS, MRCP, FRCP, Qatar

Ibrahim Yusuf Abubeker, MRCP, Qatar

Chih-Wei Tseng, Taiwan

Sawsan Abdel-Razig, MD, FACP, United Arab Emirates

 

The Society of Hospital Medicine welcomes its newest members:

Kwie-Hoa Siem, MD, Alaska

Frank Abene, Alabama

Kayla Maldonado, Alabama

Kenny Murray, MD, Alabama

Shanthan Ramidi, MD, Alabama

Lauren Hancock, APRN, Arkansas

William Hawkins, MD, Arkansas

Matthew Law, Arkansas

Emily Smith, MD, Arkansas

Firas Abbas, MBchB, Arizona

Shahid Ahmad, MD, MBBS, Arizona

Praveen Bheemanathini, Arizona

Atoosa Hosseini, Arizona

William McGrade, DO, Arizona

Konstantin Mazursky, DO, Arizona

Ibrahim Taweel, MD, Arizona

Kevin Virk, MD, FACP, Arizona

Kevin Virk, MD, FACP, Arizona

Mohemmedd Khalid Abbas, Arizona

Hasan Chaudhry, MD, Arizona

Kelly Kelleher, FAAP, Arizona

Priyanka Sultania Dudani, MBBS, Arizona

Krishna Kasireddy, MD, Arizona

Melanie Meguro, Arizona

Puneet Tuli, MD, Arizona

Jonathan Byrdy, DO, Arizona

Sarah Corral, DO, Arizona

Edward Maharam, MD, Arizona

Arvind Satyanarayan, DO, Arizona

Mayank Aggarwal, MD, Arizona

Syed Jafri, Arizona

Bujji Ainapurapu, MD, Arizona

Aaron Fernandes, MD, Arizona

Sonal Gandhi, Arizona

Sudhir Tutiki, Arizona

Navaneeth Kumar, MD, Arizona

Brian T. Courtney, MD, California

Won Jin Jeon, California

Veena Panduranga, MD, California

Jennifer Tinloy, DO, California

Debra Buckland Coffey, MCUSN, MD, California

Kathleen Teves, MD, California

Paul Goebel, MD, ACMPE, California

Shainy Hegde, California

Summaiya Muhammad, California

Desmond Wah, California

Chonn Khristin Ng, California

Almira Yang, DO, California

Salimah Boghani, MD, California

Stella Abhyankar, California

Cherie Ginwalla, MD, California

Armond Esmaili, California

Sarah Schaeffer, MD, MPH, California

Sophia Virani, MD, California

Dipti Munshi, MD, California

Judy Nguyen, DO, California

Daniel Owyang, DO, California

Christian Chiavetta, DO, California

David Reinert, DO, California

Joseph Pawlowski, MD, California

Eleanor Yang, California

Adrian Campo, MD, California

Emerson De Jesus, MD, California

Zachary Edmonds, MD, California

Trit Garg, California

Alexandra G. Ianculescu, MD, PhD, California

Felix Karp, MD, California

Cara Lai, California

Kristen Lew, MD, California

John Mogannam, California

Ameer Moussa, California

Neil Parikh, MD, MBA, California

Priya Reddy, California

Adam Simons, California

Sanjay Vadgama, MD, California

Kristofer Wills, DO, California

Michael Yang, MD, MS, California

Victor Ekuta, California,

Donna Colobong, PA-C, Colorado

Janna B. Dreason, FNP-C, Colorado

Cheryl English, NP-C, Colorado

Melanie Gerrior, MD, Colorado

Marciann Harris, NP, Colorado

Marsha Henke, MD, Colorado

Brett Hesse, Colorado

Naomi J Hipp, MD, Colorado

Aurell Horing, Colorado

Rachel Koch, DO, Colorado

Ed Marino, PA-C, Colorado

Marcus Reinhardt, MD, Colorado

Carol Runge, Colorado

Harshal Shah, Colorado

Leo Soehnlen, DO, Colorado

Anna Villalobos, MD, Colorado

Kathryn Whitfield, PA-C, Colorado

Jonathan Bei-Shing Young, MD, Colorado

Leah Damiani, MD, Colorado

Kathy Lynch, MD, Colorado

Micah Friedman, Colorado

Rachael Hilton, MD, Colorado

Madeline Koerner, Colorado

Chi Zheng, MD, Colorado

Chin-Kun Baw, MD, Connecticut

Alexandra Hawkins, NP, Connecticut

Vasundhara Singh, MD, MBBS, Connecticut

Ryan Quarles, MD, Connecticut

Debra Hernandez, APRN, BC, Connecticut

Karine Karapetyan, MD, Delaware

Choosak Burr, ARNP, Florida

Nelsi Mora, Florida

Mary Quillinan, Florida

Thuntanat Rachanakul, Florida

Samual W. Sauer, MD, MPH, Florida

Jennifer Tibangin, Florida

Keith Williams, MD, Florida

Eric Penedo, MD, Florida

Margaret Webb, Florida

Mark Bender, Florida

Brett Waress, MD, MHA, Florida

Giselle Racho, Florida

Bryan Thiel, Florida

Juan Loor Tuarez, MD, Florida

Christine Stopyra, Florida

Betsy Screws, ARNP, Florida

Jaimie Weber, MD, Florida

Priti Amin, MHA, Georgia

Naga Doddapaneni, Georgia

Stephanie Fletcher, Georgia

Disha Spath, MD, Georgia

Rafaela Wesley, DO, Georgia

Nikky Keer, DO, Georgia

James Kim, Georgia

Todd Martin, Georgia

Eli Mlaver, Georgia

Andrew Ritter, Georgia

Ali Al-Zubaidi, MBchB, Georgia

Deann Bing, MD, Georgia

Tushar Shah, Georgia

Cameron Straughn, DO, Georgia

Nobuhiro Ariyoshi, MEd, Hawaii

Prerna Kumar, Iowa

Jonathan Sebolt, MD, Iowa

Amy Tesar, DO, Iowa

Houng Chea, NP, Idaho

Finnegan Greer, PA-C, Idaho

Thao Nelson, PA, Idaho

Malatesha Gangappa, Idaho

Gloria Alumona, ACNP, Illinois

Ram Sanjeev Alur, Illinois

James Antoon, MD, FAAP, PhD, Illinois

Stefania Bailuc, MD, Illinois

Richard Huh, Illinois

Bhakti Patel, MD, Illinois

Frances Uy, ACNP, Illinois

Fernando Velazquez Vazquez, MD, Illinois

Tiffany White, MD, Illinois

Bryan P. Tully, MD, Illinois

Swati Gobhil, MBBS, Illinois

Lianghe Gao, Illinois

Gopi Astik, MD, Illinois

Marina Kovacevic, MD, Illinois

Abbie Raymond, DO, Illinois

Timothy Yung, Illinois

Ahmed Zahid, MD, Illinois

Cristina Corsini, MEd, Illinois

Faisal Rashid, MD, FACP, Illinois

Mansoor Ahmad, MD, Illinois

Matthew A. Strauch, DO, Illinois

Purshotham Reddy Grinne, Illinois

Nadia Nasreen, MD, Illinois

Maham Ashraf, MD, Indiana

Jennifer Gross, Indiana

Debasmita Mohapatra, MBBS, Indiana

Eric Scheper, Indiana

Katherine Gray, APRNBC, FNP, Indiana

Venkata Kureti, Indiana

Omer Al-Buoshkor, MD, Indiana

David Johnson, FNP, MSN, Indiana

Jonathan Salisbury, MD, Indiana

Debra Shapert, MSN, RN, Iowa

Lisa Carter, ARNP, Iowa

Matthew Woodham, Iowa

Tomoharu Suzuki, MD, Pharm, Japan

Khaldoun Haj, Kansas

Will Rogers, ACMPE, MA, MBA, Kansas

Karen Shumate, Kansas

Lisa Unruh, MD, Kansas

Matthew George, Kansas

Katie Washburn, DO, Kansas

Edwin Avallone, DO, Kentucky

Matthew Morris, Kentucky

Samantha Cappetto, MD, Kentucky

Jaison John, Kentucky

Ammar Al Jajeh, Kentucky

Joseph Bolger, MD, PhD, Louisiana

Clairissa Mulloy, Louisiana

Harish Talla, MD, Louisiana

John Amadon, Louisiana

Karthik Krishnareddy, Louisiana

Cheryl DeGrandpre, PA-C, Maine

Katherine Liu, MD, Maine

Sarah Sedney, MD, Maine

Aksana Afanasenka, MD, Maryland

Syed Nazeer Mahmood, MBBS, Maryland

Joseph Apata, MD, Maryland

Russom Ghebrai, MD, Maryland

Musa Momoh, MD, Maryland

Antanina Voit, Maryland

Dejene Kassaye, MD, MSC, Maryland

Shams Quazi, MD, FACP, MS, Maryland

Dawn Roelofs, FNP, MSN, Maryland

Kirsten Austad, MD, Massachusetts

Yoel Carrasquillo Vega, MD, Massachusetts

Michele Gaudet, NP, Massachusetts

Karina Mejias, Massachusetts

Peter Rohloff, MD, PhD, Massachusetts

Jennifer Schaeffer, Massachusetts

James Shaw, MD, Massachusetts

Renee Wheeler, Massachusetts

Angela Freeman, PA, PA-C, Massachusetts

Supriya Parvatini, MD, Massachusetts

Karen Jiang, MD, Massachusetts

Roula E. Abou-Nader, MD, Massachusetts

Shreekant Vasudhev, MD, Massachusetts

Nivedita Adabala, MD, MBBS, Michigan

Robert Behrendt, RN, BSN, Michigan

Molly Belisle, Michigan

Christine Dugan, MD, Michigan

Baljinder Gill, Michigan

Kellie Herringa, PA-C, Michigan

Christine Klingert, Michigan

Kathy Mitchell, Michigan

Aimee Vos, Michigan

Alyssa Churchill, DO, Michigan

Mailvaganam Sridharan, MD, Michigan

Atul Kapoor, MD, MBBS, Michigan

Anitha Kompally, MD, MBBS, Michigan

Nicole Webb, PA-C, Michigan

Abdulqadir Ahmad, MD, Minnesota

John Patrick Eikens, Minnesota

Bobbi Jo Jensen, PA-C, Minnesota

Rachel Keuseman, Minnesota

Stephen Palmquist, Minnesota

Manit Singla, MD, Minnesota

Douglas Berg, Minnesota

Nathan Palmolea, Minnesota

Molly Tureson, PAC, Minnesota

Mehdi Dastrange, MD, MHA, Minnesota

Kent Svee, Minnesota

Ashley Viere, PA-C, Minnesota

Molly Yang, MD, Minnesota

Paige Sams, DO, Minnesota

Amit Reddy, MBBS, Mississippi

Jacqueline Brooke Banks, FNP-C, Mississippi

Lori Foxworth, CFNP, Mississippi

 

 

Nicki Lawson, FNP-C, Mississippi

Bikash Acharya, Missouri

Zafar Ahmad, PA-C, Missouri

Harleen Chela, MD, Missouri

Jeffrey Chung, MD, Missouri

Daniel Kornfeld, Missouri

Erika Leung, MD, MSc, Missouri

Lisa Moser, PA, Missouri

Mark Stiffler, Missouri

Tushar Tarun, MBBS, Missouri

Nicole McLaughlin, Missouri

Katy Lohmann, PA-C, Missouri

Jayasree Bodagala, MD, Missouri

Ravi Kiran Morumuru, ACMPE, Missouri

Matthew Brown, MD, FAAFP, Missouri

Ravikanth Tadi, Missouri

Bazgha Ahmad, DO, Missouri

Monica Hawkins, RN, Missouri

Karri Vesey, BSN, Montana

Madison Vertin, PA-C, Montana

Urmila Mukherjee, MD, Nebraska

Noah Wiedel, MD, Nebraska

Sidrah Sheikh, MD, MBBS, Nebraska

Mohammad Esmadi, MBBS, Nebraska

Jill Zabih, MD, Nebraska

Jody Frey-Burns, RN, Nevada

Adnan Akbar, MD, Nevada

Peter Gayed, MRCP, New Hampshire

Jonathan T. Huntington, MD, New Hampshire

Meghan Meehan, ACNP, New Hampshire

Saurabh Mehta, MD, New Jersey

Hanaa Benchekroun Belabbes, MD, MHA, New Jersey

Hwan Kim, MD, New Jersey

Mary Tobiasson, USA, New Jersey

Muhammad Khakwani, MD, New Jersey

Amita Maibam, MD, MPH, New Jersey

Kumar Rohit, MBBS, New Jersey

Crystal Benjamin, MD, New Jersey

Rafael Garabis, New Mexico

Sam MacBride, MD, New Mexico

Indra Peram, MD, New Mexico

Sarah Vertrees, DO, New Mexico

Aswani Kumar Alavala, MD, New Mexico

Christopher Anstine, New Mexico

Prathima Guruguri, MD, New Mexico

Diedre Hofinger, MD, FACP, New Mexico

Katharine Juarez, New Mexico

Amtul Mahavesh, MD, New Mexico

Francisco Marquez, New Mexico

Payal Sen, MD, New Mexico

Morgan Wong, DO, New Mexico

Kelly Berchou, New York

Ronald Cho, New York

Nishil Dalsania, New York

Carolyn Drake, MD, MPH, New York

Leanne Forman, New York

Valerie Gausman, New York

Laurie Jacobs, New York

Janice Jang, MD, New York

Sonia Kohli, MD, New York

Nancy Lee, PA, New York

Allen Lee, MD, New York

Matthew McCarthy, FACP, New York

Akram Mohammed, MD, New York

Jennifer Nead, New York

Kristal Persaud, PA, New York

Mariya Rozenblit, MD, New York

Christian Torres, MD, New York

Sasha De Jesus, MD, New York

Gabriella Polyak, New York

Nataliya Yuklyaeva, MD, New York

Riyaz Kamadoli, MD, New York

Ramanuj Chakravarty, New York

Adil Zaidi, MD, New York

Allison Walker, MD, New York

Himali Gandhi, New York

Alexey Yanilshtein, MD, New York

Ramsey Al-Khalil, New York

Latoya Codougan, MD, New York

Khan Najmi, MD, New York

Sara Stream, MD, New York

Bhuwan Poudyal, MD, New York

Khalil Anchouche, New York

Sarah Azarchi, New York

Susana Bejar, New York

Brian Chang, New York

Jonathan Chen, New York

Hailey Gupta, MD, New York

Medhavi Gupta, New York

Ali Khan, New York

Benjamin Kwok, MD, New York

Billy Lin, New York

Katherine Ni, New York

Jina Park, New York

Gabriel Perreault, New York

Luis Alberto Romero, New York

Payal Shah, New York

Punita Shroff, New York

Scott Statman, New York

Maria Sunseri, New York

Benjamin Verplanke, New York

Audrey Zhang, New York

Gaby Razzouk, MD, New York

Pranitha Mantrala, MD, New York

Marsha Antoine, New York

Kanica Yashi, New York

Navid Ahmed, New York

Tasha Richards, PA, New York

Connor Tryon, MD, New York

Naveen Yarlagadda, MD, New York

Alex Hogan, New York

Andrew Donohoe, CCM, MD, North Carolina

Brittany Forshay, MD, North Carolina

Kelly Hammerbeck, FNP, North Carolina

Jennifer Hausman, North Carolina

Babajide Obisesan, North Carolina

Kwadwo Ofori, MD, North Carolina

Eric Ofosu, MD, North Carolina

Kale Roth, North Carolina

Robert Soma, PA-C, North Carolina

Sommany Weber, North Carolina

Ronnie Jacobs, North Carolina

Muhammad Ghani, MD, MACP, MBBS, North Carolina

Madeline Treasure, North Carolina

Andrew McWilliams, MD, North Carolina

Karen Payne, ACNP, MPH, North Carolina

Rafal Poplawski, MD, North Carolina

James Seal, PA-C, North Carolina

Farheen Qureshi, DO, North Carolina

Basavatti Sowmya, MD, MBBS, North Carolina

Eshwar Lal, MD, North Carolina

Catherine Hathaway, MD, North Carolina

Sherif Naguib, FAAFP, North Carolina

Sara Skavroneck, North Carolina

Charles Ofosu, North Carolina

Alex Alburquerque, MD, Ohio

Isha Butler, DO, Ohio

Anne Carrol, MD, Ohio

Scott Childers, MD, Ohio

Philip Jonas, MD, Ohio

Ahmadreza Karimianpour, Ohio

Rahul Kumar, MD, Ohio

George Maidaa, MD, Ohio

Kevin McAninch, Ohio

Jill Mccourt, FNP, Ohio

Roxanne Oliver, Ohio

Farah Hussain, Ohio

Natasha Axton, PA-C, Ohio

Brooke Harris, ACNP, Ohio

Vidhya Murukesan, MD, Ohio

Sara Dong, Ohio

Christie Astor, FNP, Ohio

Sunita Mall, MD, Ohio

Sunita Mall, MD, Ohio

Fouzia Tariq, MD, Ohio

Kaveri Sivaruban, MD, Ohio

Eunice Quicho, Ohio

Smitha Achuthankutty, MD, Ohio

Harmanpreet Shinh, MD, Ohio

Maereg Tesfaye, Ohio

Kalyn Jolivette, MD, Ohio

Richelle Voth, PA-C, Oklahoma

Samuel J. Ratermann, MD, FAAFP, Oklahoma

Richelle Voth, PA-C, Oklahoma

Alden Forrester, MD, Oregon

Nicholas Brown, DO, Oregon

Ian Pennell-Walklin, MD, Oregon

Bruce Ramsey, Oregon

Kyle Brekke, DO, Oregon

Sarah Webber, MD, Oregon

Brian Beaudoin, MD, Pennsylvania

Glenn Bedell, MHSA, Pennsylvania

Cristina Green, AGACNP-DNP, Pennsylvania

Andrew Groff, Pennsylvania

Sulman Masood Hashmi, MBBS, Pennsylvania

Eric Kasprowicz, MD, MPH, Pennsylvania

Laura Leuenberger, Pennsylvania

James Liszewski, MD, Pennsylvania

Caitlyn Moss, Pennsylvania

Paul Seunghyun Nho, Pennsylvania

Rishan Patel, MD, Pennsylvania

Dilli R. Poudel, MBBS, Pennsylvania

Naveen Yellappa, MBBS, Pennsylvania

Usman Zulfiqar, Pennsylvania

Nina Jain, Pennsylvania

Bhumika Patel, DO, Pennsylvania

Jenna M. Diasio, PA-C, Pennsylvania

Malachi Courtney, MD, Pennsylvania

Sonia Arneja, MD, Pennsylvania

Ross Ellis, MD, Pennsylvania

Samreen Siddiqui, Pennsylvania

Jillian Zavodnick, Pennsylvania

Kinan Kassar, MD, Pennsylvania

Maritsa M. Scoulos-Hanson, Pennsylvania

Jennifer Taylor, PA-C, Pennsylvania

Steven Delaveris, DO, Pennsylvania

Danica Buzniak, DO, Rhode Island

Paul Browning, MD, South Carolina

Matt Coones, MD, South Carolina

Cedric Fisher, MD, South Carolina

Aloysius Jackson, MD, South Carolina

Katharine DuPont, MD, South Carolina

Michael Jenkins, MD, South Carolina

Jessica Hamilton, APRN, BC, FNP, South Carolina

Pamela Pyle, DO, South Carolina

Shakeel Ahmed, MBBS, MD, South Dakota

D. Bruce Eaton, MD, South Dakota

Drew Jorgensen, MD, South Dakota

Shelly Turbak, MSN, RN, South Dakota

Tamera Sturm, DO, South Dakota

Peggy Brooks, Tennessee

Joseph Garrido, MD, Tennessee

Lisa Grimes, FNP, Tennessee

Chennakesava Kummathi, MBBS, Tennessee

Victoria Okafor, Tennessee

Ashley Smith, Tennessee

Monisha Bhatia, Tennessee

Belinda Jenkins, APRN-BC, Tennessee

Kim Zahnke, MD, Tennessee

Robert Arias, Texas

Nicolas Batterton, MD, Texas

Scott DePaul, MD, Texas

Nancy Foster, Texas

Larry Hughes, Texas

 

 

Erin Koval, Texas

Femi Layiwola, MD, Texas

Krysta Lin, Texas

James J. Onorato, MD, PhD, Texas

Allison Stephenson, PA-C, Texas

Brandon Stormes, Texas

Rubin Simon, MD, Texas

Brian Anderson, DO, Texas

Hatim Chhatriwala, MD, Texas

Aziz Hammoud, Texas

Haru Yamamoto, MD, Texas

Lauren Schiegg, Texas

Victoria Grasso, DO, Texas

Victor Salcedo, MD, Texas

Rajiv Bhattarai, Texas

Iram Qureshi, DO, Texas

Lisa Hafemeister, FACHE, MHA, Texas

Helena Kurian, MD, Texas

Jessica Lin, Texas

Nathan Nowalk, MD, Texas

Keely Smith, MD, Texas

Jonathan Weiser, MD, Texas

Roland Prezas, DO, FAAFP, Texas

Allan Recto, AHIP, Texas

Regina Dimbo, Texas

Venkata Ghanta, Texas

Richmond Hunt, Texas

Vishal Patel, MD, Texas

Zain Sharif, MD, Texas

Rommel Del Rosario, MD, Texas

Khawer Khadimally, DO, Texas

Diogenes Valderrama, MD, Texas

Charles Ewoh, MD, Texas

Deepika Kilaru, Texas

Tilahun Belay, MD, Texas

Chandra S Reddy Navuluri, MD, Texas

Bradley Goad, DO, FACP, Virginia

Patrick Higdon, MD, Virginia

Gabriella Miller, MD, HMDC, Virginia

Miklos Szentirmai, MD, Virginia

Hyder Tamton, Virginia

Andra Mirescu, MD, Virginia

Olukayode Ojo, Virginia

Robert Szeles, MD, Virginia

Anya Cope, DO, Virginia

OsCiriah Press, MD, Virginia

Rikin Kadakia, MD, Virginia

Bryant Self, DO, Virginia

Sarah Sabo, ACNP, Virginia

Pedro A. Gonzales Alvarez, MD, Virginia

William Best, Virginia

Pushpanjali Basnyat, MD, Washington

Nikki Hartley-Jonason, Washington

Helen Johnsonwall, MD, Washington

Eric LaMotte, MD, Washington

Maher Muraywid, Washington

Evan Neal Paul, MD, Washington

Sarah Rogers, MD, Washington

Lindee Strizich, Washington

Maryam Tariq, MBBS, Washington

Meghaan Walsh, MD, Washington

Oleg Zbirun, MD, Washington

Meeta Sabnis, MD, Washington

James Kuo, MD, Washington

Liang Du, Washington

Syed Farhan Tabraiz Hashmi, MD, Washington

Jessica Jung, MD, Washington

Joshua Pelley, MD, Washington

Alex Yu, MD, Washington

Alfred Curnow, MD, Washington

Duhwan Kang, Washington

Gilbert Daniel, MD, Washington, D.C.

Eleanor Fitall, Washington, D.C.

Vinay Srinivasan, Washington, D.C.

Scott Wine, West Virginia

Trevor Miller, MBA, PA-C, West Virginia

Audrey Hiltunen, Wisconsin

Elina Litinskaya, Wisconsin

John M. Murphy, MD, Wisconsin

Tanya Pedretti, PA, Wisconsin

Adine Rodemeyer, MD, Wisconsin

Oghomwen Sule, MBBS, Wisconsin

Terrence Witt, MD, Wisconsin

Mayank Arora, Wisconsin

John D. MacDonald, MD, Wisconsin

Abigail Cook, Wisconsin

Mohamed Ibrahim, MD, Wisconsin

Aymen Khogali, MD, Wisconsin

Nicholas Haun, Wisconsin

Sandra Brown, Victoria, Australia

Alessandra Gessner, Alberta, Canada

Courtney Carlucci, British Columbia, Canada

Muhanad Y. Al Habash, Canada

Karen Tong, MD, Canada

Taku Yabuki, Japan

Liza van Loon, the Netherlands

Edward Gebuis, MD, the Netherlands

Abdisalan Afrah, MD, Qatar

Akhnuwkh Jones, Qatar

Mashuk Uddin, MBBS, MRCP, FRCP, Qatar

Ibrahim Yusuf Abubeker, MRCP, Qatar

Chih-Wei Tseng, Taiwan

Sawsan Abdel-Razig, MD, FACP, United Arab Emirates

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Committee and chapter involvement allows SHM member to give back

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Fri, 09/14/2018 - 11:59
Paul Grant, MD, SFHM, contributes to SHM growth on both a local and national level

 

Editor’s note: Each month, SHM puts the spotlight on some of our most active members who are making substantial contributions to hospital medicine. Log on to www.hospitalmedicine.org/getinvolved for more information on how you can lend your expertise to help SHM improve the care of hospitalized patients.

This month, The Hospitalist spotlights Paul Grant, MD, SFHM, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor. Dr. Grant is the chair of SHM’s Membership Committee and an active member of SHM’s Michigan Chapter.

Why did you choose a career in hospital medicine, and how did you become an SHM member?

Dr. Paul Grant
During my internal medicine residency, I tried hard to find a subspecialty I could see myself doing for the rest of my career. But I couldn’t. What I loved about general medicine was the variety of patients I saw on a daily basis. My next decision was whether to do hospital medicine or ambulatory medicine. This was a tough choice for me, but choosing hospital medicine was one of the best career decisions I’ve ever made.

After residency, I completed a hospital medicine fellowship at the Cleveland Clinic. During my fellowship, I joined SHM. At that time, I knew nothing about the society, but that soon changed. My fellowship required me to attend the annual meeting and submit an abstract in the RIV competition, which was an extremely valuable experience for me. Not only was I blown away by the meeting, but my poster won the clinical vignette competition, as well! Needless to say, I’ve been an SHM member ever since.

What prompted you to join the Membership Committee? Can you discuss some of the projects the committee is currently working on?

Because SHM has done so much for my career as a hospitalist, I’ve tried to give back by volunteering on committees. After spending several years on the Early Career Hospitalist Committee, I felt the transition to the Membership Committee was a natural fit. Because SHM membership had been growing every year, our committee felt some pressure to keep this trend going. Thankfully, we have continued to see growth each year in every membership category.

Our committee has been working on several projects. One of the key demographics we have been targeting is the resident member. Residents play a significant role in the future of hospital medicine, as well as SHM membership. We are developing ways to reach out to residency program directors – particularly those running a hospital medicine track – to find ways they can benefit from SHM’s educational offerings. Additionally, our committee has been discussing ways to attract international members to SHM. Because hospital medicine is quite developed in the United States, we believe we have much to offer to hospitalists around the world.

Tell TH about your involvement with SHM’s Michigan Chapter. What does a typical chapter meeting entail?

A few years ago, at the end of SHM’s annual meeting, several of my hospital medicine colleagues in southeast Michigan happened to be on the same flight home. At the departure gate in the airport, we all agreed we should start an SHM chapter. After drawing straws, it was decided that I would be chapter president for our inaugural year. In a few short years, our chapter has grown into one of the largest in the country.

As for a typical meeting, each starts with a cocktail hour to encourage our members to network. We have a guest speaker, who presents on a hospital medicine topic, and then, we end the evening with a business meeting. We encourage students and residents to attend. More recently, we’ve been using interactive technology to broadcast our meetings to large hospital medicine groups in the western and northern parts of the state. Our chapter was thrilled to learn that we’d won the Outstanding Chapter award this year!

What value do you find in connecting with hospital medicine professionals at the local level?

Whether it’s a hospitalist working at a large, tertiary care center or one working in a small rural setting, it seems we all face similar challenges.

As a chapter, we can pull together our resources to address these issues. Furthermore, we have the ability to reach out to more trainees and show them what hospital medicine is all about. Our chapter has been able to partially fund both medical students and residents so they could attend SHM’s annual meeting. I’m always amazed at what I can learn from other hospitalists – in the state of Michigan and beyond.
 

 

 

Find a chapter near you and get involved at the local level at hospitalmedicine.org/chapters .

Felicia Steele is SHM’s communications coordinator.

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Paul Grant, MD, SFHM, contributes to SHM growth on both a local and national level
Paul Grant, MD, SFHM, contributes to SHM growth on both a local and national level

 

Editor’s note: Each month, SHM puts the spotlight on some of our most active members who are making substantial contributions to hospital medicine. Log on to www.hospitalmedicine.org/getinvolved for more information on how you can lend your expertise to help SHM improve the care of hospitalized patients.

This month, The Hospitalist spotlights Paul Grant, MD, SFHM, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor. Dr. Grant is the chair of SHM’s Membership Committee and an active member of SHM’s Michigan Chapter.

Why did you choose a career in hospital medicine, and how did you become an SHM member?

Dr. Paul Grant
During my internal medicine residency, I tried hard to find a subspecialty I could see myself doing for the rest of my career. But I couldn’t. What I loved about general medicine was the variety of patients I saw on a daily basis. My next decision was whether to do hospital medicine or ambulatory medicine. This was a tough choice for me, but choosing hospital medicine was one of the best career decisions I’ve ever made.

After residency, I completed a hospital medicine fellowship at the Cleveland Clinic. During my fellowship, I joined SHM. At that time, I knew nothing about the society, but that soon changed. My fellowship required me to attend the annual meeting and submit an abstract in the RIV competition, which was an extremely valuable experience for me. Not only was I blown away by the meeting, but my poster won the clinical vignette competition, as well! Needless to say, I’ve been an SHM member ever since.

What prompted you to join the Membership Committee? Can you discuss some of the projects the committee is currently working on?

Because SHM has done so much for my career as a hospitalist, I’ve tried to give back by volunteering on committees. After spending several years on the Early Career Hospitalist Committee, I felt the transition to the Membership Committee was a natural fit. Because SHM membership had been growing every year, our committee felt some pressure to keep this trend going. Thankfully, we have continued to see growth each year in every membership category.

Our committee has been working on several projects. One of the key demographics we have been targeting is the resident member. Residents play a significant role in the future of hospital medicine, as well as SHM membership. We are developing ways to reach out to residency program directors – particularly those running a hospital medicine track – to find ways they can benefit from SHM’s educational offerings. Additionally, our committee has been discussing ways to attract international members to SHM. Because hospital medicine is quite developed in the United States, we believe we have much to offer to hospitalists around the world.

Tell TH about your involvement with SHM’s Michigan Chapter. What does a typical chapter meeting entail?

A few years ago, at the end of SHM’s annual meeting, several of my hospital medicine colleagues in southeast Michigan happened to be on the same flight home. At the departure gate in the airport, we all agreed we should start an SHM chapter. After drawing straws, it was decided that I would be chapter president for our inaugural year. In a few short years, our chapter has grown into one of the largest in the country.

As for a typical meeting, each starts with a cocktail hour to encourage our members to network. We have a guest speaker, who presents on a hospital medicine topic, and then, we end the evening with a business meeting. We encourage students and residents to attend. More recently, we’ve been using interactive technology to broadcast our meetings to large hospital medicine groups in the western and northern parts of the state. Our chapter was thrilled to learn that we’d won the Outstanding Chapter award this year!

What value do you find in connecting with hospital medicine professionals at the local level?

Whether it’s a hospitalist working at a large, tertiary care center or one working in a small rural setting, it seems we all face similar challenges.

As a chapter, we can pull together our resources to address these issues. Furthermore, we have the ability to reach out to more trainees and show them what hospital medicine is all about. Our chapter has been able to partially fund both medical students and residents so they could attend SHM’s annual meeting. I’m always amazed at what I can learn from other hospitalists – in the state of Michigan and beyond.
 

 

 

Find a chapter near you and get involved at the local level at hospitalmedicine.org/chapters .

Felicia Steele is SHM’s communications coordinator.

 

Editor’s note: Each month, SHM puts the spotlight on some of our most active members who are making substantial contributions to hospital medicine. Log on to www.hospitalmedicine.org/getinvolved for more information on how you can lend your expertise to help SHM improve the care of hospitalized patients.

This month, The Hospitalist spotlights Paul Grant, MD, SFHM, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor. Dr. Grant is the chair of SHM’s Membership Committee and an active member of SHM’s Michigan Chapter.

Why did you choose a career in hospital medicine, and how did you become an SHM member?

Dr. Paul Grant
During my internal medicine residency, I tried hard to find a subspecialty I could see myself doing for the rest of my career. But I couldn’t. What I loved about general medicine was the variety of patients I saw on a daily basis. My next decision was whether to do hospital medicine or ambulatory medicine. This was a tough choice for me, but choosing hospital medicine was one of the best career decisions I’ve ever made.

After residency, I completed a hospital medicine fellowship at the Cleveland Clinic. During my fellowship, I joined SHM. At that time, I knew nothing about the society, but that soon changed. My fellowship required me to attend the annual meeting and submit an abstract in the RIV competition, which was an extremely valuable experience for me. Not only was I blown away by the meeting, but my poster won the clinical vignette competition, as well! Needless to say, I’ve been an SHM member ever since.

What prompted you to join the Membership Committee? Can you discuss some of the projects the committee is currently working on?

Because SHM has done so much for my career as a hospitalist, I’ve tried to give back by volunteering on committees. After spending several years on the Early Career Hospitalist Committee, I felt the transition to the Membership Committee was a natural fit. Because SHM membership had been growing every year, our committee felt some pressure to keep this trend going. Thankfully, we have continued to see growth each year in every membership category.

Our committee has been working on several projects. One of the key demographics we have been targeting is the resident member. Residents play a significant role in the future of hospital medicine, as well as SHM membership. We are developing ways to reach out to residency program directors – particularly those running a hospital medicine track – to find ways they can benefit from SHM’s educational offerings. Additionally, our committee has been discussing ways to attract international members to SHM. Because hospital medicine is quite developed in the United States, we believe we have much to offer to hospitalists around the world.

Tell TH about your involvement with SHM’s Michigan Chapter. What does a typical chapter meeting entail?

A few years ago, at the end of SHM’s annual meeting, several of my hospital medicine colleagues in southeast Michigan happened to be on the same flight home. At the departure gate in the airport, we all agreed we should start an SHM chapter. After drawing straws, it was decided that I would be chapter president for our inaugural year. In a few short years, our chapter has grown into one of the largest in the country.

As for a typical meeting, each starts with a cocktail hour to encourage our members to network. We have a guest speaker, who presents on a hospital medicine topic, and then, we end the evening with a business meeting. We encourage students and residents to attend. More recently, we’ve been using interactive technology to broadcast our meetings to large hospital medicine groups in the western and northern parts of the state. Our chapter was thrilled to learn that we’d won the Outstanding Chapter award this year!

What value do you find in connecting with hospital medicine professionals at the local level?

Whether it’s a hospitalist working at a large, tertiary care center or one working in a small rural setting, it seems we all face similar challenges.

As a chapter, we can pull together our resources to address these issues. Furthermore, we have the ability to reach out to more trainees and show them what hospital medicine is all about. Our chapter has been able to partially fund both medical students and residents so they could attend SHM’s annual meeting. I’m always amazed at what I can learn from other hospitalists – in the state of Michigan and beyond.
 

 

 

Find a chapter near you and get involved at the local level at hospitalmedicine.org/chapters .

Felicia Steele is SHM’s communications coordinator.

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Here’s what’s trending at SHM

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The latest news about upcoming events, new programs, and SHM initiatives

 

HM17 On Demand now available

Couldn’t make it to Las Vegas for SHM’s annual meeting, Hospital Medicine 2017? HM17 On Demand gives you access to over 80 online audio and slide recordings from the hottest tracks, including clinical updates, rapid fire, pediatrics, comanagement, quality, and high-value care.

Additionally, you can earn up to 70 American Medical Association Physician Recognition Award Category 1 Credit(s) and up to 30 American Board of Internal Medicine Maintenance of Certification credits. HM17 attendees can also benefit by earning additional credits on the sessions you missed out on.

To easily access content through SHM’s Learning Portal, visit shmlearningportal.org/hm17-demand to learn more.
 

Chapter Excellence Awards

SHM is proud to recognize outstanding chapters for the fourth annual Chapter Excellence Awards. Each year, chapters strive to demonstrate growth, sustenance, and innovation within their chapter activities.

View more at www.hospitalmedicine.org/chapterexcellence. Please join SHM in congratulating the following chapters on their success!

Silver Chapters

Boston Association of Academic Hospital Medicine (BAAHM)

Charlotte Metro Area

Houston

Kentucky

Los Angeles

Minnesota

North Jersey

Pacific Northwest

Philadelphia Tri-State

Rocky Mountain

San Francisco Bay

South Central PA

Gold Chapters

New Mexico

Wiregrass

Platinum Chapters

IowaMaryland

Michigan

NYC/Westchester

St. Louis

Outstanding Chapter of the Year

Michigan

Rising Star Chapter

Wiregrass
 

Student Hospitalist Scholar grant winners

SHM’s Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant provides funds with which medical students can conduct mentored scholarly projects related to quality improvement and patient safety in the field of hospital medicine. The program offers a summer and a longitudinal option.

Congratulations to the 2017-2018 Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant recipients:Summer Program

Anton Garazha

Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science

“Effectiveness of Communication During ICU to Ward Transfer and Association with Medical ICU Readmission”

Cole Hirschfeld

Weill Cornell Medical College

“The Role of Diagnostic Bone Biopsies in the Management of Osteomyelitis”

Farah Hussain

University of Cincinnati College of Medicine

“Better Understanding Clinical Deterioration in a Children’s Hospital”

Longitudinal Program

Monisha Bhatia

Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

“Using Electronic Medical Record Phenotypic Data to Predict Discharge Destination”

Victor Ekuta

University of California, San Diego School of Medicine

“Reducing CAUTI with Noninvasive UC Alternatives and Measure-vention”

Yun Li

Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth

“Developing and implementing clinical pathway(s) for hospitalized injection drug users due to injection-related infection sequelae”

Learn more about the Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant at hospitalmedicine.org/scholargrant.

SPARK ONE: A tool to teach residents

SPARK ONE is a comprehensive, online self-assessment tool created specifically for hospital medicine professionals. The activity contains 450+ vignette-style multiple-choice questions covering 100% of the American Board of Internal Medicine’s Focused Practice in Hospital Medicine (FPHM) exam blueprint. This online tool can be utilized as a training mechanism for resident education on hospital medicine.

SHM Trending News and Notes

As a benefit of SHM membership, residents will receive a free subscription. SPARK ONE provides in-depth review of the following content areas:

  • Cardiology
  • Pulmonary Disease and Critical Care Medicine
  • Gastroenterology and Hepatology
  • Nephrology and Urology
  • Endocrinology
  • Hematology and Oncology
  • Neurology
  • Allergy, Immunology, Dermatology, Rheumatology and Transitions in Care
  • Palliative Care, Medical Ethics and Decision-making
  • Perioperative Medicine and Consultative Co-management
  • Patient Safety
  • Quality, Cost and Clinical Reasoning

“SPARK ONE provides a unique platform for academic institutions, engaging learners in directed learning sessions, reinforcing teaching points as we encounter specific conditions.” – Rachel E. Thompson, MD, MPH, SFHM

Visit hospitalmedicine.org/sparkone to learn more.
 

Sharpen your coding with the updated CODE-H

SHM’s Coding Optimally by Documenting Effectively for Hospitalists (CODE-H) has launched an updated program with all new content. It will now include eight recorded webinar sessions presented by expert faculty, downloadable resources, and an interactive discussion forum through the Hospital Medicine Exchange (HMX), enabling participants to ask questions and learn the most relevant best practices.

Following each webinar, learners will have the opportunity to complete an evaluation to redeem continuing medical education credits.

Webinars in the series include:
 

  • E/M Basics Part I
  • E/M Basics Part II
  • Utilizing Other Providers in Your Practice
  • EMR and Mitigating Risk
  • Putting Time into Critical Care Documentation
  • Time Based Services
  • Navigating the Rules for Hospitalist Visits
  • Challenges of Concurrent Care

To purchase CODE-H, visit hospitalmedicine.org/CODEH. If you have questions about the new program, please contact education@hospitalmedicine.org.
 

Set yourself apart as a Fellow in Hospital Medicine

The Fellow in Hospital Medicine (FHM) designation signals your commitment to the hospital medicine specialty and dedication to quality improvement and patient safety. This designation is available for hospital medicine practitioners, including practice administrators, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants. If you meet the prerequisites and complete the requirements, which are rooted in the Core Competencies in Hospital Medicine, you can apply for this prestigious designation and join more than 1,100 FHMs who are dedicated to the field of hospital medicine. Learn more and apply at hospitalmedicine.org/fellow.

 

 

New guide & modules on multimodal pain strategies for postoperative pain management

Pain management can pose multiple challenges in the acute care setting for hospitalists and front-line prescribers. While their first priority is to optimally manage pain in their patients, they also face the challenges of treating diverse patient populations, managing patient expectations, and considering how pain control and perceptions affect Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems scores. Furthermore, because of the ongoing opioid epidemic, prescribers must ensure that pain is managed responsibly and ethically.

To address these issues, SHM developed a guide to address how to work in an interdisciplinary team, identify impediments to implementation, and provide examples of appropriate pain management. In accompaniment with this Multimodal Pain Strategies Guide for Postoperative Pain Management, there are three modules presented by the authors which supplement the electronic guide.

To download the guide or view the modules, visit hospitalmedicine.org/pain.
 

Proven excellence through a unique education style: Academic Hospitalist Academy

Don’t miss the eighth annual Academic Hospitalist Academy (AHA), Sept. 25-28, 2017, at the Lakeway Resort and Spa in Austin, Texas. AHA attendees experience an energizing, interactive learning environment featuring didactics, small-group exercise and skill-building breakout sessions. Each full day of learning is facilitated by leading clinician-educators, hospitalist researchers, and clinical administrators in a 1 to 10 faculty to student ratio.

The Principal Goals of the Academy are to:

  • Develop junior academic hospitalists as the premier teachers and educational leaders at their institutions
  • Help academic hospitalists develop scholarly work and increase scholarly output
  • Enhance awareness of the value of quality improvement and patient safety work
  • Support academic promotion of all attendees

Don’t miss out on this unique, hands-on experience. Register before July 18, 2017, to receive the early-bird rates. Visit academichospitalist.org to learn more.
 

Choosing Wisely Case Study compendium now available

The Choosing Wisely Case Study Competition, hosted by SHM, sought submissions from hospitalists on innovative improvement initiatives implemented in their respective institutions. These initiatives reflect and promote movement toward reducing unnecessary medical tests and procedures and changing a culture that dictates, “More care is better care.”

Submissions were judged by the Choosing Wisely Subcommittee, a panel of SHM members, under adult and pediatric categories. One grand prize winner and three honorable mentions were selected from these categories. The compendium includes these case studies along with additional exemplary submissions.

View the Choosing Wisely Case Study Compendium at hospitalmedicine.org/choosingwisely.
 

Strengthen your interactions with the 5 Rs of Cultural Humility

Look inside this issue for your 5 Rs of Cultural Humility pocket card. It can be easily referenced on rounds and shared with colleagues. We hope to achieve heightened awareness of effective interactions. In addition to the definitions of each of the Rs, the card features questions to ask yourself before, during, and after every interaction to aid in attaining cultural humility.

For more information, visit hospitalmedicine.org/5Rs.

Brett Radler is communications specialist at the Society of Hospital Medicine.

Publications
Topics
Sections
The latest news about upcoming events, new programs, and SHM initiatives
The latest news about upcoming events, new programs, and SHM initiatives

 

HM17 On Demand now available

Couldn’t make it to Las Vegas for SHM’s annual meeting, Hospital Medicine 2017? HM17 On Demand gives you access to over 80 online audio and slide recordings from the hottest tracks, including clinical updates, rapid fire, pediatrics, comanagement, quality, and high-value care.

Additionally, you can earn up to 70 American Medical Association Physician Recognition Award Category 1 Credit(s) and up to 30 American Board of Internal Medicine Maintenance of Certification credits. HM17 attendees can also benefit by earning additional credits on the sessions you missed out on.

To easily access content through SHM’s Learning Portal, visit shmlearningportal.org/hm17-demand to learn more.
 

Chapter Excellence Awards

SHM is proud to recognize outstanding chapters for the fourth annual Chapter Excellence Awards. Each year, chapters strive to demonstrate growth, sustenance, and innovation within their chapter activities.

View more at www.hospitalmedicine.org/chapterexcellence. Please join SHM in congratulating the following chapters on their success!

Silver Chapters

Boston Association of Academic Hospital Medicine (BAAHM)

Charlotte Metro Area

Houston

Kentucky

Los Angeles

Minnesota

North Jersey

Pacific Northwest

Philadelphia Tri-State

Rocky Mountain

San Francisco Bay

South Central PA

Gold Chapters

New Mexico

Wiregrass

Platinum Chapters

IowaMaryland

Michigan

NYC/Westchester

St. Louis

Outstanding Chapter of the Year

Michigan

Rising Star Chapter

Wiregrass
 

Student Hospitalist Scholar grant winners

SHM’s Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant provides funds with which medical students can conduct mentored scholarly projects related to quality improvement and patient safety in the field of hospital medicine. The program offers a summer and a longitudinal option.

Congratulations to the 2017-2018 Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant recipients:Summer Program

Anton Garazha

Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science

“Effectiveness of Communication During ICU to Ward Transfer and Association with Medical ICU Readmission”

Cole Hirschfeld

Weill Cornell Medical College

“The Role of Diagnostic Bone Biopsies in the Management of Osteomyelitis”

Farah Hussain

University of Cincinnati College of Medicine

“Better Understanding Clinical Deterioration in a Children’s Hospital”

Longitudinal Program

Monisha Bhatia

Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

“Using Electronic Medical Record Phenotypic Data to Predict Discharge Destination”

Victor Ekuta

University of California, San Diego School of Medicine

“Reducing CAUTI with Noninvasive UC Alternatives and Measure-vention”

Yun Li

Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth

“Developing and implementing clinical pathway(s) for hospitalized injection drug users due to injection-related infection sequelae”

Learn more about the Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant at hospitalmedicine.org/scholargrant.

SPARK ONE: A tool to teach residents

SPARK ONE is a comprehensive, online self-assessment tool created specifically for hospital medicine professionals. The activity contains 450+ vignette-style multiple-choice questions covering 100% of the American Board of Internal Medicine’s Focused Practice in Hospital Medicine (FPHM) exam blueprint. This online tool can be utilized as a training mechanism for resident education on hospital medicine.

SHM Trending News and Notes

As a benefit of SHM membership, residents will receive a free subscription. SPARK ONE provides in-depth review of the following content areas:

  • Cardiology
  • Pulmonary Disease and Critical Care Medicine
  • Gastroenterology and Hepatology
  • Nephrology and Urology
  • Endocrinology
  • Hematology and Oncology
  • Neurology
  • Allergy, Immunology, Dermatology, Rheumatology and Transitions in Care
  • Palliative Care, Medical Ethics and Decision-making
  • Perioperative Medicine and Consultative Co-management
  • Patient Safety
  • Quality, Cost and Clinical Reasoning

“SPARK ONE provides a unique platform for academic institutions, engaging learners in directed learning sessions, reinforcing teaching points as we encounter specific conditions.” – Rachel E. Thompson, MD, MPH, SFHM

Visit hospitalmedicine.org/sparkone to learn more.
 

Sharpen your coding with the updated CODE-H

SHM’s Coding Optimally by Documenting Effectively for Hospitalists (CODE-H) has launched an updated program with all new content. It will now include eight recorded webinar sessions presented by expert faculty, downloadable resources, and an interactive discussion forum through the Hospital Medicine Exchange (HMX), enabling participants to ask questions and learn the most relevant best practices.

Following each webinar, learners will have the opportunity to complete an evaluation to redeem continuing medical education credits.

Webinars in the series include:
 

  • E/M Basics Part I
  • E/M Basics Part II
  • Utilizing Other Providers in Your Practice
  • EMR and Mitigating Risk
  • Putting Time into Critical Care Documentation
  • Time Based Services
  • Navigating the Rules for Hospitalist Visits
  • Challenges of Concurrent Care

To purchase CODE-H, visit hospitalmedicine.org/CODEH. If you have questions about the new program, please contact education@hospitalmedicine.org.
 

Set yourself apart as a Fellow in Hospital Medicine

The Fellow in Hospital Medicine (FHM) designation signals your commitment to the hospital medicine specialty and dedication to quality improvement and patient safety. This designation is available for hospital medicine practitioners, including practice administrators, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants. If you meet the prerequisites and complete the requirements, which are rooted in the Core Competencies in Hospital Medicine, you can apply for this prestigious designation and join more than 1,100 FHMs who are dedicated to the field of hospital medicine. Learn more and apply at hospitalmedicine.org/fellow.

 

 

New guide & modules on multimodal pain strategies for postoperative pain management

Pain management can pose multiple challenges in the acute care setting for hospitalists and front-line prescribers. While their first priority is to optimally manage pain in their patients, they also face the challenges of treating diverse patient populations, managing patient expectations, and considering how pain control and perceptions affect Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems scores. Furthermore, because of the ongoing opioid epidemic, prescribers must ensure that pain is managed responsibly and ethically.

To address these issues, SHM developed a guide to address how to work in an interdisciplinary team, identify impediments to implementation, and provide examples of appropriate pain management. In accompaniment with this Multimodal Pain Strategies Guide for Postoperative Pain Management, there are three modules presented by the authors which supplement the electronic guide.

To download the guide or view the modules, visit hospitalmedicine.org/pain.
 

Proven excellence through a unique education style: Academic Hospitalist Academy

Don’t miss the eighth annual Academic Hospitalist Academy (AHA), Sept. 25-28, 2017, at the Lakeway Resort and Spa in Austin, Texas. AHA attendees experience an energizing, interactive learning environment featuring didactics, small-group exercise and skill-building breakout sessions. Each full day of learning is facilitated by leading clinician-educators, hospitalist researchers, and clinical administrators in a 1 to 10 faculty to student ratio.

The Principal Goals of the Academy are to:

  • Develop junior academic hospitalists as the premier teachers and educational leaders at their institutions
  • Help academic hospitalists develop scholarly work and increase scholarly output
  • Enhance awareness of the value of quality improvement and patient safety work
  • Support academic promotion of all attendees

Don’t miss out on this unique, hands-on experience. Register before July 18, 2017, to receive the early-bird rates. Visit academichospitalist.org to learn more.
 

Choosing Wisely Case Study compendium now available

The Choosing Wisely Case Study Competition, hosted by SHM, sought submissions from hospitalists on innovative improvement initiatives implemented in their respective institutions. These initiatives reflect and promote movement toward reducing unnecessary medical tests and procedures and changing a culture that dictates, “More care is better care.”

Submissions were judged by the Choosing Wisely Subcommittee, a panel of SHM members, under adult and pediatric categories. One grand prize winner and three honorable mentions were selected from these categories. The compendium includes these case studies along with additional exemplary submissions.

View the Choosing Wisely Case Study Compendium at hospitalmedicine.org/choosingwisely.
 

Strengthen your interactions with the 5 Rs of Cultural Humility

Look inside this issue for your 5 Rs of Cultural Humility pocket card. It can be easily referenced on rounds and shared with colleagues. We hope to achieve heightened awareness of effective interactions. In addition to the definitions of each of the Rs, the card features questions to ask yourself before, during, and after every interaction to aid in attaining cultural humility.

For more information, visit hospitalmedicine.org/5Rs.

Brett Radler is communications specialist at the Society of Hospital Medicine.

 

HM17 On Demand now available

Couldn’t make it to Las Vegas for SHM’s annual meeting, Hospital Medicine 2017? HM17 On Demand gives you access to over 80 online audio and slide recordings from the hottest tracks, including clinical updates, rapid fire, pediatrics, comanagement, quality, and high-value care.

Additionally, you can earn up to 70 American Medical Association Physician Recognition Award Category 1 Credit(s) and up to 30 American Board of Internal Medicine Maintenance of Certification credits. HM17 attendees can also benefit by earning additional credits on the sessions you missed out on.

To easily access content through SHM’s Learning Portal, visit shmlearningportal.org/hm17-demand to learn more.
 

Chapter Excellence Awards

SHM is proud to recognize outstanding chapters for the fourth annual Chapter Excellence Awards. Each year, chapters strive to demonstrate growth, sustenance, and innovation within their chapter activities.

View more at www.hospitalmedicine.org/chapterexcellence. Please join SHM in congratulating the following chapters on their success!

Silver Chapters

Boston Association of Academic Hospital Medicine (BAAHM)

Charlotte Metro Area

Houston

Kentucky

Los Angeles

Minnesota

North Jersey

Pacific Northwest

Philadelphia Tri-State

Rocky Mountain

San Francisco Bay

South Central PA

Gold Chapters

New Mexico

Wiregrass

Platinum Chapters

IowaMaryland

Michigan

NYC/Westchester

St. Louis

Outstanding Chapter of the Year

Michigan

Rising Star Chapter

Wiregrass
 

Student Hospitalist Scholar grant winners

SHM’s Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant provides funds with which medical students can conduct mentored scholarly projects related to quality improvement and patient safety in the field of hospital medicine. The program offers a summer and a longitudinal option.

Congratulations to the 2017-2018 Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant recipients:Summer Program

Anton Garazha

Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science

“Effectiveness of Communication During ICU to Ward Transfer and Association with Medical ICU Readmission”

Cole Hirschfeld

Weill Cornell Medical College

“The Role of Diagnostic Bone Biopsies in the Management of Osteomyelitis”

Farah Hussain

University of Cincinnati College of Medicine

“Better Understanding Clinical Deterioration in a Children’s Hospital”

Longitudinal Program

Monisha Bhatia

Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

“Using Electronic Medical Record Phenotypic Data to Predict Discharge Destination”

Victor Ekuta

University of California, San Diego School of Medicine

“Reducing CAUTI with Noninvasive UC Alternatives and Measure-vention”

Yun Li

Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth

“Developing and implementing clinical pathway(s) for hospitalized injection drug users due to injection-related infection sequelae”

Learn more about the Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant at hospitalmedicine.org/scholargrant.

SPARK ONE: A tool to teach residents

SPARK ONE is a comprehensive, online self-assessment tool created specifically for hospital medicine professionals. The activity contains 450+ vignette-style multiple-choice questions covering 100% of the American Board of Internal Medicine’s Focused Practice in Hospital Medicine (FPHM) exam blueprint. This online tool can be utilized as a training mechanism for resident education on hospital medicine.

SHM Trending News and Notes

As a benefit of SHM membership, residents will receive a free subscription. SPARK ONE provides in-depth review of the following content areas:

  • Cardiology
  • Pulmonary Disease and Critical Care Medicine
  • Gastroenterology and Hepatology
  • Nephrology and Urology
  • Endocrinology
  • Hematology and Oncology
  • Neurology
  • Allergy, Immunology, Dermatology, Rheumatology and Transitions in Care
  • Palliative Care, Medical Ethics and Decision-making
  • Perioperative Medicine and Consultative Co-management
  • Patient Safety
  • Quality, Cost and Clinical Reasoning

“SPARK ONE provides a unique platform for academic institutions, engaging learners in directed learning sessions, reinforcing teaching points as we encounter specific conditions.” – Rachel E. Thompson, MD, MPH, SFHM

Visit hospitalmedicine.org/sparkone to learn more.
 

Sharpen your coding with the updated CODE-H

SHM’s Coding Optimally by Documenting Effectively for Hospitalists (CODE-H) has launched an updated program with all new content. It will now include eight recorded webinar sessions presented by expert faculty, downloadable resources, and an interactive discussion forum through the Hospital Medicine Exchange (HMX), enabling participants to ask questions and learn the most relevant best practices.

Following each webinar, learners will have the opportunity to complete an evaluation to redeem continuing medical education credits.

Webinars in the series include:
 

  • E/M Basics Part I
  • E/M Basics Part II
  • Utilizing Other Providers in Your Practice
  • EMR and Mitigating Risk
  • Putting Time into Critical Care Documentation
  • Time Based Services
  • Navigating the Rules for Hospitalist Visits
  • Challenges of Concurrent Care

To purchase CODE-H, visit hospitalmedicine.org/CODEH. If you have questions about the new program, please contact education@hospitalmedicine.org.
 

Set yourself apart as a Fellow in Hospital Medicine

The Fellow in Hospital Medicine (FHM) designation signals your commitment to the hospital medicine specialty and dedication to quality improvement and patient safety. This designation is available for hospital medicine practitioners, including practice administrators, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants. If you meet the prerequisites and complete the requirements, which are rooted in the Core Competencies in Hospital Medicine, you can apply for this prestigious designation and join more than 1,100 FHMs who are dedicated to the field of hospital medicine. Learn more and apply at hospitalmedicine.org/fellow.

 

 

New guide & modules on multimodal pain strategies for postoperative pain management

Pain management can pose multiple challenges in the acute care setting for hospitalists and front-line prescribers. While their first priority is to optimally manage pain in their patients, they also face the challenges of treating diverse patient populations, managing patient expectations, and considering how pain control and perceptions affect Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems scores. Furthermore, because of the ongoing opioid epidemic, prescribers must ensure that pain is managed responsibly and ethically.

To address these issues, SHM developed a guide to address how to work in an interdisciplinary team, identify impediments to implementation, and provide examples of appropriate pain management. In accompaniment with this Multimodal Pain Strategies Guide for Postoperative Pain Management, there are three modules presented by the authors which supplement the electronic guide.

To download the guide or view the modules, visit hospitalmedicine.org/pain.
 

Proven excellence through a unique education style: Academic Hospitalist Academy

Don’t miss the eighth annual Academic Hospitalist Academy (AHA), Sept. 25-28, 2017, at the Lakeway Resort and Spa in Austin, Texas. AHA attendees experience an energizing, interactive learning environment featuring didactics, small-group exercise and skill-building breakout sessions. Each full day of learning is facilitated by leading clinician-educators, hospitalist researchers, and clinical administrators in a 1 to 10 faculty to student ratio.

The Principal Goals of the Academy are to:

  • Develop junior academic hospitalists as the premier teachers and educational leaders at their institutions
  • Help academic hospitalists develop scholarly work and increase scholarly output
  • Enhance awareness of the value of quality improvement and patient safety work
  • Support academic promotion of all attendees

Don’t miss out on this unique, hands-on experience. Register before July 18, 2017, to receive the early-bird rates. Visit academichospitalist.org to learn more.
 

Choosing Wisely Case Study compendium now available

The Choosing Wisely Case Study Competition, hosted by SHM, sought submissions from hospitalists on innovative improvement initiatives implemented in their respective institutions. These initiatives reflect and promote movement toward reducing unnecessary medical tests and procedures and changing a culture that dictates, “More care is better care.”

Submissions were judged by the Choosing Wisely Subcommittee, a panel of SHM members, under adult and pediatric categories. One grand prize winner and three honorable mentions were selected from these categories. The compendium includes these case studies along with additional exemplary submissions.

View the Choosing Wisely Case Study Compendium at hospitalmedicine.org/choosingwisely.
 

Strengthen your interactions with the 5 Rs of Cultural Humility

Look inside this issue for your 5 Rs of Cultural Humility pocket card. It can be easily referenced on rounds and shared with colleagues. We hope to achieve heightened awareness of effective interactions. In addition to the definitions of each of the Rs, the card features questions to ask yourself before, during, and after every interaction to aid in attaining cultural humility.

For more information, visit hospitalmedicine.org/5Rs.

Brett Radler is communications specialist at the Society of Hospital Medicine.

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SHM group membership strengthens teams, builds leaders at iNDIGO

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When it comes to developing, maintaining, and growing an effective hospital medicine team, James W. Levy, PA-C, SFHM, certified physician assistant and managing partner of iNDIGO Health Partners, credits much of the company’s success to a decision to purchase a group SHM membership for its hospital medicine team. Recognizing the value that membership brings, it was an easy decision to extend a group membership to iNDIGO’s hospital medicine team.

“As a company, we are strong supporters of SHM and its mission,” Mr. Levy said. “This seemed like the best way we could support SHM and allow all our providers access to all the personal and professional benefits of SHM membership.”

Mr. James W. Levy
Levy says that SHM membership helps new providers identify themselves as hospitalists and develop the leadership skills necessary to build and grow an effective team. To iNDIGO, this also means integrating NPs and PAs into hospitalist practice. Not only does it fortify the iNDIGO team, but it demonstrates to new members that iNDIGO is committed to the hospital medicine specialty and providing its employees with resources to help them develop their hospital medicine career pathway and provide exceptional patient care.

“We’re strong believers in aggressively fostering the deployment of PAs and NPs in hospital medicine, and, as a PA, I value SHM’s efforts to be a ‘big tent’ organization,” Levy said. “SHM, among professional societies, has been a model of inclusiveness, of encouraging all providers, and [for] providing a forum for like-minded people to collaborate.”

Dr. Jacques Burgess
This decision has paid off for iNDIGO, whose providers appreciate the opportunities afforded to them through SHM membership. “SHM’s Leadership Academy has been something that our group has participated in for years,” explained Jacques Burgess, MD, MPH, director of the Pediatric Hospitalist Program at Munson Medical Center in Traverse City, Mich. “Not only has the course been valuable for us, regardless of where we are in our careers, but, by attending as a group, we can use the time to gather and talk about how we are going to apply what we’ve learned to actually lead change.”

Even prior to the group membership, Dr. Burgess was an active SHM member, citing SHM as a key driver in his development of iNDIGO’s pediatric hospitalist team. He describes how The Pediatric Hospital Medicine Core Competencies, a publication outlining the key clinical skills and objectives for a pediatric hospital medicine team, continues to be critical in onboarding new colleagues and strengthening teams in community hospitals.

“In a community hospital, we’re somewhat removed from the cutting-edge research and programs being implemented at larger academic institutions,” Dr. Burgess said. “SHM provides that information to us and allows us to see trends and connect with colleagues in larger programs.”

Through SHM’s implementation toolkits and online forums, such as the Hospital Medicine Exchange (HMX), iNDIGO hospitalists have access to resources from leaders in the field that are not typically available in a community hospital. Over the last 2 years, Dr. Burgess’ team has implemented the Pediatric Early Warning System (PEWS), a scoring system presented at Hospital Medicine 2013 to aid in the identification of hospitalized patients at risk for clinical deterioration.

It is not only SHM’s resources that enhance iNDIGO’s hospital medicine practice. “As a former member of SHM’s Public Policy Committee, I especially respect the advocacy that SHM does so effectively in Washington to ensure that federal policy being developed positively affects hospitalists and the patients they serve,” Levy said. SHM’s recent advocacy efforts include work on observation status as well as physician payment and the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA).

iNDIGO continues to seek out partnerships with SHM at a local and national level, bringing best practices and innovative ideas – like a flexible scheduling system not reflective of the typical 7-on/7-off hospitalist schedule – to SHM and its members throughout the country.

From quality improvement and leadership training to advocacy and education, SHM helps hospital medicine professionals to build successful teams. “One of our goals is to develop great teams rather than just staffing programs,” Levy said. “Great teams need great leaders, and SHM’s resources promote and strengthen our on-the-ground leaders.”

To learn more about the membership opportunities available to you and your hospital medicine team, visit joinshm.org.     

Brett Radler is SHM’s communications specialist.

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When it comes to developing, maintaining, and growing an effective hospital medicine team, James W. Levy, PA-C, SFHM, certified physician assistant and managing partner of iNDIGO Health Partners, credits much of the company’s success to a decision to purchase a group SHM membership for its hospital medicine team. Recognizing the value that membership brings, it was an easy decision to extend a group membership to iNDIGO’s hospital medicine team.

“As a company, we are strong supporters of SHM and its mission,” Mr. Levy said. “This seemed like the best way we could support SHM and allow all our providers access to all the personal and professional benefits of SHM membership.”

Mr. James W. Levy
Levy says that SHM membership helps new providers identify themselves as hospitalists and develop the leadership skills necessary to build and grow an effective team. To iNDIGO, this also means integrating NPs and PAs into hospitalist practice. Not only does it fortify the iNDIGO team, but it demonstrates to new members that iNDIGO is committed to the hospital medicine specialty and providing its employees with resources to help them develop their hospital medicine career pathway and provide exceptional patient care.

“We’re strong believers in aggressively fostering the deployment of PAs and NPs in hospital medicine, and, as a PA, I value SHM’s efforts to be a ‘big tent’ organization,” Levy said. “SHM, among professional societies, has been a model of inclusiveness, of encouraging all providers, and [for] providing a forum for like-minded people to collaborate.”

Dr. Jacques Burgess
This decision has paid off for iNDIGO, whose providers appreciate the opportunities afforded to them through SHM membership. “SHM’s Leadership Academy has been something that our group has participated in for years,” explained Jacques Burgess, MD, MPH, director of the Pediatric Hospitalist Program at Munson Medical Center in Traverse City, Mich. “Not only has the course been valuable for us, regardless of where we are in our careers, but, by attending as a group, we can use the time to gather and talk about how we are going to apply what we’ve learned to actually lead change.”

Even prior to the group membership, Dr. Burgess was an active SHM member, citing SHM as a key driver in his development of iNDIGO’s pediatric hospitalist team. He describes how The Pediatric Hospital Medicine Core Competencies, a publication outlining the key clinical skills and objectives for a pediatric hospital medicine team, continues to be critical in onboarding new colleagues and strengthening teams in community hospitals.

“In a community hospital, we’re somewhat removed from the cutting-edge research and programs being implemented at larger academic institutions,” Dr. Burgess said. “SHM provides that information to us and allows us to see trends and connect with colleagues in larger programs.”

Through SHM’s implementation toolkits and online forums, such as the Hospital Medicine Exchange (HMX), iNDIGO hospitalists have access to resources from leaders in the field that are not typically available in a community hospital. Over the last 2 years, Dr. Burgess’ team has implemented the Pediatric Early Warning System (PEWS), a scoring system presented at Hospital Medicine 2013 to aid in the identification of hospitalized patients at risk for clinical deterioration.

It is not only SHM’s resources that enhance iNDIGO’s hospital medicine practice. “As a former member of SHM’s Public Policy Committee, I especially respect the advocacy that SHM does so effectively in Washington to ensure that federal policy being developed positively affects hospitalists and the patients they serve,” Levy said. SHM’s recent advocacy efforts include work on observation status as well as physician payment and the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA).

iNDIGO continues to seek out partnerships with SHM at a local and national level, bringing best practices and innovative ideas – like a flexible scheduling system not reflective of the typical 7-on/7-off hospitalist schedule – to SHM and its members throughout the country.

From quality improvement and leadership training to advocacy and education, SHM helps hospital medicine professionals to build successful teams. “One of our goals is to develop great teams rather than just staffing programs,” Levy said. “Great teams need great leaders, and SHM’s resources promote and strengthen our on-the-ground leaders.”

To learn more about the membership opportunities available to you and your hospital medicine team, visit joinshm.org.     

Brett Radler is SHM’s communications specialist.

 

When it comes to developing, maintaining, and growing an effective hospital medicine team, James W. Levy, PA-C, SFHM, certified physician assistant and managing partner of iNDIGO Health Partners, credits much of the company’s success to a decision to purchase a group SHM membership for its hospital medicine team. Recognizing the value that membership brings, it was an easy decision to extend a group membership to iNDIGO’s hospital medicine team.

“As a company, we are strong supporters of SHM and its mission,” Mr. Levy said. “This seemed like the best way we could support SHM and allow all our providers access to all the personal and professional benefits of SHM membership.”

Mr. James W. Levy
Levy says that SHM membership helps new providers identify themselves as hospitalists and develop the leadership skills necessary to build and grow an effective team. To iNDIGO, this also means integrating NPs and PAs into hospitalist practice. Not only does it fortify the iNDIGO team, but it demonstrates to new members that iNDIGO is committed to the hospital medicine specialty and providing its employees with resources to help them develop their hospital medicine career pathway and provide exceptional patient care.

“We’re strong believers in aggressively fostering the deployment of PAs and NPs in hospital medicine, and, as a PA, I value SHM’s efforts to be a ‘big tent’ organization,” Levy said. “SHM, among professional societies, has been a model of inclusiveness, of encouraging all providers, and [for] providing a forum for like-minded people to collaborate.”

Dr. Jacques Burgess
This decision has paid off for iNDIGO, whose providers appreciate the opportunities afforded to them through SHM membership. “SHM’s Leadership Academy has been something that our group has participated in for years,” explained Jacques Burgess, MD, MPH, director of the Pediatric Hospitalist Program at Munson Medical Center in Traverse City, Mich. “Not only has the course been valuable for us, regardless of where we are in our careers, but, by attending as a group, we can use the time to gather and talk about how we are going to apply what we’ve learned to actually lead change.”

Even prior to the group membership, Dr. Burgess was an active SHM member, citing SHM as a key driver in his development of iNDIGO’s pediatric hospitalist team. He describes how The Pediatric Hospital Medicine Core Competencies, a publication outlining the key clinical skills and objectives for a pediatric hospital medicine team, continues to be critical in onboarding new colleagues and strengthening teams in community hospitals.

“In a community hospital, we’re somewhat removed from the cutting-edge research and programs being implemented at larger academic institutions,” Dr. Burgess said. “SHM provides that information to us and allows us to see trends and connect with colleagues in larger programs.”

Through SHM’s implementation toolkits and online forums, such as the Hospital Medicine Exchange (HMX), iNDIGO hospitalists have access to resources from leaders in the field that are not typically available in a community hospital. Over the last 2 years, Dr. Burgess’ team has implemented the Pediatric Early Warning System (PEWS), a scoring system presented at Hospital Medicine 2013 to aid in the identification of hospitalized patients at risk for clinical deterioration.

It is not only SHM’s resources that enhance iNDIGO’s hospital medicine practice. “As a former member of SHM’s Public Policy Committee, I especially respect the advocacy that SHM does so effectively in Washington to ensure that federal policy being developed positively affects hospitalists and the patients they serve,” Levy said. SHM’s recent advocacy efforts include work on observation status as well as physician payment and the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA).

iNDIGO continues to seek out partnerships with SHM at a local and national level, bringing best practices and innovative ideas – like a flexible scheduling system not reflective of the typical 7-on/7-off hospitalist schedule – to SHM and its members throughout the country.

From quality improvement and leadership training to advocacy and education, SHM helps hospital medicine professionals to build successful teams. “One of our goals is to develop great teams rather than just staffing programs,” Levy said. “Great teams need great leaders, and SHM’s resources promote and strengthen our on-the-ground leaders.”

To learn more about the membership opportunities available to you and your hospital medicine team, visit joinshm.org.     

Brett Radler is SHM’s communications specialist.

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Improve your glycemic control efforts with SHM’s GC eQUIPS program

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Tue, 05/03/2022 - 15:30

 

Inpatient hyperglycemia is a very common condition, affecting approximately 38% of patients in the non–intensive care unit setting.

Enhance the efficiency and reliability of your quality improvement efforts to close the gap between best practices and methods for caring for inpatients with hyperglycemia with SHM’s Glycemic Control (GC) Electronic Quality Improvement Program (eQUIPS). The GC eQUIPS program supports the development and implementation of GC programs at hospitals nationwide.

iStock/ThinkStock
Insulin syringes
This program offers 2-year access to a data center for performance tracking and benchmarking and aims to support your institution in:

  • Gaining understanding in the principles of glycemic control
  • Improving glycemic control data collection/analysis/and reporting
  • Building and obtaining approval for protocols/policies for glycemic control
  • Creating a culture for change and change management

When you enroll in the Glycemic Control eQUIPS, you’ll receive:

  • Data center for performance tracking. Helps track performance on project milestones and outcomes, and benchmark performance against comparison groups at your institution and other participating facilities.
  • Implementation toolkit. Provides stepwise instruction for improving glycemic control, preventing hypoglycemia and optimizing care of the inpatient with hyperglycemia and diabetes.
  • Online glycemic control toolkit. Includes clinical tools and interventions, research materials and literature review, informational papers and case studies, teaching slide sets, and more.
  • Online community and collaborative:

– Glycemic Control Library of site-created tools and documents allows you to view sample order sets and protocols, awareness campaigns, patient education materials, and various articles.

– National Discussion Forum lets you share professional questions and discuss topics related to the planning, implementation and evaluation of glycemic control interventions.

– Access to on-demand webinar, facilitated by national experts, topics include IV Insulin Management Strategies, Change Management and Introduction to Glycemic Control.



Join the webinar on June 28 from 1–2 p.m., ET, to receive additional information about SHM’s GC programs. Visit hospitalmedicine.org/gc to register or learn more. If you have questions on the program, please email Sara Platt at splatt@hospitalmedicine.org.
 

Brett Radler is communications specialist at the Society of Hospital Medicine.

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Inpatient hyperglycemia is a very common condition, affecting approximately 38% of patients in the non–intensive care unit setting.

Enhance the efficiency and reliability of your quality improvement efforts to close the gap between best practices and methods for caring for inpatients with hyperglycemia with SHM’s Glycemic Control (GC) Electronic Quality Improvement Program (eQUIPS). The GC eQUIPS program supports the development and implementation of GC programs at hospitals nationwide.

iStock/ThinkStock
Insulin syringes
This program offers 2-year access to a data center for performance tracking and benchmarking and aims to support your institution in:

  • Gaining understanding in the principles of glycemic control
  • Improving glycemic control data collection/analysis/and reporting
  • Building and obtaining approval for protocols/policies for glycemic control
  • Creating a culture for change and change management

When you enroll in the Glycemic Control eQUIPS, you’ll receive:

  • Data center for performance tracking. Helps track performance on project milestones and outcomes, and benchmark performance against comparison groups at your institution and other participating facilities.
  • Implementation toolkit. Provides stepwise instruction for improving glycemic control, preventing hypoglycemia and optimizing care of the inpatient with hyperglycemia and diabetes.
  • Online glycemic control toolkit. Includes clinical tools and interventions, research materials and literature review, informational papers and case studies, teaching slide sets, and more.
  • Online community and collaborative:

– Glycemic Control Library of site-created tools and documents allows you to view sample order sets and protocols, awareness campaigns, patient education materials, and various articles.

– National Discussion Forum lets you share professional questions and discuss topics related to the planning, implementation and evaluation of glycemic control interventions.

– Access to on-demand webinar, facilitated by national experts, topics include IV Insulin Management Strategies, Change Management and Introduction to Glycemic Control.



Join the webinar on June 28 from 1–2 p.m., ET, to receive additional information about SHM’s GC programs. Visit hospitalmedicine.org/gc to register or learn more. If you have questions on the program, please email Sara Platt at splatt@hospitalmedicine.org.
 

Brett Radler is communications specialist at the Society of Hospital Medicine.

 

Inpatient hyperglycemia is a very common condition, affecting approximately 38% of patients in the non–intensive care unit setting.

Enhance the efficiency and reliability of your quality improvement efforts to close the gap between best practices and methods for caring for inpatients with hyperglycemia with SHM’s Glycemic Control (GC) Electronic Quality Improvement Program (eQUIPS). The GC eQUIPS program supports the development and implementation of GC programs at hospitals nationwide.

iStock/ThinkStock
Insulin syringes
This program offers 2-year access to a data center for performance tracking and benchmarking and aims to support your institution in:

  • Gaining understanding in the principles of glycemic control
  • Improving glycemic control data collection/analysis/and reporting
  • Building and obtaining approval for protocols/policies for glycemic control
  • Creating a culture for change and change management

When you enroll in the Glycemic Control eQUIPS, you’ll receive:

  • Data center for performance tracking. Helps track performance on project milestones and outcomes, and benchmark performance against comparison groups at your institution and other participating facilities.
  • Implementation toolkit. Provides stepwise instruction for improving glycemic control, preventing hypoglycemia and optimizing care of the inpatient with hyperglycemia and diabetes.
  • Online glycemic control toolkit. Includes clinical tools and interventions, research materials and literature review, informational papers and case studies, teaching slide sets, and more.
  • Online community and collaborative:

– Glycemic Control Library of site-created tools and documents allows you to view sample order sets and protocols, awareness campaigns, patient education materials, and various articles.

– National Discussion Forum lets you share professional questions and discuss topics related to the planning, implementation and evaluation of glycemic control interventions.

– Access to on-demand webinar, facilitated by national experts, topics include IV Insulin Management Strategies, Change Management and Introduction to Glycemic Control.



Join the webinar on June 28 from 1–2 p.m., ET, to receive additional information about SHM’s GC programs. Visit hospitalmedicine.org/gc to register or learn more. If you have questions on the program, please email Sara Platt at splatt@hospitalmedicine.org.
 

Brett Radler is communications specialist at the Society of Hospital Medicine.

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Sneak Peek: The Hospital Leader Blog

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Fri, 09/14/2018 - 11:59
What should you be thinking about when joining an HMG?

 

We go to the altar together.

Last month, I wrote about onboarding and the important responsibility that everyone associated with a hospitalist program has to ensure that each new provider quickly comes to believe he or she made a terrific choice to join the group.

Upon reflection, it seems important to address the other side of this equation. I’m talking about the responsibilities that each candidate has when deciding whether to apply for a job, to interview, and to accept or reject a group’s offer.

Leslie Flores


The relationship between a hospitalist and the group he or she is part of is a lot like a marriage. Both parties go to the altar together, and the relationship is most likely to be successful when both enter it with their eyes open, having done their due diligence, and with an intention to align their interests and support each other. Here are some things every hospitalist should be thinking about as they assess potential job opportunities:

1. Be clear about your own needs, goals, and priorities. Before you embark on the job-hunting process, take time to do some careful introspection. My partner John Nelson is fond of saying that one of the key reasons many doctors choose to become hospitalists is that they prefer to “date” their practice rather than “marry” it. Which do you want? Are you willing to accept both the benefits and the costs of your preference? What are your short- and long-term career goals? In what part of the country do you want to live, and are you looking for an urban, suburban, or small-town environment? Is it important to be in a teaching setting? Are there specific pieces of work, such as ICU care or procedures, that you want to either pursue or avoid? What personal considerations, such as the needs of your spouse or kids, might limit your options? What structural aspects of the job are most important to you? Schedule? Daily workload? Compensation? I encourage you to think through these and other similar questions so that you are clear in your own mind about your personal job selection criteria. This will enable you to honestly articulate these things to others and to assess potential job opportunities in light of them.

Read the full text of this blog post at hospitalleader.org.
 

Leslie Flores is a founding partner at Nelson Flores Hospital Medicine Consultants, a consulting practice that has specialized in helping clients enhance the effectiveness and value of hospital medicine programs.

Also on The Hospital Leader …

Don’t Compare HM Group Part B Costs Hospital to Hospital by Brad Flansbaum, DO, MPH, MHM

Overcoming a Continued Physician Shortage by Danielle Scheurer, MD, MSCR, SFHM

Is Patient-Centered Care Bad for Resident Education? by Vineet Arora, MD, MPP, MHM

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What should you be thinking about when joining an HMG?
What should you be thinking about when joining an HMG?

 

We go to the altar together.

Last month, I wrote about onboarding and the important responsibility that everyone associated with a hospitalist program has to ensure that each new provider quickly comes to believe he or she made a terrific choice to join the group.

Upon reflection, it seems important to address the other side of this equation. I’m talking about the responsibilities that each candidate has when deciding whether to apply for a job, to interview, and to accept or reject a group’s offer.

Leslie Flores


The relationship between a hospitalist and the group he or she is part of is a lot like a marriage. Both parties go to the altar together, and the relationship is most likely to be successful when both enter it with their eyes open, having done their due diligence, and with an intention to align their interests and support each other. Here are some things every hospitalist should be thinking about as they assess potential job opportunities:

1. Be clear about your own needs, goals, and priorities. Before you embark on the job-hunting process, take time to do some careful introspection. My partner John Nelson is fond of saying that one of the key reasons many doctors choose to become hospitalists is that they prefer to “date” their practice rather than “marry” it. Which do you want? Are you willing to accept both the benefits and the costs of your preference? What are your short- and long-term career goals? In what part of the country do you want to live, and are you looking for an urban, suburban, or small-town environment? Is it important to be in a teaching setting? Are there specific pieces of work, such as ICU care or procedures, that you want to either pursue or avoid? What personal considerations, such as the needs of your spouse or kids, might limit your options? What structural aspects of the job are most important to you? Schedule? Daily workload? Compensation? I encourage you to think through these and other similar questions so that you are clear in your own mind about your personal job selection criteria. This will enable you to honestly articulate these things to others and to assess potential job opportunities in light of them.

Read the full text of this blog post at hospitalleader.org.
 

Leslie Flores is a founding partner at Nelson Flores Hospital Medicine Consultants, a consulting practice that has specialized in helping clients enhance the effectiveness and value of hospital medicine programs.

Also on The Hospital Leader …

Don’t Compare HM Group Part B Costs Hospital to Hospital by Brad Flansbaum, DO, MPH, MHM

Overcoming a Continued Physician Shortage by Danielle Scheurer, MD, MSCR, SFHM

Is Patient-Centered Care Bad for Resident Education? by Vineet Arora, MD, MPP, MHM

 

We go to the altar together.

Last month, I wrote about onboarding and the important responsibility that everyone associated with a hospitalist program has to ensure that each new provider quickly comes to believe he or she made a terrific choice to join the group.

Upon reflection, it seems important to address the other side of this equation. I’m talking about the responsibilities that each candidate has when deciding whether to apply for a job, to interview, and to accept or reject a group’s offer.

Leslie Flores


The relationship between a hospitalist and the group he or she is part of is a lot like a marriage. Both parties go to the altar together, and the relationship is most likely to be successful when both enter it with their eyes open, having done their due diligence, and with an intention to align their interests and support each other. Here are some things every hospitalist should be thinking about as they assess potential job opportunities:

1. Be clear about your own needs, goals, and priorities. Before you embark on the job-hunting process, take time to do some careful introspection. My partner John Nelson is fond of saying that one of the key reasons many doctors choose to become hospitalists is that they prefer to “date” their practice rather than “marry” it. Which do you want? Are you willing to accept both the benefits and the costs of your preference? What are your short- and long-term career goals? In what part of the country do you want to live, and are you looking for an urban, suburban, or small-town environment? Is it important to be in a teaching setting? Are there specific pieces of work, such as ICU care or procedures, that you want to either pursue or avoid? What personal considerations, such as the needs of your spouse or kids, might limit your options? What structural aspects of the job are most important to you? Schedule? Daily workload? Compensation? I encourage you to think through these and other similar questions so that you are clear in your own mind about your personal job selection criteria. This will enable you to honestly articulate these things to others and to assess potential job opportunities in light of them.

Read the full text of this blog post at hospitalleader.org.
 

Leslie Flores is a founding partner at Nelson Flores Hospital Medicine Consultants, a consulting practice that has specialized in helping clients enhance the effectiveness and value of hospital medicine programs.

Also on The Hospital Leader …

Don’t Compare HM Group Part B Costs Hospital to Hospital by Brad Flansbaum, DO, MPH, MHM

Overcoming a Continued Physician Shortage by Danielle Scheurer, MD, MSCR, SFHM

Is Patient-Centered Care Bad for Resident Education? by Vineet Arora, MD, MPP, MHM

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Nontraditional med student hopes to bridge common understanding gaps in health care

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 09/14/2018 - 11:59
SHM annual meeting inspires Ryan Gamlin with forward-looking programming

Editor’s note: Each month, SHM puts the spotlight on some of our most active members who are making substantial contributions to hospital medicine. Log on to www.hospitalmedicine.org/getinvolved for more information on how you can lend your expertise to help SHM improve the care of hospitalized patients.

 

This month, The Hospitalist spotlights Ryan Gamlin, a nontraditional student at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. Ryan was chosen to present his scientific abstract at SHM’s annual meeting in 2016, and encourages medical students to utilize SHM’s resources.
 

Tell TH about your unique pathway to medical school. How did you become an SHM member?

After 10 years working for and consulting to large health insurance companies, I was increasingly disillusioned with my work and the insurance industry and began feeling restless. When I considered possible avenues to help improve health and the health care delivery system, nothing held more intellectual or professional appeal than working on problems from the inside as a physician.

Ryan Gamlin
Many issues in our health care delivery and financing systems stem from lack of common understanding; physicians rarely speak the same language as administrators, who in turn do not speak the language of policy makers, etc. It’s my goal to serve as something of an ideas translator for these disparate groups within U.S. health care – physicians, administrators, and policy makers – helping them to make real progress, together, on the biggest challenges facing our health care system.

This effort to bridge these constituencies was my introduction to SHM. I was fortunate enough to be selected for the Health Innovations Scholars Program (HISP), an incredible quality improvement (QI) and leadership development program run by the hospital medicine group at University of Colorado. Conceived by Jeff Glasheen, MD, and now led by Read Pierce, MD, and Emily Gottenborg, MD, among many others, HISP brings eight medical students together to grow their QI toolkit and build leadership skills while providing the opportunity to design and run a meaningful QI project at the University of Colorado’s Anschutz medical campus. Many involved with this program – and others within the hospital medicine group at the University of Colorado – are leaders within SHM. With their encouragement, I submitted an abstract based on our HISP project and had the good fortune to share our work as a podium presentation at Hospital Medicine 2016 in San Diego.
 

Describe your experience at your first annual meeting. Why would you encourage medical students to attend?

Hospital Medicine 2016 inspired me. As someone interested in the intersection of clinical care and the care system itself, I was amazed at the depth and breadth of forward-looking programming and the amount of similarly-inclined people!

I wish that every medical student – irrespective of their intended specialty – could attend an SHM meeting to witness firsthand how a progressive, thriving professional society integrates members at all levels (student, resident, early-career faculty, and beyond) into their work of improving health care.
 

As a medical student, why is SHM beneficial to your professional growth as a future physician?

I see SHM as a “big tent” professional society that values insights and expertise from all types of physicians, with tangible commitments to support them in the types of system-improving work that are important to me in my career. SHM’s member resources and commitment to students’ and residents’ professional development are incomparable.

What are the biggest opportunities you see for yourself and other future physicians in the changing health care landscape?

The days when a physician’s job was limited to doctoring are over. Our generation of physicians must be great clinicians and work to heal a sick health care system. Now more than ever, physicians must be systems thinkers, designers, and fixers, equipped with the tools of quality improvement, design thinking, finance, and health policy.

Opportunities for meaningful improvement exist at every level, from care teams to health systems, the health care industry, and policy at every level. I would encourage those at any stage of their careers to find an area that they’re excited about or interested in. Seek out information and mentors in that area at their institutions or within SHM, and just start working on something.

There is a tremendous amount of uncertainty in health care; reimbursement paradigms are changing, clinical expectations only grow, and the forces competing for every doctor’s limited time seem unlimited. Uncertainty is uncomfortable, but it also means opportunity. I’m excited to see the commitment to leadership from SHM and so many of its members. It has never been more necessary.
 

 

 

Felicia Steele is SHM’s communications coordinator.

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SHM annual meeting inspires Ryan Gamlin with forward-looking programming
SHM annual meeting inspires Ryan Gamlin with forward-looking programming

Editor’s note: Each month, SHM puts the spotlight on some of our most active members who are making substantial contributions to hospital medicine. Log on to www.hospitalmedicine.org/getinvolved for more information on how you can lend your expertise to help SHM improve the care of hospitalized patients.

 

This month, The Hospitalist spotlights Ryan Gamlin, a nontraditional student at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. Ryan was chosen to present his scientific abstract at SHM’s annual meeting in 2016, and encourages medical students to utilize SHM’s resources.
 

Tell TH about your unique pathway to medical school. How did you become an SHM member?

After 10 years working for and consulting to large health insurance companies, I was increasingly disillusioned with my work and the insurance industry and began feeling restless. When I considered possible avenues to help improve health and the health care delivery system, nothing held more intellectual or professional appeal than working on problems from the inside as a physician.

Ryan Gamlin
Many issues in our health care delivery and financing systems stem from lack of common understanding; physicians rarely speak the same language as administrators, who in turn do not speak the language of policy makers, etc. It’s my goal to serve as something of an ideas translator for these disparate groups within U.S. health care – physicians, administrators, and policy makers – helping them to make real progress, together, on the biggest challenges facing our health care system.

This effort to bridge these constituencies was my introduction to SHM. I was fortunate enough to be selected for the Health Innovations Scholars Program (HISP), an incredible quality improvement (QI) and leadership development program run by the hospital medicine group at University of Colorado. Conceived by Jeff Glasheen, MD, and now led by Read Pierce, MD, and Emily Gottenborg, MD, among many others, HISP brings eight medical students together to grow their QI toolkit and build leadership skills while providing the opportunity to design and run a meaningful QI project at the University of Colorado’s Anschutz medical campus. Many involved with this program – and others within the hospital medicine group at the University of Colorado – are leaders within SHM. With their encouragement, I submitted an abstract based on our HISP project and had the good fortune to share our work as a podium presentation at Hospital Medicine 2016 in San Diego.
 

Describe your experience at your first annual meeting. Why would you encourage medical students to attend?

Hospital Medicine 2016 inspired me. As someone interested in the intersection of clinical care and the care system itself, I was amazed at the depth and breadth of forward-looking programming and the amount of similarly-inclined people!

I wish that every medical student – irrespective of their intended specialty – could attend an SHM meeting to witness firsthand how a progressive, thriving professional society integrates members at all levels (student, resident, early-career faculty, and beyond) into their work of improving health care.
 

As a medical student, why is SHM beneficial to your professional growth as a future physician?

I see SHM as a “big tent” professional society that values insights and expertise from all types of physicians, with tangible commitments to support them in the types of system-improving work that are important to me in my career. SHM’s member resources and commitment to students’ and residents’ professional development are incomparable.

What are the biggest opportunities you see for yourself and other future physicians in the changing health care landscape?

The days when a physician’s job was limited to doctoring are over. Our generation of physicians must be great clinicians and work to heal a sick health care system. Now more than ever, physicians must be systems thinkers, designers, and fixers, equipped with the tools of quality improvement, design thinking, finance, and health policy.

Opportunities for meaningful improvement exist at every level, from care teams to health systems, the health care industry, and policy at every level. I would encourage those at any stage of their careers to find an area that they’re excited about or interested in. Seek out information and mentors in that area at their institutions or within SHM, and just start working on something.

There is a tremendous amount of uncertainty in health care; reimbursement paradigms are changing, clinical expectations only grow, and the forces competing for every doctor’s limited time seem unlimited. Uncertainty is uncomfortable, but it also means opportunity. I’m excited to see the commitment to leadership from SHM and so many of its members. It has never been more necessary.
 

 

 

Felicia Steele is SHM’s communications coordinator.

Editor’s note: Each month, SHM puts the spotlight on some of our most active members who are making substantial contributions to hospital medicine. Log on to www.hospitalmedicine.org/getinvolved for more information on how you can lend your expertise to help SHM improve the care of hospitalized patients.

 

This month, The Hospitalist spotlights Ryan Gamlin, a nontraditional student at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. Ryan was chosen to present his scientific abstract at SHM’s annual meeting in 2016, and encourages medical students to utilize SHM’s resources.
 

Tell TH about your unique pathway to medical school. How did you become an SHM member?

After 10 years working for and consulting to large health insurance companies, I was increasingly disillusioned with my work and the insurance industry and began feeling restless. When I considered possible avenues to help improve health and the health care delivery system, nothing held more intellectual or professional appeal than working on problems from the inside as a physician.

Ryan Gamlin
Many issues in our health care delivery and financing systems stem from lack of common understanding; physicians rarely speak the same language as administrators, who in turn do not speak the language of policy makers, etc. It’s my goal to serve as something of an ideas translator for these disparate groups within U.S. health care – physicians, administrators, and policy makers – helping them to make real progress, together, on the biggest challenges facing our health care system.

This effort to bridge these constituencies was my introduction to SHM. I was fortunate enough to be selected for the Health Innovations Scholars Program (HISP), an incredible quality improvement (QI) and leadership development program run by the hospital medicine group at University of Colorado. Conceived by Jeff Glasheen, MD, and now led by Read Pierce, MD, and Emily Gottenborg, MD, among many others, HISP brings eight medical students together to grow their QI toolkit and build leadership skills while providing the opportunity to design and run a meaningful QI project at the University of Colorado’s Anschutz medical campus. Many involved with this program – and others within the hospital medicine group at the University of Colorado – are leaders within SHM. With their encouragement, I submitted an abstract based on our HISP project and had the good fortune to share our work as a podium presentation at Hospital Medicine 2016 in San Diego.
 

Describe your experience at your first annual meeting. Why would you encourage medical students to attend?

Hospital Medicine 2016 inspired me. As someone interested in the intersection of clinical care and the care system itself, I was amazed at the depth and breadth of forward-looking programming and the amount of similarly-inclined people!

I wish that every medical student – irrespective of their intended specialty – could attend an SHM meeting to witness firsthand how a progressive, thriving professional society integrates members at all levels (student, resident, early-career faculty, and beyond) into their work of improving health care.
 

As a medical student, why is SHM beneficial to your professional growth as a future physician?

I see SHM as a “big tent” professional society that values insights and expertise from all types of physicians, with tangible commitments to support them in the types of system-improving work that are important to me in my career. SHM’s member resources and commitment to students’ and residents’ professional development are incomparable.

What are the biggest opportunities you see for yourself and other future physicians in the changing health care landscape?

The days when a physician’s job was limited to doctoring are over. Our generation of physicians must be great clinicians and work to heal a sick health care system. Now more than ever, physicians must be systems thinkers, designers, and fixers, equipped with the tools of quality improvement, design thinking, finance, and health policy.

Opportunities for meaningful improvement exist at every level, from care teams to health systems, the health care industry, and policy at every level. I would encourage those at any stage of their careers to find an area that they’re excited about or interested in. Seek out information and mentors in that area at their institutions or within SHM, and just start working on something.

There is a tremendous amount of uncertainty in health care; reimbursement paradigms are changing, clinical expectations only grow, and the forces competing for every doctor’s limited time seem unlimited. Uncertainty is uncomfortable, but it also means opportunity. I’m excited to see the commitment to leadership from SHM and so many of its members. It has never been more necessary.
 

 

 

Felicia Steele is SHM’s communications coordinator.

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SHM gives QI a new look

SHM is proud to announce that its Center for Hospital Innovation & Improvement has a fresh look and name: SHM’s Center for Quality Improvement. While the name may have changed, SHM’s Center for QI will remain your partner in quality and patient safety.

“SHM’s Center for QI provides a comprehensive set of resources and programs to support hospitalists and other hospital clinicians as they work to improve quality and safety in their hospitals,” says Eric E. Howell, MD, MHM, senior physician advisor for SHM’s Center for QI.

SHM’s Center for QI’s mentored implementation programs are deployed in hundreds of hospitals and have been recognized with the John M. Eisenberg Award. More recently, its opioid-safety program (RADEO) was recognized by the CMS for its efforts to enhance patient safety.

Visit http://www.hospitalmedicine.org/QI to learn more about SHM’s Center for QI and about opportunities for partnerships, solutions, and tools to address your QI needs.

PHM 2017 is coming! Book your ticket to Nashville today

Pediatric Hospital Medicine (PHM) 2017 is the largest, leading educational event for health care professionals who specialize in the care of hospitalized children. This year’s meeting will be held July 20-23 at the Omni Nashville in Tennessee.

Attendees will have the opportunity to network with colleagues from across the nation, learn from renowned faculty from throughout the discipline, and acquire skills, tools, and resources to directly benefit their patients and practice.

PHM 2017 has been designed to provide participants with tools to improve clinical skills and practice, address management issues, lead change and innovation within their institutions, and network with thought leaders to collaborate and learn about new innovations.

View the full meeting schedule, educational objectives, and more at www.peds2017.org.

Benchmark your HMG appropriately with the State of Hospital Medicine Report

The State of Hospital Medicine Report continues to be the best source of detail regarding the configuration and operation of hospital medicine groups. The biennial report provides current data on hospitalist compensation and production, in addition to cutting-edge knowledge covering practice demographics, staffing levels, turnover, staff growth, compensation methods, and financial support for solid, evidence-based management decisions.

“We’ve used data from the report to hold more informed discussions with the group that provides our note-coding services and to determine how to benchmark our nocturnists’ workloads and pay,” said Andrew White, MD, SFHM, director of the Hospital Medicine Service at the University of Washington in Seattle. “The results are broken into region and academic practice type, which gives me the confidence that I’m looking at results from groups like mine, rather than comparing to the country-wide average.”

The report is designed for hospital medicine leaders (both physician leaders and nonphysician practice administrators and executives), as well as frontline hospitalists, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, pediatricians, and internal and family medicine physicians.

In addition to the print version, the 2016 State of Hospital Medicine Report is also available in an enhanced, fully searchable digital version. To order your copy in either print or digital, visit www.hospitalmedicine.org/survey.

Learn how to drive change as a leader in hospital medicine

A successful hospitalist program requires strong leadership from the floor to the C-suite. SHM’s Leadership Academy prepares clinical and academic leaders with vital skills that, traditionally, are not taught in medical school or typical residency programs. This year’s meeting will be held October 23-26 at the JW Marriott Camelback Inn in Scottsdale, Ariz.

New for Leadership Academy 2017, Strategic Essentials (formerly Leadership Foundations), Influential Management, and Mastering Teamwork will be available to all attendees, regardless of previous attendance. SHM provides recommendations for interested registrants so they can determine which course fits them best in their leadership journey.

Take the Strategic Essentials course to evaluate your personal leadership strengths and weaknesses, understand key hospital drivers, and more.

If you are looking to learn skills needed to drive culture change through specific leadership behaviors as well as financial storytelling, then Leadership: Influential Management would be a great course for you.

The third course, Leadership: Mastering Teamwork, will help attendees learn to critically assess program growth opportunities, lead and motivate teams, and design effective communication strategies. Learn more at www.shmleadershipacademy.org.

Stay ahead of the MACRA curve with SHM

The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) put into motion the new Quality Payment Program, which replaces past pay-for-performance programs, such as the Physician Quality Reporting System and physician value-based modifier. The new program has many complicated requirements, and hospitalists will be impacted.

The first year of the program has flexible participation, yet hospitalists need to do at least one thing (report one quality measure, attest to one improvement activity) in the program in order to avoid a 4% penalty to Medicare payments. 2017 is the first reporting year, so now is the time for providers to familiarize themselves with the requirements.

To support hospitalists who are looking for hospital medicine–specific ways to participate and avoid penalties, SHM hosted a webinar that is now available at www.macraforhm.org under “Resources.” SHM’s policy staff broke down the program requirements and went into detail on ways in which hospitalists can and should participate in the new program. Updates and other resources are also available at www.macraforhm.org.

 

 

Looking to be a speaker at Hospital Medicine 2018?

The Society of Hospital Medicine reminds you to submit your workshop proposal for the 2018 Annual Meeting to be held April 8-11, 2018, at the Orlando World Center Marriott. Workshops should involve topics in one of ten categories: clinical, career development, research, academic, patient experience/communication, perioperative, information technology, practice management, quality and patient safety, and evidence‐based medicine/high‐value care. Each workshop should last 90 minutes.

Proposals that are the most likely to be accepted will be innovative as well as highly interactive, utilizing small groups and limiting didactic/lecture content. Workshops previously presented at national or regional meetings will be considered. Four faculty members from each workshop that is accepted will receive 50% off their annual meeting registration, although workshops may include a maximum of six additional facilitators.

The submission deadline is Friday, May 12, 2017 at 8:00 a.m. EST. Visit www.hospitalmedicine2018.org for more information.

Brett Radler is SHM’s communications specialist.

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Get the latest news about upcoming events, new programs and SHM initiatives
Get the latest news about upcoming events, new programs and SHM initiatives

 

SHM gives QI a new look

SHM is proud to announce that its Center for Hospital Innovation & Improvement has a fresh look and name: SHM’s Center for Quality Improvement. While the name may have changed, SHM’s Center for QI will remain your partner in quality and patient safety.

“SHM’s Center for QI provides a comprehensive set of resources and programs to support hospitalists and other hospital clinicians as they work to improve quality and safety in their hospitals,” says Eric E. Howell, MD, MHM, senior physician advisor for SHM’s Center for QI.

SHM’s Center for QI’s mentored implementation programs are deployed in hundreds of hospitals and have been recognized with the John M. Eisenberg Award. More recently, its opioid-safety program (RADEO) was recognized by the CMS for its efforts to enhance patient safety.

Visit http://www.hospitalmedicine.org/QI to learn more about SHM’s Center for QI and about opportunities for partnerships, solutions, and tools to address your QI needs.

PHM 2017 is coming! Book your ticket to Nashville today

Pediatric Hospital Medicine (PHM) 2017 is the largest, leading educational event for health care professionals who specialize in the care of hospitalized children. This year’s meeting will be held July 20-23 at the Omni Nashville in Tennessee.

Attendees will have the opportunity to network with colleagues from across the nation, learn from renowned faculty from throughout the discipline, and acquire skills, tools, and resources to directly benefit their patients and practice.

PHM 2017 has been designed to provide participants with tools to improve clinical skills and practice, address management issues, lead change and innovation within their institutions, and network with thought leaders to collaborate and learn about new innovations.

View the full meeting schedule, educational objectives, and more at www.peds2017.org.

Benchmark your HMG appropriately with the State of Hospital Medicine Report

The State of Hospital Medicine Report continues to be the best source of detail regarding the configuration and operation of hospital medicine groups. The biennial report provides current data on hospitalist compensation and production, in addition to cutting-edge knowledge covering practice demographics, staffing levels, turnover, staff growth, compensation methods, and financial support for solid, evidence-based management decisions.

“We’ve used data from the report to hold more informed discussions with the group that provides our note-coding services and to determine how to benchmark our nocturnists’ workloads and pay,” said Andrew White, MD, SFHM, director of the Hospital Medicine Service at the University of Washington in Seattle. “The results are broken into region and academic practice type, which gives me the confidence that I’m looking at results from groups like mine, rather than comparing to the country-wide average.”

The report is designed for hospital medicine leaders (both physician leaders and nonphysician practice administrators and executives), as well as frontline hospitalists, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, pediatricians, and internal and family medicine physicians.

In addition to the print version, the 2016 State of Hospital Medicine Report is also available in an enhanced, fully searchable digital version. To order your copy in either print or digital, visit www.hospitalmedicine.org/survey.

Learn how to drive change as a leader in hospital medicine

A successful hospitalist program requires strong leadership from the floor to the C-suite. SHM’s Leadership Academy prepares clinical and academic leaders with vital skills that, traditionally, are not taught in medical school or typical residency programs. This year’s meeting will be held October 23-26 at the JW Marriott Camelback Inn in Scottsdale, Ariz.

New for Leadership Academy 2017, Strategic Essentials (formerly Leadership Foundations), Influential Management, and Mastering Teamwork will be available to all attendees, regardless of previous attendance. SHM provides recommendations for interested registrants so they can determine which course fits them best in their leadership journey.

Take the Strategic Essentials course to evaluate your personal leadership strengths and weaknesses, understand key hospital drivers, and more.

If you are looking to learn skills needed to drive culture change through specific leadership behaviors as well as financial storytelling, then Leadership: Influential Management would be a great course for you.

The third course, Leadership: Mastering Teamwork, will help attendees learn to critically assess program growth opportunities, lead and motivate teams, and design effective communication strategies. Learn more at www.shmleadershipacademy.org.

Stay ahead of the MACRA curve with SHM

The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) put into motion the new Quality Payment Program, which replaces past pay-for-performance programs, such as the Physician Quality Reporting System and physician value-based modifier. The new program has many complicated requirements, and hospitalists will be impacted.

The first year of the program has flexible participation, yet hospitalists need to do at least one thing (report one quality measure, attest to one improvement activity) in the program in order to avoid a 4% penalty to Medicare payments. 2017 is the first reporting year, so now is the time for providers to familiarize themselves with the requirements.

To support hospitalists who are looking for hospital medicine–specific ways to participate and avoid penalties, SHM hosted a webinar that is now available at www.macraforhm.org under “Resources.” SHM’s policy staff broke down the program requirements and went into detail on ways in which hospitalists can and should participate in the new program. Updates and other resources are also available at www.macraforhm.org.

 

 

Looking to be a speaker at Hospital Medicine 2018?

The Society of Hospital Medicine reminds you to submit your workshop proposal for the 2018 Annual Meeting to be held April 8-11, 2018, at the Orlando World Center Marriott. Workshops should involve topics in one of ten categories: clinical, career development, research, academic, patient experience/communication, perioperative, information technology, practice management, quality and patient safety, and evidence‐based medicine/high‐value care. Each workshop should last 90 minutes.

Proposals that are the most likely to be accepted will be innovative as well as highly interactive, utilizing small groups and limiting didactic/lecture content. Workshops previously presented at national or regional meetings will be considered. Four faculty members from each workshop that is accepted will receive 50% off their annual meeting registration, although workshops may include a maximum of six additional facilitators.

The submission deadline is Friday, May 12, 2017 at 8:00 a.m. EST. Visit www.hospitalmedicine2018.org for more information.

Brett Radler is SHM’s communications specialist.

 

SHM gives QI a new look

SHM is proud to announce that its Center for Hospital Innovation & Improvement has a fresh look and name: SHM’s Center for Quality Improvement. While the name may have changed, SHM’s Center for QI will remain your partner in quality and patient safety.

“SHM’s Center for QI provides a comprehensive set of resources and programs to support hospitalists and other hospital clinicians as they work to improve quality and safety in their hospitals,” says Eric E. Howell, MD, MHM, senior physician advisor for SHM’s Center for QI.

SHM’s Center for QI’s mentored implementation programs are deployed in hundreds of hospitals and have been recognized with the John M. Eisenberg Award. More recently, its opioid-safety program (RADEO) was recognized by the CMS for its efforts to enhance patient safety.

Visit http://www.hospitalmedicine.org/QI to learn more about SHM’s Center for QI and about opportunities for partnerships, solutions, and tools to address your QI needs.

PHM 2017 is coming! Book your ticket to Nashville today

Pediatric Hospital Medicine (PHM) 2017 is the largest, leading educational event for health care professionals who specialize in the care of hospitalized children. This year’s meeting will be held July 20-23 at the Omni Nashville in Tennessee.

Attendees will have the opportunity to network with colleagues from across the nation, learn from renowned faculty from throughout the discipline, and acquire skills, tools, and resources to directly benefit their patients and practice.

PHM 2017 has been designed to provide participants with tools to improve clinical skills and practice, address management issues, lead change and innovation within their institutions, and network with thought leaders to collaborate and learn about new innovations.

View the full meeting schedule, educational objectives, and more at www.peds2017.org.

Benchmark your HMG appropriately with the State of Hospital Medicine Report

The State of Hospital Medicine Report continues to be the best source of detail regarding the configuration and operation of hospital medicine groups. The biennial report provides current data on hospitalist compensation and production, in addition to cutting-edge knowledge covering practice demographics, staffing levels, turnover, staff growth, compensation methods, and financial support for solid, evidence-based management decisions.

“We’ve used data from the report to hold more informed discussions with the group that provides our note-coding services and to determine how to benchmark our nocturnists’ workloads and pay,” said Andrew White, MD, SFHM, director of the Hospital Medicine Service at the University of Washington in Seattle. “The results are broken into region and academic practice type, which gives me the confidence that I’m looking at results from groups like mine, rather than comparing to the country-wide average.”

The report is designed for hospital medicine leaders (both physician leaders and nonphysician practice administrators and executives), as well as frontline hospitalists, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, pediatricians, and internal and family medicine physicians.

In addition to the print version, the 2016 State of Hospital Medicine Report is also available in an enhanced, fully searchable digital version. To order your copy in either print or digital, visit www.hospitalmedicine.org/survey.

Learn how to drive change as a leader in hospital medicine

A successful hospitalist program requires strong leadership from the floor to the C-suite. SHM’s Leadership Academy prepares clinical and academic leaders with vital skills that, traditionally, are not taught in medical school or typical residency programs. This year’s meeting will be held October 23-26 at the JW Marriott Camelback Inn in Scottsdale, Ariz.

New for Leadership Academy 2017, Strategic Essentials (formerly Leadership Foundations), Influential Management, and Mastering Teamwork will be available to all attendees, regardless of previous attendance. SHM provides recommendations for interested registrants so they can determine which course fits them best in their leadership journey.

Take the Strategic Essentials course to evaluate your personal leadership strengths and weaknesses, understand key hospital drivers, and more.

If you are looking to learn skills needed to drive culture change through specific leadership behaviors as well as financial storytelling, then Leadership: Influential Management would be a great course for you.

The third course, Leadership: Mastering Teamwork, will help attendees learn to critically assess program growth opportunities, lead and motivate teams, and design effective communication strategies. Learn more at www.shmleadershipacademy.org.

Stay ahead of the MACRA curve with SHM

The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) put into motion the new Quality Payment Program, which replaces past pay-for-performance programs, such as the Physician Quality Reporting System and physician value-based modifier. The new program has many complicated requirements, and hospitalists will be impacted.

The first year of the program has flexible participation, yet hospitalists need to do at least one thing (report one quality measure, attest to one improvement activity) in the program in order to avoid a 4% penalty to Medicare payments. 2017 is the first reporting year, so now is the time for providers to familiarize themselves with the requirements.

To support hospitalists who are looking for hospital medicine–specific ways to participate and avoid penalties, SHM hosted a webinar that is now available at www.macraforhm.org under “Resources.” SHM’s policy staff broke down the program requirements and went into detail on ways in which hospitalists can and should participate in the new program. Updates and other resources are also available at www.macraforhm.org.

 

 

Looking to be a speaker at Hospital Medicine 2018?

The Society of Hospital Medicine reminds you to submit your workshop proposal for the 2018 Annual Meeting to be held April 8-11, 2018, at the Orlando World Center Marriott. Workshops should involve topics in one of ten categories: clinical, career development, research, academic, patient experience/communication, perioperative, information technology, practice management, quality and patient safety, and evidence‐based medicine/high‐value care. Each workshop should last 90 minutes.

Proposals that are the most likely to be accepted will be innovative as well as highly interactive, utilizing small groups and limiting didactic/lecture content. Workshops previously presented at national or regional meetings will be considered. Four faculty members from each workshop that is accepted will receive 50% off their annual meeting registration, although workshops may include a maximum of six additional facilitators.

The submission deadline is Friday, May 12, 2017 at 8:00 a.m. EST. Visit www.hospitalmedicine2018.org for more information.

Brett Radler is SHM’s communications specialist.

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Hospitalists: Leading health care innovation

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As I begin my year as SHM president, I continue to be energized by the opportunity to be part of an organization that has such a positive impact on our nation’s health care system. From the beginning of my medical career to now, never have I witnessed a health care movement quite like hospital medicine.

Even when I first arrived in Southern California as a pulmonary/critical-care physician in 1987, there were groups of physicians who had taken financial risk on populations of managed-care patients and were paid using an “alternative payment model” called capitation. One of the innovations they had utilized since the early ’80s to successfully manage their risk – and their patients’ – was to have dedicated inpatient physicians caring for their hospitalized patients 24/7, while most of their primary care partners managed the group’s patients in the outpatient setting.

Dr. Ron Greeno
These inpatient specialists were, without a doubt, the first hospitalists, even though the creation of the name came many years after the model was first used. By the early 1990s, more and more groups (including mine) in pockets around the country started delivering care using this model. By the second half of the decade, we had a name, an emerging national identity, and even a medical society to bring us together and represent us and the issues we care about. As our health care system continues to change, there is no specialty as well positioned as hospital medicine to evolve with it.

This year will see a continued reshaping of our delivery system, driven by emerging federal policy like the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA). All of this policy is designed to create a health care system that delivers high-quality care in a much more cost effective way. Many of these policies will result in groups of providers being pushed away from fee-for-service payment toward alternative payment models that involve higher levels of risk and opportunity. If we, as providers, are going to be successful in managing our “at risk” populations, we are going to have to be as innovative as our managed care forefathers. If we are not, we, as a society, are not going to be able to afford to deliver high-quality care to our nations sickest citizens.

At the center of much of this innovation will be hospitalists. After all, by its very nature, our model is a delivery system reform. The drive to deliver more-efficient quality care is in the very DNA of our specialty.

As decisions are made, they will have a significant impact on our patients and our careers. It will continue to be a priority for SHM to make sure that the voice of hospital medicine is heard loud and clear. We will continue to ask our members to ensure that the hospital medicine community has a prominent place in these conversations. Those who step up in this effort will lead us as we insist on having a prominent seat at the table and as new models of care emerge and new incentives are created for the provider community. We will continue to strive to make sure that our patients get the care they deserve and that we continue to help build a sustainable health care delivery system.

This year, you will also see a focused effort to strengthen SHM’s system of state and local chapters. The vitality of these local organizations is important to our efforts to effectively serve our members by engaging them with their colleagues at the local level. In our attempts to further connect our members with others who share similar interests and focuses, we will be rolling out a new structure of special interest groups. These local chapters and these interest groups will fuel new ideas that will continue to improve our specialty and the effectiveness of the society to speak for hospital medicine with a strong voice.

Of course, SHM will continue to be the only organization that was created to represent our nation’s hospitalists and will be totally committed to providing our members with clinical and administrative education, dedicated publications, leadership training, research opportunities, and advocacy. I look forward to serving you and helping you get the most from your SHM experience. Together, we will continue to move the hospital medicine movement forward, shaping our health care system and improving patient care.

Dr. Greeno is the incoming president of the Society of Hospital Medicine and senior adviser for medical affairs at TeamHealth.

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As I begin my year as SHM president, I continue to be energized by the opportunity to be part of an organization that has such a positive impact on our nation’s health care system. From the beginning of my medical career to now, never have I witnessed a health care movement quite like hospital medicine.

Even when I first arrived in Southern California as a pulmonary/critical-care physician in 1987, there were groups of physicians who had taken financial risk on populations of managed-care patients and were paid using an “alternative payment model” called capitation. One of the innovations they had utilized since the early ’80s to successfully manage their risk – and their patients’ – was to have dedicated inpatient physicians caring for their hospitalized patients 24/7, while most of their primary care partners managed the group’s patients in the outpatient setting.

Dr. Ron Greeno
These inpatient specialists were, without a doubt, the first hospitalists, even though the creation of the name came many years after the model was first used. By the early 1990s, more and more groups (including mine) in pockets around the country started delivering care using this model. By the second half of the decade, we had a name, an emerging national identity, and even a medical society to bring us together and represent us and the issues we care about. As our health care system continues to change, there is no specialty as well positioned as hospital medicine to evolve with it.

This year will see a continued reshaping of our delivery system, driven by emerging federal policy like the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA). All of this policy is designed to create a health care system that delivers high-quality care in a much more cost effective way. Many of these policies will result in groups of providers being pushed away from fee-for-service payment toward alternative payment models that involve higher levels of risk and opportunity. If we, as providers, are going to be successful in managing our “at risk” populations, we are going to have to be as innovative as our managed care forefathers. If we are not, we, as a society, are not going to be able to afford to deliver high-quality care to our nations sickest citizens.

At the center of much of this innovation will be hospitalists. After all, by its very nature, our model is a delivery system reform. The drive to deliver more-efficient quality care is in the very DNA of our specialty.

As decisions are made, they will have a significant impact on our patients and our careers. It will continue to be a priority for SHM to make sure that the voice of hospital medicine is heard loud and clear. We will continue to ask our members to ensure that the hospital medicine community has a prominent place in these conversations. Those who step up in this effort will lead us as we insist on having a prominent seat at the table and as new models of care emerge and new incentives are created for the provider community. We will continue to strive to make sure that our patients get the care they deserve and that we continue to help build a sustainable health care delivery system.

This year, you will also see a focused effort to strengthen SHM’s system of state and local chapters. The vitality of these local organizations is important to our efforts to effectively serve our members by engaging them with their colleagues at the local level. In our attempts to further connect our members with others who share similar interests and focuses, we will be rolling out a new structure of special interest groups. These local chapters and these interest groups will fuel new ideas that will continue to improve our specialty and the effectiveness of the society to speak for hospital medicine with a strong voice.

Of course, SHM will continue to be the only organization that was created to represent our nation’s hospitalists and will be totally committed to providing our members with clinical and administrative education, dedicated publications, leadership training, research opportunities, and advocacy. I look forward to serving you and helping you get the most from your SHM experience. Together, we will continue to move the hospital medicine movement forward, shaping our health care system and improving patient care.

Dr. Greeno is the incoming president of the Society of Hospital Medicine and senior adviser for medical affairs at TeamHealth.

 

As I begin my year as SHM president, I continue to be energized by the opportunity to be part of an organization that has such a positive impact on our nation’s health care system. From the beginning of my medical career to now, never have I witnessed a health care movement quite like hospital medicine.

Even when I first arrived in Southern California as a pulmonary/critical-care physician in 1987, there were groups of physicians who had taken financial risk on populations of managed-care patients and were paid using an “alternative payment model” called capitation. One of the innovations they had utilized since the early ’80s to successfully manage their risk – and their patients’ – was to have dedicated inpatient physicians caring for their hospitalized patients 24/7, while most of their primary care partners managed the group’s patients in the outpatient setting.

Dr. Ron Greeno
These inpatient specialists were, without a doubt, the first hospitalists, even though the creation of the name came many years after the model was first used. By the early 1990s, more and more groups (including mine) in pockets around the country started delivering care using this model. By the second half of the decade, we had a name, an emerging national identity, and even a medical society to bring us together and represent us and the issues we care about. As our health care system continues to change, there is no specialty as well positioned as hospital medicine to evolve with it.

This year will see a continued reshaping of our delivery system, driven by emerging federal policy like the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA). All of this policy is designed to create a health care system that delivers high-quality care in a much more cost effective way. Many of these policies will result in groups of providers being pushed away from fee-for-service payment toward alternative payment models that involve higher levels of risk and opportunity. If we, as providers, are going to be successful in managing our “at risk” populations, we are going to have to be as innovative as our managed care forefathers. If we are not, we, as a society, are not going to be able to afford to deliver high-quality care to our nations sickest citizens.

At the center of much of this innovation will be hospitalists. After all, by its very nature, our model is a delivery system reform. The drive to deliver more-efficient quality care is in the very DNA of our specialty.

As decisions are made, they will have a significant impact on our patients and our careers. It will continue to be a priority for SHM to make sure that the voice of hospital medicine is heard loud and clear. We will continue to ask our members to ensure that the hospital medicine community has a prominent place in these conversations. Those who step up in this effort will lead us as we insist on having a prominent seat at the table and as new models of care emerge and new incentives are created for the provider community. We will continue to strive to make sure that our patients get the care they deserve and that we continue to help build a sustainable health care delivery system.

This year, you will also see a focused effort to strengthen SHM’s system of state and local chapters. The vitality of these local organizations is important to our efforts to effectively serve our members by engaging them with their colleagues at the local level. In our attempts to further connect our members with others who share similar interests and focuses, we will be rolling out a new structure of special interest groups. These local chapters and these interest groups will fuel new ideas that will continue to improve our specialty and the effectiveness of the society to speak for hospital medicine with a strong voice.

Of course, SHM will continue to be the only organization that was created to represent our nation’s hospitalists and will be totally committed to providing our members with clinical and administrative education, dedicated publications, leadership training, research opportunities, and advocacy. I look forward to serving you and helping you get the most from your SHM experience. Together, we will continue to move the hospital medicine movement forward, shaping our health care system and improving patient care.

Dr. Greeno is the incoming president of the Society of Hospital Medicine and senior adviser for medical affairs at TeamHealth.

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