2024
A Rapid-Response Curricular Approach to Teaching Politically Charged Topics.
Henrich J, Gielissen K, McNamara C, Pathy S, Hirschman A, Canarie J, Dhond M, Richman I, Rabin T, Vasquez L, Encandela J. A Rapid-Response Curricular Approach to Teaching Politically Charged Topics. Journal Of Graduate Medical Education 2024, 16: 723-729. PMID: 39677323, PMCID: PMC11641876, DOI: 10.4300/jgme-d-24-00140.1.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsEducational problemsHealth care provisionInternal medicine residentsGender-affirming health careSelf-reported readinessAcademic half-dayUnited States face challengesCare provisionCurricular approachCurriculum planningMedicine residentsEligible residentsHealth careNeeds assessmentCurriculumAdministrative supportEvaluate acceptabilityEvidence-basedTraining programModulation feasibilityHalf-dayEducate residentsSelf-AssessmentResident educationFaculty timeMultidisciplinary proactive e-consults to improve guideline-directed medical therapies for patients with diabetes and chronic kidney disease: an implementation study
Rikin S, Bauman L, Arnaoudova I, DiPalo K, Suda N, Gupta S, Deng Y, Golestaneh L. Multidisciplinary proactive e-consults to improve guideline-directed medical therapies for patients with diabetes and chronic kidney disease: an implementation study. BMJ Open Diabetes Research & Care 2024, 12: e004155. PMID: 38719510, PMCID: PMC11085711, DOI: 10.1136/bmjdrc-2024-004155.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAgedDiabetes Mellitus, Type 2FemaleFollow-Up StudiesGuideline AdherenceHumansMaleMiddle AgedPatient Care TeamPilot ProjectsPractice Guidelines as TopicPractice Patterns, Physicians'Primary Health CarePrognosisReferral and ConsultationRenal Insufficiency, ChronicSodium-Glucose Transporter 2 InhibitorsConceptsGuideline-directed medical therapyE-consultationImprove guideline-directed medical therapySystem-level barriersPatient-specific barriersHealth system strategiesElectronic health recordsAcademic health systemRenin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitorsChronic kidney diseasePrescribed guideline-directed medical therapySodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitorsE-consult recommendationElectronic consultationIn-depth interviewsPreliminary effectivenessHealth recordsHealth systemImplementation studyOvercome barriersType 2 diabetesMonths postbaselineMultidisciplinary teamPrescription dataAdministrative supportStructure and Funding of Clinical Informatics Fellowships: A National Survey of Program Directors
Patel T, Chaise A, Hanna J, Patel K, Kochendorfer K, Medford R, Mize D, Melnick E, Hron J, Youens K, Pandita D, Leu M, Ator G, Yu F, Genes N, Baker C, Bell D, Pevnick J, Conrad S, Chandawarkar A, Rogers K, Kaelber D, Singh I, Levy B, Finnell J, Kannry J, Pageler N, Mohan V, Lehmann C. Structure and Funding of Clinical Informatics Fellowships: A National Survey of Program Directors. Applied Clinical Informatics 2024, 15: 155-163. PMID: 38171383, PMCID: PMC10881258, DOI: 10.1055/a-2237-8309.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsProgram directorsAmerican BoardCommunity health care systemAccreditation Council for Graduate Medical EducationAmerican Board of Medical SpecialtiesAdministrative supportFunding sourcesOnline REDCap surveyHealth care systemFunding modelsGraduate Medical EducationAmerican Board of Preventive MedicineHospital information technologyMedical education officeGraduate medical education officeSurvey of program directorsFellowship training programsFamily medicineFellowship program directorsEmergency medicineHealth systemSurveyed program directorsCare systemNational survey of program directorsInformatics practice
2021
Design and Implementation of an Agitation Code Response Team in the Emergency Department
Wong AH, Ray JM, Cramer LD, Brashear TK, Eixenberger C, McVaney C, Haggan J, Sevilla M, Costa DS, Parwani V, Ulrich A, Dziura JD, Bernstein SL, Venkatesh AK. Design and Implementation of an Agitation Code Response Team in the Emergency Department. Annals Of Emergency Medicine 2021, 79: 453-464. PMID: 34863528, PMCID: PMC9038629, DOI: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2021.10.013.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsResponse team interventionPhysical restraint useInterrupted time series analysisRestraint useEmergency departmentTeam interventionRates of physical restraint useTeam-based interventionAdministrative supportQuality improvement studyResponse teamBehavioral health systemManagement of agitated patientsInterprofessional collaborationRestraint ordersExcessive psychomotor activityRestraint ratesHealth systemED visitsImprovement studyPhysical restraintCompare trendsPrimary outcomeTime series analysisAgitated patients
2001
A Qualitative Study of Increasing β-Blocker Use After Myocardial Infarction: Why Do Some Hospitals Succeed?
Bradley EH, Holmboe ES, Mattera JA, Roumanis SA, Radford MJ, Krumholz HM. A Qualitative Study of Increasing β-Blocker Use After Myocardial Infarction: Why Do Some Hospitals Succeed? JAMA 2001, 285: 2604-2611. PMID: 11368734, DOI: 10.1001/jama.285.20.2604.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsBeta-blocker useAcute myocardial infarctionMyocardial infarctionΒ-blocker useStrong physician leadershipImprovement effortsUS hospitalsQualitative studyHospitalPatientsHospital sizeImprovement initiativesInfarctionKey physiciansGreater improvementPhysician leadershipCareAdministrative supportUse ratesPerformance improvement effortsData feedbackParticipantsGeographic regionsCliniciansMortality
This site is protected by hCaptcha and its Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply