What’s new for CHEST 2019?

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Head to New Orleans this October for CHEST Annual Meeting 2019 for the latest original research, postgraduate courses, interactive case-based discussions, simulation sessions, CHEST Games, and more! CHEST 2019 allows clinician members of the entire health-care team to stay up to date on pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine. There are many new and exciting things happening at CHEST 2019, and we are excited to give you a sneak peek.

The simulation sessions are better than ever and include a full day of cadaver-based courses and brand new hands-on sessions in bronchoscopy, advanced critical care echocardiography, and airway management, that will put your skills to the test. You don’t want to miss these simulation sessions that allow you to learn from our expert faculty to advance and develop valuable skills and apply your knowledge.

Visit CHEST in the exhibit hall to see the new additions we have added to amplify your experience. The new FISH Bowl innovation competition will allow you to learn about new solutions and ideas that were submitted in education and clinical disease for pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine. The finalists will be presenting live in Experience CHEST and competing for prizes in each category. CHEST games will be back again in a new space in the exhibit hall. Be sure to bring your team to play the popular Nodal Nemesis and the other games that test your skills in new and creative ways.

CHEST 2019 plans to make your life easier by providing you with the latest updates in patient care at the annual meeting, but we are also planning on making it easier in other ways. New this year, you can update your professional headshot in our new complimentary headshot booth. Plan on a visit to the new CHEST Wellness Zone. This area is designed to help you relax and recharge while at CHEST and includes meditation, posture consultants, aromatherapy, foot massage, and yoga. Attend CHEST 2019 with some peace of mind knowing that your children can be cared for at the Kiddie Corp childcare program for kids ages 6 months to 12 years.

According to William Kelly, MD, FCCP, CHEST 2019 Program Chair, “We are excited about these new opportunities that will help you improve your patient care. We’re taking concrete steps to make your learning, your practice, and your life a little easier.”

We look forward to seeing you at CHEST 2019 in New Orleans, Louisiana, October 19-23!

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Head to New Orleans this October for CHEST Annual Meeting 2019 for the latest original research, postgraduate courses, interactive case-based discussions, simulation sessions, CHEST Games, and more! CHEST 2019 allows clinician members of the entire health-care team to stay up to date on pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine. There are many new and exciting things happening at CHEST 2019, and we are excited to give you a sneak peek.

The simulation sessions are better than ever and include a full day of cadaver-based courses and brand new hands-on sessions in bronchoscopy, advanced critical care echocardiography, and airway management, that will put your skills to the test. You don’t want to miss these simulation sessions that allow you to learn from our expert faculty to advance and develop valuable skills and apply your knowledge.

Visit CHEST in the exhibit hall to see the new additions we have added to amplify your experience. The new FISH Bowl innovation competition will allow you to learn about new solutions and ideas that were submitted in education and clinical disease for pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine. The finalists will be presenting live in Experience CHEST and competing for prizes in each category. CHEST games will be back again in a new space in the exhibit hall. Be sure to bring your team to play the popular Nodal Nemesis and the other games that test your skills in new and creative ways.

CHEST 2019 plans to make your life easier by providing you with the latest updates in patient care at the annual meeting, but we are also planning on making it easier in other ways. New this year, you can update your professional headshot in our new complimentary headshot booth. Plan on a visit to the new CHEST Wellness Zone. This area is designed to help you relax and recharge while at CHEST and includes meditation, posture consultants, aromatherapy, foot massage, and yoga. Attend CHEST 2019 with some peace of mind knowing that your children can be cared for at the Kiddie Corp childcare program for kids ages 6 months to 12 years.

According to William Kelly, MD, FCCP, CHEST 2019 Program Chair, “We are excited about these new opportunities that will help you improve your patient care. We’re taking concrete steps to make your learning, your practice, and your life a little easier.”

We look forward to seeing you at CHEST 2019 in New Orleans, Louisiana, October 19-23!

Head to New Orleans this October for CHEST Annual Meeting 2019 for the latest original research, postgraduate courses, interactive case-based discussions, simulation sessions, CHEST Games, and more! CHEST 2019 allows clinician members of the entire health-care team to stay up to date on pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine. There are many new and exciting things happening at CHEST 2019, and we are excited to give you a sneak peek.

The simulation sessions are better than ever and include a full day of cadaver-based courses and brand new hands-on sessions in bronchoscopy, advanced critical care echocardiography, and airway management, that will put your skills to the test. You don’t want to miss these simulation sessions that allow you to learn from our expert faculty to advance and develop valuable skills and apply your knowledge.

Visit CHEST in the exhibit hall to see the new additions we have added to amplify your experience. The new FISH Bowl innovation competition will allow you to learn about new solutions and ideas that were submitted in education and clinical disease for pulmonary, critical care, and sleep medicine. The finalists will be presenting live in Experience CHEST and competing for prizes in each category. CHEST games will be back again in a new space in the exhibit hall. Be sure to bring your team to play the popular Nodal Nemesis and the other games that test your skills in new and creative ways.

CHEST 2019 plans to make your life easier by providing you with the latest updates in patient care at the annual meeting, but we are also planning on making it easier in other ways. New this year, you can update your professional headshot in our new complimentary headshot booth. Plan on a visit to the new CHEST Wellness Zone. This area is designed to help you relax and recharge while at CHEST and includes meditation, posture consultants, aromatherapy, foot massage, and yoga. Attend CHEST 2019 with some peace of mind knowing that your children can be cared for at the Kiddie Corp childcare program for kids ages 6 months to 12 years.

According to William Kelly, MD, FCCP, CHEST 2019 Program Chair, “We are excited about these new opportunities that will help you improve your patient care. We’re taking concrete steps to make your learning, your practice, and your life a little easier.”

We look forward to seeing you at CHEST 2019 in New Orleans, Louisiana, October 19-23!

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CHEST keynote to bridge the gap between generations

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Scott Zimmer, a product of generation X, went through college with a passion for public speaking, as well as a deep interest in the generational divide. In 2013, he began working for a company called BridgeWorks and so began his career as one of three speakers at this firm of “generational junkies and trend spotters.”

Founded in 1998, Bridgeworks strives to bridge the generational gaps that are found in all workplaces through research, keynote speakers, workshops, blogs, training, trivia, and more. Bridgeworks is a team of 13 people coming from the baby boomer generation down to millennials on the cusp of being classified with generation Z (gen edgers, as Zimmer calls them). Each team member has their own interesting and diverse background with a passion for the topic of generations, and everyone engages this passion by conducting research with the BridgeWorks team.

There are generational clashes in every single industry, according to Zimmer. Just at BridgeWorks, he even notices when simply sending a text he perceives as “normal” to one of his millennial coworkers, that it is sometimes received as curt and leaves the recipient concerned that they have done something to offend him. This topic is not foreign to anyone— everyone has had a moment of saying “kids these days,” or “ugh, old people.” Because of this, Zimmer starts every session knowing that each person will leave with relevant insights and actionable takeaways.

Zimmer also loves to integrate nostalgia into his presentations, and working with generational theory at BridgeWorks allows him to do just that in a way that helps drive home points and makes ideas more relatable. “Some people like to say we are all just people and we grow out of certain things. But we develop specific traits and values at an impressionable age, and I love looking at what was happening in our lives during those formative years. What are these shared experiences that will form who we are?” This love of nostalgia set Zimmer up for a great opportunity to develop his own trivia gameshow at BridgeWorks. GenPOP! is an interactive trivia gameshow that pairs members of different generations up and quizzes them on all things pop culture from different decades, while also teaching audience members new things about the people they interact with every day.

“So much goes into who we are and who shows up to the workplace, what effects our behavior, and our motivation,” says Zimmer when asked where his passion for this topic stems. “It could be our gender, the region we grew up in, or birth order, and I personally like looking at it through the lens of these different generations.”

So, what will Zimmer bring to CHEST 2018? During his keynote presentation in San Antonio, Zimmer will examine the generational gaps that are existent in the medical community. “You don’t want your young medical professionals to feel like they are sitting at the ‘kids table’ or being talked down to when they have something to share because they do not have equal experience.”

Each generation and each member of a medical team communicates differently, and understanding those differences and feeling like an equal part of the team is very important. How information is conveyed to patients and medical team members of any age affects how they perceive given information and the level of comfort that is felt by each party. Finding ways to bridge the obvious gaps between the generations is a key component to making any team work efficiently.

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Scott Zimmer, a product of generation X, went through college with a passion for public speaking, as well as a deep interest in the generational divide. In 2013, he began working for a company called BridgeWorks and so began his career as one of three speakers at this firm of “generational junkies and trend spotters.”

Founded in 1998, Bridgeworks strives to bridge the generational gaps that are found in all workplaces through research, keynote speakers, workshops, blogs, training, trivia, and more. Bridgeworks is a team of 13 people coming from the baby boomer generation down to millennials on the cusp of being classified with generation Z (gen edgers, as Zimmer calls them). Each team member has their own interesting and diverse background with a passion for the topic of generations, and everyone engages this passion by conducting research with the BridgeWorks team.

There are generational clashes in every single industry, according to Zimmer. Just at BridgeWorks, he even notices when simply sending a text he perceives as “normal” to one of his millennial coworkers, that it is sometimes received as curt and leaves the recipient concerned that they have done something to offend him. This topic is not foreign to anyone— everyone has had a moment of saying “kids these days,” or “ugh, old people.” Because of this, Zimmer starts every session knowing that each person will leave with relevant insights and actionable takeaways.

Zimmer also loves to integrate nostalgia into his presentations, and working with generational theory at BridgeWorks allows him to do just that in a way that helps drive home points and makes ideas more relatable. “Some people like to say we are all just people and we grow out of certain things. But we develop specific traits and values at an impressionable age, and I love looking at what was happening in our lives during those formative years. What are these shared experiences that will form who we are?” This love of nostalgia set Zimmer up for a great opportunity to develop his own trivia gameshow at BridgeWorks. GenPOP! is an interactive trivia gameshow that pairs members of different generations up and quizzes them on all things pop culture from different decades, while also teaching audience members new things about the people they interact with every day.

“So much goes into who we are and who shows up to the workplace, what effects our behavior, and our motivation,” says Zimmer when asked where his passion for this topic stems. “It could be our gender, the region we grew up in, or birth order, and I personally like looking at it through the lens of these different generations.”

So, what will Zimmer bring to CHEST 2018? During his keynote presentation in San Antonio, Zimmer will examine the generational gaps that are existent in the medical community. “You don’t want your young medical professionals to feel like they are sitting at the ‘kids table’ or being talked down to when they have something to share because they do not have equal experience.”

Each generation and each member of a medical team communicates differently, and understanding those differences and feeling like an equal part of the team is very important. How information is conveyed to patients and medical team members of any age affects how they perceive given information and the level of comfort that is felt by each party. Finding ways to bridge the obvious gaps between the generations is a key component to making any team work efficiently.

Scott Zimmer, a product of generation X, went through college with a passion for public speaking, as well as a deep interest in the generational divide. In 2013, he began working for a company called BridgeWorks and so began his career as one of three speakers at this firm of “generational junkies and trend spotters.”

Founded in 1998, Bridgeworks strives to bridge the generational gaps that are found in all workplaces through research, keynote speakers, workshops, blogs, training, trivia, and more. Bridgeworks is a team of 13 people coming from the baby boomer generation down to millennials on the cusp of being classified with generation Z (gen edgers, as Zimmer calls them). Each team member has their own interesting and diverse background with a passion for the topic of generations, and everyone engages this passion by conducting research with the BridgeWorks team.

There are generational clashes in every single industry, according to Zimmer. Just at BridgeWorks, he even notices when simply sending a text he perceives as “normal” to one of his millennial coworkers, that it is sometimes received as curt and leaves the recipient concerned that they have done something to offend him. This topic is not foreign to anyone— everyone has had a moment of saying “kids these days,” or “ugh, old people.” Because of this, Zimmer starts every session knowing that each person will leave with relevant insights and actionable takeaways.

Zimmer also loves to integrate nostalgia into his presentations, and working with generational theory at BridgeWorks allows him to do just that in a way that helps drive home points and makes ideas more relatable. “Some people like to say we are all just people and we grow out of certain things. But we develop specific traits and values at an impressionable age, and I love looking at what was happening in our lives during those formative years. What are these shared experiences that will form who we are?” This love of nostalgia set Zimmer up for a great opportunity to develop his own trivia gameshow at BridgeWorks. GenPOP! is an interactive trivia gameshow that pairs members of different generations up and quizzes them on all things pop culture from different decades, while also teaching audience members new things about the people they interact with every day.

“So much goes into who we are and who shows up to the workplace, what effects our behavior, and our motivation,” says Zimmer when asked where his passion for this topic stems. “It could be our gender, the region we grew up in, or birth order, and I personally like looking at it through the lens of these different generations.”

So, what will Zimmer bring to CHEST 2018? During his keynote presentation in San Antonio, Zimmer will examine the generational gaps that are existent in the medical community. “You don’t want your young medical professionals to feel like they are sitting at the ‘kids table’ or being talked down to when they have something to share because they do not have equal experience.”

Each generation and each member of a medical team communicates differently, and understanding those differences and feeling like an equal part of the team is very important. How information is conveyed to patients and medical team members of any age affects how they perceive given information and the level of comfort that is felt by each party. Finding ways to bridge the obvious gaps between the generations is a key component to making any team work efficiently.

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CHEST Keynote: Reflections of a Lifetime Practicing Chest Medicine

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Dr. Richard Irwin, the Editor in Chief for the journal CHEST, and Chair of UMass Memorial Medical Center’s Department of Critical Care, has observed the way patient-focused care has evolved through the years. He will be speaking on this topic at the CHEST 2018 opening session on Sunday, October 7.

During Dr. Irwin’s early years at UMass Memorial, the then chairman of Medicine, Dr. James Dalen, a longtime CHEST member who was about to begin his term as CHEST President, strongly encouraged Dr. Irwin to join the organization. By joining the college, Dr. Irwin was able to form strong connections with other influential chest medicine professionals, such as Dr. Jack Weg, a former CHEST President, and Dr. Alfred Soffer – who was the Editor in Chief of CHEST.

While Dr. Irwin was not yet a member of the CHEST community, the college became instrumental in focusing Dr. Irwin’s academic career because of a manuscript that he and colleagues had been working on, titled Cough. A Comprehensive Review. After submitting the early version of his manuscript to ten different journals and being rejected by each one, Dr. Irwin contacted Dr. Soffer and asked him, if he had the time, could he please read it and offer advice. Dr. Soffer, who had a reputation of being a mentor with endless generosity of his time, reviewed the manuscript and worked with Dr. Irwin on the article, leading to its publication in the Archives of Internal Medicine in 1977. Dr. Soffer’s kindness would lead to the start of Dr. Irwin’s 40-year career of studying cough.

Dr. Irwin has been very influential within the CHEST organization throughout his career. In addition to his years as the Editor in Chief of CHEST, he also served on every major CHEST committee and held the office of CHEST President in 2003-2004. “If you want to join a society that has a family-feel to it and focuses on clinical care and education, then CHEST is the place to be.”

Throughout his years as a physician, Dr. Irwin has been interested in the way physicians learn. During his formative years, he says the way he learned was to “see one, do one, teach one.” He gives the example of the flexible fiber-optic bronchoscope, which was developed in Japan in the late 1960s, arriving in the US in 1970. It was a new way of performing bronchoscopy, which led to physicians reading about it, and then putting what they read into action. Now – there are high fidelity simulation instruments and models and a lot of experiential learning prefacing the use of new technologies for patients. We have CHEST to thank for being a leader in experiential learning and an international resource for simulation training.

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Dr. Richard Irwin, the Editor in Chief for the journal CHEST, and Chair of UMass Memorial Medical Center’s Department of Critical Care, has observed the way patient-focused care has evolved through the years. He will be speaking on this topic at the CHEST 2018 opening session on Sunday, October 7.

During Dr. Irwin’s early years at UMass Memorial, the then chairman of Medicine, Dr. James Dalen, a longtime CHEST member who was about to begin his term as CHEST President, strongly encouraged Dr. Irwin to join the organization. By joining the college, Dr. Irwin was able to form strong connections with other influential chest medicine professionals, such as Dr. Jack Weg, a former CHEST President, and Dr. Alfred Soffer – who was the Editor in Chief of CHEST.

While Dr. Irwin was not yet a member of the CHEST community, the college became instrumental in focusing Dr. Irwin’s academic career because of a manuscript that he and colleagues had been working on, titled Cough. A Comprehensive Review. After submitting the early version of his manuscript to ten different journals and being rejected by each one, Dr. Irwin contacted Dr. Soffer and asked him, if he had the time, could he please read it and offer advice. Dr. Soffer, who had a reputation of being a mentor with endless generosity of his time, reviewed the manuscript and worked with Dr. Irwin on the article, leading to its publication in the Archives of Internal Medicine in 1977. Dr. Soffer’s kindness would lead to the start of Dr. Irwin’s 40-year career of studying cough.

Dr. Irwin has been very influential within the CHEST organization throughout his career. In addition to his years as the Editor in Chief of CHEST, he also served on every major CHEST committee and held the office of CHEST President in 2003-2004. “If you want to join a society that has a family-feel to it and focuses on clinical care and education, then CHEST is the place to be.”

Throughout his years as a physician, Dr. Irwin has been interested in the way physicians learn. During his formative years, he says the way he learned was to “see one, do one, teach one.” He gives the example of the flexible fiber-optic bronchoscope, which was developed in Japan in the late 1960s, arriving in the US in 1970. It was a new way of performing bronchoscopy, which led to physicians reading about it, and then putting what they read into action. Now – there are high fidelity simulation instruments and models and a lot of experiential learning prefacing the use of new technologies for patients. We have CHEST to thank for being a leader in experiential learning and an international resource for simulation training.

Dr. Richard Irwin, the Editor in Chief for the journal CHEST, and Chair of UMass Memorial Medical Center’s Department of Critical Care, has observed the way patient-focused care has evolved through the years. He will be speaking on this topic at the CHEST 2018 opening session on Sunday, October 7.

During Dr. Irwin’s early years at UMass Memorial, the then chairman of Medicine, Dr. James Dalen, a longtime CHEST member who was about to begin his term as CHEST President, strongly encouraged Dr. Irwin to join the organization. By joining the college, Dr. Irwin was able to form strong connections with other influential chest medicine professionals, such as Dr. Jack Weg, a former CHEST President, and Dr. Alfred Soffer – who was the Editor in Chief of CHEST.

While Dr. Irwin was not yet a member of the CHEST community, the college became instrumental in focusing Dr. Irwin’s academic career because of a manuscript that he and colleagues had been working on, titled Cough. A Comprehensive Review. After submitting the early version of his manuscript to ten different journals and being rejected by each one, Dr. Irwin contacted Dr. Soffer and asked him, if he had the time, could he please read it and offer advice. Dr. Soffer, who had a reputation of being a mentor with endless generosity of his time, reviewed the manuscript and worked with Dr. Irwin on the article, leading to its publication in the Archives of Internal Medicine in 1977. Dr. Soffer’s kindness would lead to the start of Dr. Irwin’s 40-year career of studying cough.

Dr. Irwin has been very influential within the CHEST organization throughout his career. In addition to his years as the Editor in Chief of CHEST, he also served on every major CHEST committee and held the office of CHEST President in 2003-2004. “If you want to join a society that has a family-feel to it and focuses on clinical care and education, then CHEST is the place to be.”

Throughout his years as a physician, Dr. Irwin has been interested in the way physicians learn. During his formative years, he says the way he learned was to “see one, do one, teach one.” He gives the example of the flexible fiber-optic bronchoscope, which was developed in Japan in the late 1960s, arriving in the US in 1970. It was a new way of performing bronchoscopy, which led to physicians reading about it, and then putting what they read into action. Now – there are high fidelity simulation instruments and models and a lot of experiential learning prefacing the use of new technologies for patients. We have CHEST to thank for being a leader in experiential learning and an international resource for simulation training.

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Explore Ultrasound Corner

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The use of ultrasound is often overlooked when it could very well aid in the diagnosis of a critical illness in a shorter amount of time, while eliminating potential risks that come with many of the usually administered tests.


In 2013, Seth Koenig, MD, FCCP, of Hofstra School of Medicine in New Hyde Park, New York, noticed the need to educate providers about the use of ultrasound in the ICU. Dr. Koenig approached Richard Irwin, MD, Master FCCP, and Editor in Chief of the journal CHEST, with an idea for a new section in the journal. So began “Ultrasound Corner,” an online, video-based series in the journal that provides readers with real cases where ultrasound has played a large role in diagnostic patient care.


Each month, the journal receives two to four submissions from chest medicine clinicians who want to share their critical care ultrasound patient stories. One to two stories are selected and published monthly with real video images that are explained in the manuscript and in a narration done by Dr. Koenig.


“This creates a section where clinicians worldwide can share their experiences so that others may incorporate different methods of diagnosis into their practice,” said Dr. Koenig. “This method of learning challenges the readers to interpret images and integrate the results into a patient management plan.”


Dr. Koenig recommends that clinicians who have experienced benefit using ultrasound in critical care situations submit their cases so that viewers can learn from each other. Share the knowledge you’ve gained from your patient cases. Visit https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/chest, log in to your account, and click “Start a New Submission” under the “Author” section.  


More importantly, Dr. Koenig encourages the journal readership to explore Ultrasound Corner (https://journal.chestnet.org/ultrasound) every month in CHEST to learn of different courses of diagnosis and treatment being used to strengthen patient diagnostic and management plans in new, evolving ways.

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The use of ultrasound is often overlooked when it could very well aid in the diagnosis of a critical illness in a shorter amount of time, while eliminating potential risks that come with many of the usually administered tests.


In 2013, Seth Koenig, MD, FCCP, of Hofstra School of Medicine in New Hyde Park, New York, noticed the need to educate providers about the use of ultrasound in the ICU. Dr. Koenig approached Richard Irwin, MD, Master FCCP, and Editor in Chief of the journal CHEST, with an idea for a new section in the journal. So began “Ultrasound Corner,” an online, video-based series in the journal that provides readers with real cases where ultrasound has played a large role in diagnostic patient care.


Each month, the journal receives two to four submissions from chest medicine clinicians who want to share their critical care ultrasound patient stories. One to two stories are selected and published monthly with real video images that are explained in the manuscript and in a narration done by Dr. Koenig.


“This creates a section where clinicians worldwide can share their experiences so that others may incorporate different methods of diagnosis into their practice,” said Dr. Koenig. “This method of learning challenges the readers to interpret images and integrate the results into a patient management plan.”


Dr. Koenig recommends that clinicians who have experienced benefit using ultrasound in critical care situations submit their cases so that viewers can learn from each other. Share the knowledge you’ve gained from your patient cases. Visit https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/chest, log in to your account, and click “Start a New Submission” under the “Author” section.  


More importantly, Dr. Koenig encourages the journal readership to explore Ultrasound Corner (https://journal.chestnet.org/ultrasound) every month in CHEST to learn of different courses of diagnosis and treatment being used to strengthen patient diagnostic and management plans in new, evolving ways.

The use of ultrasound is often overlooked when it could very well aid in the diagnosis of a critical illness in a shorter amount of time, while eliminating potential risks that come with many of the usually administered tests.


In 2013, Seth Koenig, MD, FCCP, of Hofstra School of Medicine in New Hyde Park, New York, noticed the need to educate providers about the use of ultrasound in the ICU. Dr. Koenig approached Richard Irwin, MD, Master FCCP, and Editor in Chief of the journal CHEST, with an idea for a new section in the journal. So began “Ultrasound Corner,” an online, video-based series in the journal that provides readers with real cases where ultrasound has played a large role in diagnostic patient care.


Each month, the journal receives two to four submissions from chest medicine clinicians who want to share their critical care ultrasound patient stories. One to two stories are selected and published monthly with real video images that are explained in the manuscript and in a narration done by Dr. Koenig.


“This creates a section where clinicians worldwide can share their experiences so that others may incorporate different methods of diagnosis into their practice,” said Dr. Koenig. “This method of learning challenges the readers to interpret images and integrate the results into a patient management plan.”


Dr. Koenig recommends that clinicians who have experienced benefit using ultrasound in critical care situations submit their cases so that viewers can learn from each other. Share the knowledge you’ve gained from your patient cases. Visit https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/chest, log in to your account, and click “Start a New Submission” under the “Author” section.  


More importantly, Dr. Koenig encourages the journal readership to explore Ultrasound Corner (https://journal.chestnet.org/ultrasound) every month in CHEST to learn of different courses of diagnosis and treatment being used to strengthen patient diagnostic and management plans in new, evolving ways.

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