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HM14 offers something for every hospitalist, from procedures training to special interest forums to practice management pearls. The four-day annual meeting, coming up March 24-27 at the Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas, caters to young, old, and every doctor in between.
So how will you get the most value out of the conference?
“The highest-yield content is going to depend on what your background is and how to spend that time in a way that augments your knowledge, your perspective, or your exposure to like-minded colleagues in a very individual way,” says HM14 course director Daniel Brotman, MD, FACP, SFHM, director of the hospitalist program at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore. “One of the things that’s so cool about hospital medicine is its diversity.”
But don’t take Dr. Brotman’s well-educated word for it. Here’s a list of recommendations from Team Hospitalist, the only reader-involvement group of its kind in HM, on events they would not miss this year.
Team Hospitalist contributors: Danielle Scheurer, MD, MSCR, SFHM, hospitalist, chief quality officer, Medical University of South Carolina; Edward Ma, MD, hospitalist, Coatesville (Pa.) VA Medical Center; Nick Fitterman, MD, FACP, SFHM, vice chair of hospital medicine, Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine, Manhasset, N.Y.; James O’Callaghan, MD, FHM, clinical assistant professor of pediatrics, Seattle Children’s Hospital, University of Washington, and EvergreenHealth, Kirkland, Wash.; Klaus Suehler, MD, FHM, Mercy Hospital, Allina Health, Minneapolis, Minn.
1 “When Time is Brain (or Cord): Neurological Emergencies for the Hospitalist”
Tuesday, March 25
10:35-11:15 am
Dr. Suehler: As hospitalists, we often are the first ones to see patients with such neurological emergencies, and it is crucial to know when to get the neurologist or neurosurgeon involved. These are opportunities with a brief window of time to save or restore a patient’s neurological function.
2 “The ACA at 4: Impact on Costs, Quality, Lifestyle, and Payment”
Tuesday, March 25
10:35-11:50 am
Dr. Scheurer: This will be a packed session and will discuss all angles of the Affordable Care Act: how it will play out in hospitals around the country and, particularly, what it will mean to hospitalists. The complexity of the ACA is dizzying, so it will be time well spent to hear from several leaders in the field on how the major components of the ACA can and will impact us.
Dr. Ma: The ACA is nearly four years old, so I’m looking forward to a review on what precisely has been accomplished in medicine thus far and what can we anticipate down the road. The lawyers bantered about the constitutionality of the policy for the first two years. Politicians have been ranting about death panels, repeals, and amendments [for] the past four years. The public endured the latter part of 2013 reading about (or experiencing firsthand) the disastrous rollout of the healthcare.gov website. I want a clearer idea, beyond the fear and loathing, beyond the inane rhetoric, of the real impact that ACA has had and will have on the two most important components of healthcare: physicians and patients.
3 “Rate, Rhythm, Rivaroxaban, Ablation: Update in Atrial Fibrillation”
Tuesday, March 25
11:20 am-Noon
Dr. Suehler: This is a standard situation for hospitalists. We often admit patients with atrial fibrillation or get consulted when patients who are hospitalized for other reasons develop atrial fibrillation. It is very important for hospitalists to provide optimal care and counseling to patients with this arrhythmia, whether or not cardiologists get involved down the road.
4 “How ICD-10 Will Affect Hospitalists”
Tuesday, March 25
1:10-2:25 pm
Dr. Scheurer: Whether we like it or not, ICD-10 is right around the corner. This session will give an overview of what impact ICD-10 will have on our medical record documentation and coding, including how it can and will affect reimbursement. The more you know now, the better off you will be when your hospital implements it.
5 “Controversies in Perioperative Medicine”
Wednesday, March 26
11 am-Noon
Dr. Scheurer: We all know how much our surgeons depend on us to give them sound and evidence-based advice on how to manage surgical patients in the perioperative period. This session will review some controversial topics, from [the perspective of] two of the leaders in the field of perioperative medicine.
6 “Is It OK if I Sit Down?: Improving Patient Communication and Satisfaction at the Bedside”
Wednesday, March 26
11:45 am-12:25 pm
Dr. Fitterman: Any hospitalist or HM program leader struggling to raise patient satisfaction scores must attend this session. Recognizing that 30% of the value-based incentive pool for hospitals is directly linked to these scores, we all have “skin in the game.” Most hospitalists have part of their salary tied to patient satisfaction; however, many still lack the desired improvement in rankings despite multiple initiatives to address this issue. Four of the top five drivers of the patient experience are related to nursing, making our responsibility to impact this quite challenging. There is a correlation between the hospitals with the best satisfaction scores and lower patient mortality, so this is not just about the “chocolate on the pillow” but about filling gaps in care. I anticipate the discussion leaders will help us navigate this challenge with tips to bring back to our programs.
7 “Ending the Benevolent Dictatorship: Shared Decision-Making in the Hospital”
Wednesday, March 26
2:50-3:30 pm
Dr. Fitterman: This is a must attend for anyone interested in the “next blockbuster drug.” That is how patient activation and shared decision-making are being referred to (Health Affairs, February 2013). Where this has been implemented, patients have recognized better health outcomes, and there has been less decisional conflict (which likely equates to better satisfaction)—and all at lower costs. Sounds like a blockbuster drug, doesn’t it? The challenges I hope to see answered in this breakout session: First, most evidence wrapped around this topic is in the outpatient arena. Second, how do we overcome a lack of training in this field? Finally, how can we fit this into our busy workflows? Save me a seat.
8 “What Keeps Your CFO Awake at Night”
Wednesday, March 26
2:50-4:05 pm
Dr. Scheurer: The complexity of hospital finances can confuse even the brightest of hospitalists. This session will focus on the basics of what hospitalists should know and care about, as it relates to hospital finances. You won’t want to miss the concise opportunity to get informed.
9 “Different Generation/Different Concerns: Managing Boomers, Gen-Xers, and Gen Ys”
Thursday, March 27
8:45-9:40 am
Dr. Ma: This will likely be a contentious yet humorous session. The generational differences in attitude toward the practice of medicine can be very pronounced at times and certainly can lead to conflict in the workplace between the older and younger physicians. It’s important to recognize these differences without passing judgment and understand how they impact a practice.
10 “Effective, Efficient, and Prudent Syncope Evaluation”
Thursday, March 27
10:30-11:10 am
Dr. Suehler: Syncope is a frequent admission diagnosis for hospitalists. There is a wide spectrum of how hospitalists manage such patients (how long to monitor on telemetry, what additional tests to order). Hospitalists need to know how to provide a rational and cost-effective evaluation of patients with syncope and be able to identify patients who have a serious or life-threatening cause for their syncope.
–Nick Fitterman, MD, FACP, SFHM, vice chair of hospital medicine, Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine, Manhasset, N.Y.
11 “The Leadership Imperative: Building a Culture of Engagement and Ownership”
Thursday, March 27
10:55-11:50 am
Dr. O’Callaghan: Hospital practices, and the systems to which they belong, are complex organizations with their own culture. Producing long-term, sustainable change and improvement usually means changing this culture. Practices and their leaders need to develop hospitalists who think about improving the system of care, not just the patients in front of them. Successful practices are able to provide physicians with the freedom and responsibility to develop an ownership-mindset toward the practice. This lecture will help leaders develop the skills needed to support the development and maintenance of a culture of ownership.
12 “HFNC in Bronchiolitis: Best Thing Since Sliced Bread?”
Thursday, March 25
1:10-2:25 pm
Dr. O’Callaghan: Shawn Ralston, MD, is well known in pediatric hospital medicine for having both expertise and passion around the diagnosis of bronchiolitis. In the past year, she was lead author of a multi-site voluntary QI collaborative study that demonstrated that benchmarking decreased utilization of bronchodilators and chest physiotherapy in bronchiolitis (J Hosp Med. 2013;8:25-30). In addition, she was one of the authors of SHM’s Choosing Wisely Pediatric Hospital Medicine Recommendations (J Hosp Med. 2013;8(9):479-485). Dr. Ralston is a strong proponent of “doing more by doing less,” with regard to bronchiolitis, which is a self-limiting disease in pediatrics; however, along comes a potential new therapy—high flow nasal cannula therapy. I am very excited to see Dr. Ralston explore this new treatment. Will she have a debate with herself, and if so, which Ralston wins—doing-less Ralston or doing-more Ralston? I anticipate this session to be both highly informative and highly entertaining.
Richard Quinn is a freelance writer in New Jersey.
HM14 offers something for every hospitalist, from procedures training to special interest forums to practice management pearls. The four-day annual meeting, coming up March 24-27 at the Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas, caters to young, old, and every doctor in between.
So how will you get the most value out of the conference?
“The highest-yield content is going to depend on what your background is and how to spend that time in a way that augments your knowledge, your perspective, or your exposure to like-minded colleagues in a very individual way,” says HM14 course director Daniel Brotman, MD, FACP, SFHM, director of the hospitalist program at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore. “One of the things that’s so cool about hospital medicine is its diversity.”
But don’t take Dr. Brotman’s well-educated word for it. Here’s a list of recommendations from Team Hospitalist, the only reader-involvement group of its kind in HM, on events they would not miss this year.
Team Hospitalist contributors: Danielle Scheurer, MD, MSCR, SFHM, hospitalist, chief quality officer, Medical University of South Carolina; Edward Ma, MD, hospitalist, Coatesville (Pa.) VA Medical Center; Nick Fitterman, MD, FACP, SFHM, vice chair of hospital medicine, Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine, Manhasset, N.Y.; James O’Callaghan, MD, FHM, clinical assistant professor of pediatrics, Seattle Children’s Hospital, University of Washington, and EvergreenHealth, Kirkland, Wash.; Klaus Suehler, MD, FHM, Mercy Hospital, Allina Health, Minneapolis, Minn.
1 “When Time is Brain (or Cord): Neurological Emergencies for the Hospitalist”
Tuesday, March 25
10:35-11:15 am
Dr. Suehler: As hospitalists, we often are the first ones to see patients with such neurological emergencies, and it is crucial to know when to get the neurologist or neurosurgeon involved. These are opportunities with a brief window of time to save or restore a patient’s neurological function.
2 “The ACA at 4: Impact on Costs, Quality, Lifestyle, and Payment”
Tuesday, March 25
10:35-11:50 am
Dr. Scheurer: This will be a packed session and will discuss all angles of the Affordable Care Act: how it will play out in hospitals around the country and, particularly, what it will mean to hospitalists. The complexity of the ACA is dizzying, so it will be time well spent to hear from several leaders in the field on how the major components of the ACA can and will impact us.
Dr. Ma: The ACA is nearly four years old, so I’m looking forward to a review on what precisely has been accomplished in medicine thus far and what can we anticipate down the road. The lawyers bantered about the constitutionality of the policy for the first two years. Politicians have been ranting about death panels, repeals, and amendments [for] the past four years. The public endured the latter part of 2013 reading about (or experiencing firsthand) the disastrous rollout of the healthcare.gov website. I want a clearer idea, beyond the fear and loathing, beyond the inane rhetoric, of the real impact that ACA has had and will have on the two most important components of healthcare: physicians and patients.
3 “Rate, Rhythm, Rivaroxaban, Ablation: Update in Atrial Fibrillation”
Tuesday, March 25
11:20 am-Noon
Dr. Suehler: This is a standard situation for hospitalists. We often admit patients with atrial fibrillation or get consulted when patients who are hospitalized for other reasons develop atrial fibrillation. It is very important for hospitalists to provide optimal care and counseling to patients with this arrhythmia, whether or not cardiologists get involved down the road.
4 “How ICD-10 Will Affect Hospitalists”
Tuesday, March 25
1:10-2:25 pm
Dr. Scheurer: Whether we like it or not, ICD-10 is right around the corner. This session will give an overview of what impact ICD-10 will have on our medical record documentation and coding, including how it can and will affect reimbursement. The more you know now, the better off you will be when your hospital implements it.
5 “Controversies in Perioperative Medicine”
Wednesday, March 26
11 am-Noon
Dr. Scheurer: We all know how much our surgeons depend on us to give them sound and evidence-based advice on how to manage surgical patients in the perioperative period. This session will review some controversial topics, from [the perspective of] two of the leaders in the field of perioperative medicine.
6 “Is It OK if I Sit Down?: Improving Patient Communication and Satisfaction at the Bedside”
Wednesday, March 26
11:45 am-12:25 pm
Dr. Fitterman: Any hospitalist or HM program leader struggling to raise patient satisfaction scores must attend this session. Recognizing that 30% of the value-based incentive pool for hospitals is directly linked to these scores, we all have “skin in the game.” Most hospitalists have part of their salary tied to patient satisfaction; however, many still lack the desired improvement in rankings despite multiple initiatives to address this issue. Four of the top five drivers of the patient experience are related to nursing, making our responsibility to impact this quite challenging. There is a correlation between the hospitals with the best satisfaction scores and lower patient mortality, so this is not just about the “chocolate on the pillow” but about filling gaps in care. I anticipate the discussion leaders will help us navigate this challenge with tips to bring back to our programs.
7 “Ending the Benevolent Dictatorship: Shared Decision-Making in the Hospital”
Wednesday, March 26
2:50-3:30 pm
Dr. Fitterman: This is a must attend for anyone interested in the “next blockbuster drug.” That is how patient activation and shared decision-making are being referred to (Health Affairs, February 2013). Where this has been implemented, patients have recognized better health outcomes, and there has been less decisional conflict (which likely equates to better satisfaction)—and all at lower costs. Sounds like a blockbuster drug, doesn’t it? The challenges I hope to see answered in this breakout session: First, most evidence wrapped around this topic is in the outpatient arena. Second, how do we overcome a lack of training in this field? Finally, how can we fit this into our busy workflows? Save me a seat.
8 “What Keeps Your CFO Awake at Night”
Wednesday, March 26
2:50-4:05 pm
Dr. Scheurer: The complexity of hospital finances can confuse even the brightest of hospitalists. This session will focus on the basics of what hospitalists should know and care about, as it relates to hospital finances. You won’t want to miss the concise opportunity to get informed.
9 “Different Generation/Different Concerns: Managing Boomers, Gen-Xers, and Gen Ys”
Thursday, March 27
8:45-9:40 am
Dr. Ma: This will likely be a contentious yet humorous session. The generational differences in attitude toward the practice of medicine can be very pronounced at times and certainly can lead to conflict in the workplace between the older and younger physicians. It’s important to recognize these differences without passing judgment and understand how they impact a practice.
10 “Effective, Efficient, and Prudent Syncope Evaluation”
Thursday, March 27
10:30-11:10 am
Dr. Suehler: Syncope is a frequent admission diagnosis for hospitalists. There is a wide spectrum of how hospitalists manage such patients (how long to monitor on telemetry, what additional tests to order). Hospitalists need to know how to provide a rational and cost-effective evaluation of patients with syncope and be able to identify patients who have a serious or life-threatening cause for their syncope.
–Nick Fitterman, MD, FACP, SFHM, vice chair of hospital medicine, Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine, Manhasset, N.Y.
11 “The Leadership Imperative: Building a Culture of Engagement and Ownership”
Thursday, March 27
10:55-11:50 am
Dr. O’Callaghan: Hospital practices, and the systems to which they belong, are complex organizations with their own culture. Producing long-term, sustainable change and improvement usually means changing this culture. Practices and their leaders need to develop hospitalists who think about improving the system of care, not just the patients in front of them. Successful practices are able to provide physicians with the freedom and responsibility to develop an ownership-mindset toward the practice. This lecture will help leaders develop the skills needed to support the development and maintenance of a culture of ownership.
12 “HFNC in Bronchiolitis: Best Thing Since Sliced Bread?”
Thursday, March 25
1:10-2:25 pm
Dr. O’Callaghan: Shawn Ralston, MD, is well known in pediatric hospital medicine for having both expertise and passion around the diagnosis of bronchiolitis. In the past year, she was lead author of a multi-site voluntary QI collaborative study that demonstrated that benchmarking decreased utilization of bronchodilators and chest physiotherapy in bronchiolitis (J Hosp Med. 2013;8:25-30). In addition, she was one of the authors of SHM’s Choosing Wisely Pediatric Hospital Medicine Recommendations (J Hosp Med. 2013;8(9):479-485). Dr. Ralston is a strong proponent of “doing more by doing less,” with regard to bronchiolitis, which is a self-limiting disease in pediatrics; however, along comes a potential new therapy—high flow nasal cannula therapy. I am very excited to see Dr. Ralston explore this new treatment. Will she have a debate with herself, and if so, which Ralston wins—doing-less Ralston or doing-more Ralston? I anticipate this session to be both highly informative and highly entertaining.
Richard Quinn is a freelance writer in New Jersey.
HM14 offers something for every hospitalist, from procedures training to special interest forums to practice management pearls. The four-day annual meeting, coming up March 24-27 at the Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas, caters to young, old, and every doctor in between.
So how will you get the most value out of the conference?
“The highest-yield content is going to depend on what your background is and how to spend that time in a way that augments your knowledge, your perspective, or your exposure to like-minded colleagues in a very individual way,” says HM14 course director Daniel Brotman, MD, FACP, SFHM, director of the hospitalist program at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore. “One of the things that’s so cool about hospital medicine is its diversity.”
But don’t take Dr. Brotman’s well-educated word for it. Here’s a list of recommendations from Team Hospitalist, the only reader-involvement group of its kind in HM, on events they would not miss this year.
Team Hospitalist contributors: Danielle Scheurer, MD, MSCR, SFHM, hospitalist, chief quality officer, Medical University of South Carolina; Edward Ma, MD, hospitalist, Coatesville (Pa.) VA Medical Center; Nick Fitterman, MD, FACP, SFHM, vice chair of hospital medicine, Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine, Manhasset, N.Y.; James O’Callaghan, MD, FHM, clinical assistant professor of pediatrics, Seattle Children’s Hospital, University of Washington, and EvergreenHealth, Kirkland, Wash.; Klaus Suehler, MD, FHM, Mercy Hospital, Allina Health, Minneapolis, Minn.
1 “When Time is Brain (or Cord): Neurological Emergencies for the Hospitalist”
Tuesday, March 25
10:35-11:15 am
Dr. Suehler: As hospitalists, we often are the first ones to see patients with such neurological emergencies, and it is crucial to know when to get the neurologist or neurosurgeon involved. These are opportunities with a brief window of time to save or restore a patient’s neurological function.
2 “The ACA at 4: Impact on Costs, Quality, Lifestyle, and Payment”
Tuesday, March 25
10:35-11:50 am
Dr. Scheurer: This will be a packed session and will discuss all angles of the Affordable Care Act: how it will play out in hospitals around the country and, particularly, what it will mean to hospitalists. The complexity of the ACA is dizzying, so it will be time well spent to hear from several leaders in the field on how the major components of the ACA can and will impact us.
Dr. Ma: The ACA is nearly four years old, so I’m looking forward to a review on what precisely has been accomplished in medicine thus far and what can we anticipate down the road. The lawyers bantered about the constitutionality of the policy for the first two years. Politicians have been ranting about death panels, repeals, and amendments [for] the past four years. The public endured the latter part of 2013 reading about (or experiencing firsthand) the disastrous rollout of the healthcare.gov website. I want a clearer idea, beyond the fear and loathing, beyond the inane rhetoric, of the real impact that ACA has had and will have on the two most important components of healthcare: physicians and patients.
3 “Rate, Rhythm, Rivaroxaban, Ablation: Update in Atrial Fibrillation”
Tuesday, March 25
11:20 am-Noon
Dr. Suehler: This is a standard situation for hospitalists. We often admit patients with atrial fibrillation or get consulted when patients who are hospitalized for other reasons develop atrial fibrillation. It is very important for hospitalists to provide optimal care and counseling to patients with this arrhythmia, whether or not cardiologists get involved down the road.
4 “How ICD-10 Will Affect Hospitalists”
Tuesday, March 25
1:10-2:25 pm
Dr. Scheurer: Whether we like it or not, ICD-10 is right around the corner. This session will give an overview of what impact ICD-10 will have on our medical record documentation and coding, including how it can and will affect reimbursement. The more you know now, the better off you will be when your hospital implements it.
5 “Controversies in Perioperative Medicine”
Wednesday, March 26
11 am-Noon
Dr. Scheurer: We all know how much our surgeons depend on us to give them sound and evidence-based advice on how to manage surgical patients in the perioperative period. This session will review some controversial topics, from [the perspective of] two of the leaders in the field of perioperative medicine.
6 “Is It OK if I Sit Down?: Improving Patient Communication and Satisfaction at the Bedside”
Wednesday, March 26
11:45 am-12:25 pm
Dr. Fitterman: Any hospitalist or HM program leader struggling to raise patient satisfaction scores must attend this session. Recognizing that 30% of the value-based incentive pool for hospitals is directly linked to these scores, we all have “skin in the game.” Most hospitalists have part of their salary tied to patient satisfaction; however, many still lack the desired improvement in rankings despite multiple initiatives to address this issue. Four of the top five drivers of the patient experience are related to nursing, making our responsibility to impact this quite challenging. There is a correlation between the hospitals with the best satisfaction scores and lower patient mortality, so this is not just about the “chocolate on the pillow” but about filling gaps in care. I anticipate the discussion leaders will help us navigate this challenge with tips to bring back to our programs.
7 “Ending the Benevolent Dictatorship: Shared Decision-Making in the Hospital”
Wednesday, March 26
2:50-3:30 pm
Dr. Fitterman: This is a must attend for anyone interested in the “next blockbuster drug.” That is how patient activation and shared decision-making are being referred to (Health Affairs, February 2013). Where this has been implemented, patients have recognized better health outcomes, and there has been less decisional conflict (which likely equates to better satisfaction)—and all at lower costs. Sounds like a blockbuster drug, doesn’t it? The challenges I hope to see answered in this breakout session: First, most evidence wrapped around this topic is in the outpatient arena. Second, how do we overcome a lack of training in this field? Finally, how can we fit this into our busy workflows? Save me a seat.
8 “What Keeps Your CFO Awake at Night”
Wednesday, March 26
2:50-4:05 pm
Dr. Scheurer: The complexity of hospital finances can confuse even the brightest of hospitalists. This session will focus on the basics of what hospitalists should know and care about, as it relates to hospital finances. You won’t want to miss the concise opportunity to get informed.
9 “Different Generation/Different Concerns: Managing Boomers, Gen-Xers, and Gen Ys”
Thursday, March 27
8:45-9:40 am
Dr. Ma: This will likely be a contentious yet humorous session. The generational differences in attitude toward the practice of medicine can be very pronounced at times and certainly can lead to conflict in the workplace between the older and younger physicians. It’s important to recognize these differences without passing judgment and understand how they impact a practice.
10 “Effective, Efficient, and Prudent Syncope Evaluation”
Thursday, March 27
10:30-11:10 am
Dr. Suehler: Syncope is a frequent admission diagnosis for hospitalists. There is a wide spectrum of how hospitalists manage such patients (how long to monitor on telemetry, what additional tests to order). Hospitalists need to know how to provide a rational and cost-effective evaluation of patients with syncope and be able to identify patients who have a serious or life-threatening cause for their syncope.
–Nick Fitterman, MD, FACP, SFHM, vice chair of hospital medicine, Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine, Manhasset, N.Y.
11 “The Leadership Imperative: Building a Culture of Engagement and Ownership”
Thursday, March 27
10:55-11:50 am
Dr. O’Callaghan: Hospital practices, and the systems to which they belong, are complex organizations with their own culture. Producing long-term, sustainable change and improvement usually means changing this culture. Practices and their leaders need to develop hospitalists who think about improving the system of care, not just the patients in front of them. Successful practices are able to provide physicians with the freedom and responsibility to develop an ownership-mindset toward the practice. This lecture will help leaders develop the skills needed to support the development and maintenance of a culture of ownership.
12 “HFNC in Bronchiolitis: Best Thing Since Sliced Bread?”
Thursday, March 25
1:10-2:25 pm
Dr. O’Callaghan: Shawn Ralston, MD, is well known in pediatric hospital medicine for having both expertise and passion around the diagnosis of bronchiolitis. In the past year, she was lead author of a multi-site voluntary QI collaborative study that demonstrated that benchmarking decreased utilization of bronchodilators and chest physiotherapy in bronchiolitis (J Hosp Med. 2013;8:25-30). In addition, she was one of the authors of SHM’s Choosing Wisely Pediatric Hospital Medicine Recommendations (J Hosp Med. 2013;8(9):479-485). Dr. Ralston is a strong proponent of “doing more by doing less,” with regard to bronchiolitis, which is a self-limiting disease in pediatrics; however, along comes a potential new therapy—high flow nasal cannula therapy. I am very excited to see Dr. Ralston explore this new treatment. Will she have a debate with herself, and if so, which Ralston wins—doing-less Ralston or doing-more Ralston? I anticipate this session to be both highly informative and highly entertaining.
Richard Quinn is a freelance writer in New Jersey.