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Chapter Excellence Awards

The Society of Hospital Medicine is proud to recognize its chapters for their hard work and dedication through Chapter Excellence Awards. Each year, chapters strive to demonstrate growth, sustainability, and innovation within their activities, which are then recognized at SHM’s annual conference.

Please join SHM in congratulating the following chapters on their year of success in 2018!

Platinum Chapters: Iowa; Knoxville; Maryland; Michigan; Minnesota; New Mexico; North Carolina Triangle; Pacific Northwest; Southwest Florida; Wiregrass.

Gold Chapters: Houston; NYC/Westchester; Piedmont Triad; San Francisco Bay Area

Silver Chapters: Boston/Eastern Massachusetts; Charlotte Metro Area; Gulf States; Hampton Roads; Kentucky; Maine; Nebraska; North Jersey; Rocky Mountain; South Central Pennsylvania; South Texas; St. Louis.
 

Outstanding Chapter of the Year

Michigan. The Outstanding Chapter of the Year Award goes to one chapter that exemplifies high performance, going above and beyond the basic chapter requirements. The recipient of the Outstanding Chapter of the Year Award for 2018 is the Michigan chapter of SHM.

The Michigan chapter continues to embrace the mission of our society and nurtures a vibrant, multidisciplinary membership. It is currently the largest chapter in the program, representing more than 750 SHM members.

Using a technology-enabled platform, the Michigan chapter has expanded its meetings to four different sites, leveraging expertise from across the state. The chapter recently held its largest meeting focused on provider burnout, with more than 100 attendees across four different sites. It featured a main speaker as well as a multidisciplinary panel of leaders from eight different health systems.

The chapter has successfully incorporated advocacy into its annual planning and actively responds to new legislation affecting hospital medicine. It continues to be an active and valued member of the Michigan medical community and the SHM chapter community at large.

In addition to the service to members, the chapter strives to serve the SHM chapter community at large by collaborating and sharing best practices.

The chapter’s level of originality is not only a benefit to the chapter, but also to SHM’s Chapter program as a whole. Congratulations to the Michigan chapter on being named the Outstanding Chapter of 2018.

 

 

Rising Star Chapter

Knoxville. The Rising Star Chapter Award goes to one chapter that has been active for 2 years or less and in the past 12 months has made improvements to its leadership, stability and growth, and membership.

The recipient of the Rising Star Chapter Award for 2018 is the Knoxville (Tenn.) Chapter of SHM, which has made significant strides since its launch in the spring of 2017. The chapter assembled a group of local hospitalists from Knoxville and the surrounding region to encourage participation and drive quality initiatives in area hospitals.

The Knoxville chapter developed a leadership framework, including officers and board members, and just completed its first formal chapter leadership election. In 2018, the chapter held four meetings, including an event steered toward residents and students. Membership in the chapter has grown by more than 20% since inception. The chapter has engaged in statewide quality initiatives with the Tennessee Hospital Association and has engaged with other chapters across the state.

The Knoxville’s Chapter is an active, enthusiastic organization that is rapidly growing and thriving. Congratulations to the Knoxville chapter on being named the Rising Star Chapter for 2018.
 

 

Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant recipients

SHM is proud to acknowledge the latest winners of its Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant. These medical students were awarded grants to complete scholarly work with an active SHM mentor in a project related to patient safety, quality improvement, or other areas relevant to the field of hospital medicine.

Sandeep Bala
University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine
Poster 382 – The impact of plain language open medical notes on patient activation
Location: Denver (Colo.) Health Hospital

Monisha Bhatia
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Poster 23 – Using electronic medical record phenotypic data to predict discharge destination
Location: Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn.

Maximilian Hemmrich
University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine
Oral presentation, 11:45 a.m. – Noon, Tuesday, March 26
Project: Derivation and validation of a COPD readmission risk prediction tool
Location: University of Chicago

Ilana Scandariato Lavina
Weill Cornell Medical College
Poster 424 – Understanding the experience of the long-term hospitalized patient with provider fragmentation: A qualitative study

Yun Li
Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth
Poster 320 – Developing and implementing clinical pathway(s) for hospitalized injection drug users due to injection-related infection sequelae
Location: Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, N.H.

 

 

Resident Travel Grant recipients

We would like to congratulate the latest winners of SHM’s Resident Travel Grant. To qualify for this award, residents submitted an abstract for consideration in the RIV session at HM19 as first authors. Each of them produced outstanding work worthy of recognition:

Daniel Choi, MD – New York Presbyterian Hospital–Weill Cornell
Poster 277 – Improving rates of appropriate ICD deactivation discussions in admitted patients made DNR and/or comfort care

Armond Esmaili, MD – University of California, San Francisco, and the San Francisco VA Medical Center
Poster 649 – Early isolated hypotension, a sepsis “Canary in the Coal Mine”: Timing of antibiotics according to hypotension identifies different sepsis subtypes at differing risks of treatment delay
Poster 8 – Who’s waiting? Predictors of antibiotic delays in hypotensive patients with sepsis

Geoffroy Fauchet, MD – University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora – Rocky Mountain Regional VA Medical Center
Poster 288 – Tackling opioid prescriptions through resident engagement

Nick Zessis, MD – Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Poster 101 – Smartphone-based teaching app increases frequency of residents teaching medical students

David Sterken, MD – University of California, San Francisco
Poster 230 – Safety of antimotility agent use during treatment for Clostridioides difficile infection in malignant hepatology patients

James Anstey, MD – University of California, San Francisco
Poster 57 – The POCUS supervision safety gap: Attending physician knowledge in point-of-care ultrasound lags behind that of internal medicine residents
Poster 147 – Association of post paracentesis albumin dosage and acute kidney injury in hospitalized patients

Nicholas Iverson, MD – University of California, San Francisco
Poster 408 – Implications of using an alternative measure to assess opiate days supplied at discharge

Marwah Shahid, MD – Baylor College of Medicine, Houston
Poster 22 – Topic modeling to evaluate hospital Google reviews

Abhishek Chaturvedi, MD – Allegheny Health Network, Pittsburgh
Poster 152 – Association of socioeconomic and racial disparities with health care utilization and outcomes in opioid overdose–related hospitalizations in the United States: Insights from National Inpatient Sample from 2012 through 2014

Pratyusha Tirumanisetty, MD – Unity Hospital, Rochester (N.Y.) Regional Health
Poster 9 – Does hospital-onset Clostridium difficile infection increase the risk of hospital discharge to skilled nursing facilities? A retrospective case-control study from a community hospital.

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Chapter Excellence Awards

The Society of Hospital Medicine is proud to recognize its chapters for their hard work and dedication through Chapter Excellence Awards. Each year, chapters strive to demonstrate growth, sustainability, and innovation within their activities, which are then recognized at SHM’s annual conference.

Please join SHM in congratulating the following chapters on their year of success in 2018!

Platinum Chapters: Iowa; Knoxville; Maryland; Michigan; Minnesota; New Mexico; North Carolina Triangle; Pacific Northwest; Southwest Florida; Wiregrass.

Gold Chapters: Houston; NYC/Westchester; Piedmont Triad; San Francisco Bay Area

Silver Chapters: Boston/Eastern Massachusetts; Charlotte Metro Area; Gulf States; Hampton Roads; Kentucky; Maine; Nebraska; North Jersey; Rocky Mountain; South Central Pennsylvania; South Texas; St. Louis.
 

Outstanding Chapter of the Year

Michigan. The Outstanding Chapter of the Year Award goes to one chapter that exemplifies high performance, going above and beyond the basic chapter requirements. The recipient of the Outstanding Chapter of the Year Award for 2018 is the Michigan chapter of SHM.

The Michigan chapter continues to embrace the mission of our society and nurtures a vibrant, multidisciplinary membership. It is currently the largest chapter in the program, representing more than 750 SHM members.

Using a technology-enabled platform, the Michigan chapter has expanded its meetings to four different sites, leveraging expertise from across the state. The chapter recently held its largest meeting focused on provider burnout, with more than 100 attendees across four different sites. It featured a main speaker as well as a multidisciplinary panel of leaders from eight different health systems.

The chapter has successfully incorporated advocacy into its annual planning and actively responds to new legislation affecting hospital medicine. It continues to be an active and valued member of the Michigan medical community and the SHM chapter community at large.

In addition to the service to members, the chapter strives to serve the SHM chapter community at large by collaborating and sharing best practices.

The chapter’s level of originality is not only a benefit to the chapter, but also to SHM’s Chapter program as a whole. Congratulations to the Michigan chapter on being named the Outstanding Chapter of 2018.

 

 

Rising Star Chapter

Knoxville. The Rising Star Chapter Award goes to one chapter that has been active for 2 years or less and in the past 12 months has made improvements to its leadership, stability and growth, and membership.

The recipient of the Rising Star Chapter Award for 2018 is the Knoxville (Tenn.) Chapter of SHM, which has made significant strides since its launch in the spring of 2017. The chapter assembled a group of local hospitalists from Knoxville and the surrounding region to encourage participation and drive quality initiatives in area hospitals.

The Knoxville chapter developed a leadership framework, including officers and board members, and just completed its first formal chapter leadership election. In 2018, the chapter held four meetings, including an event steered toward residents and students. Membership in the chapter has grown by more than 20% since inception. The chapter has engaged in statewide quality initiatives with the Tennessee Hospital Association and has engaged with other chapters across the state.

The Knoxville’s Chapter is an active, enthusiastic organization that is rapidly growing and thriving. Congratulations to the Knoxville chapter on being named the Rising Star Chapter for 2018.
 

 

Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant recipients

SHM is proud to acknowledge the latest winners of its Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant. These medical students were awarded grants to complete scholarly work with an active SHM mentor in a project related to patient safety, quality improvement, or other areas relevant to the field of hospital medicine.

Sandeep Bala
University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine
Poster 382 – The impact of plain language open medical notes on patient activation
Location: Denver (Colo.) Health Hospital

Monisha Bhatia
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Poster 23 – Using electronic medical record phenotypic data to predict discharge destination
Location: Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn.

Maximilian Hemmrich
University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine
Oral presentation, 11:45 a.m. – Noon, Tuesday, March 26
Project: Derivation and validation of a COPD readmission risk prediction tool
Location: University of Chicago

Ilana Scandariato Lavina
Weill Cornell Medical College
Poster 424 – Understanding the experience of the long-term hospitalized patient with provider fragmentation: A qualitative study

Yun Li
Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth
Poster 320 – Developing and implementing clinical pathway(s) for hospitalized injection drug users due to injection-related infection sequelae
Location: Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, N.H.

 

 

Resident Travel Grant recipients

We would like to congratulate the latest winners of SHM’s Resident Travel Grant. To qualify for this award, residents submitted an abstract for consideration in the RIV session at HM19 as first authors. Each of them produced outstanding work worthy of recognition:

Daniel Choi, MD – New York Presbyterian Hospital–Weill Cornell
Poster 277 – Improving rates of appropriate ICD deactivation discussions in admitted patients made DNR and/or comfort care

Armond Esmaili, MD – University of California, San Francisco, and the San Francisco VA Medical Center
Poster 649 – Early isolated hypotension, a sepsis “Canary in the Coal Mine”: Timing of antibiotics according to hypotension identifies different sepsis subtypes at differing risks of treatment delay
Poster 8 – Who’s waiting? Predictors of antibiotic delays in hypotensive patients with sepsis

Geoffroy Fauchet, MD – University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora – Rocky Mountain Regional VA Medical Center
Poster 288 – Tackling opioid prescriptions through resident engagement

Nick Zessis, MD – Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Poster 101 – Smartphone-based teaching app increases frequency of residents teaching medical students

David Sterken, MD – University of California, San Francisco
Poster 230 – Safety of antimotility agent use during treatment for Clostridioides difficile infection in malignant hepatology patients

James Anstey, MD – University of California, San Francisco
Poster 57 – The POCUS supervision safety gap: Attending physician knowledge in point-of-care ultrasound lags behind that of internal medicine residents
Poster 147 – Association of post paracentesis albumin dosage and acute kidney injury in hospitalized patients

Nicholas Iverson, MD – University of California, San Francisco
Poster 408 – Implications of using an alternative measure to assess opiate days supplied at discharge

Marwah Shahid, MD – Baylor College of Medicine, Houston
Poster 22 – Topic modeling to evaluate hospital Google reviews

Abhishek Chaturvedi, MD – Allegheny Health Network, Pittsburgh
Poster 152 – Association of socioeconomic and racial disparities with health care utilization and outcomes in opioid overdose–related hospitalizations in the United States: Insights from National Inpatient Sample from 2012 through 2014

Pratyusha Tirumanisetty, MD – Unity Hospital, Rochester (N.Y.) Regional Health
Poster 9 – Does hospital-onset Clostridium difficile infection increase the risk of hospital discharge to skilled nursing facilities? A retrospective case-control study from a community hospital.

Chapter Excellence Awards

The Society of Hospital Medicine is proud to recognize its chapters for their hard work and dedication through Chapter Excellence Awards. Each year, chapters strive to demonstrate growth, sustainability, and innovation within their activities, which are then recognized at SHM’s annual conference.

Please join SHM in congratulating the following chapters on their year of success in 2018!

Platinum Chapters: Iowa; Knoxville; Maryland; Michigan; Minnesota; New Mexico; North Carolina Triangle; Pacific Northwest; Southwest Florida; Wiregrass.

Gold Chapters: Houston; NYC/Westchester; Piedmont Triad; San Francisco Bay Area

Silver Chapters: Boston/Eastern Massachusetts; Charlotte Metro Area; Gulf States; Hampton Roads; Kentucky; Maine; Nebraska; North Jersey; Rocky Mountain; South Central Pennsylvania; South Texas; St. Louis.
 

Outstanding Chapter of the Year

Michigan. The Outstanding Chapter of the Year Award goes to one chapter that exemplifies high performance, going above and beyond the basic chapter requirements. The recipient of the Outstanding Chapter of the Year Award for 2018 is the Michigan chapter of SHM.

The Michigan chapter continues to embrace the mission of our society and nurtures a vibrant, multidisciplinary membership. It is currently the largest chapter in the program, representing more than 750 SHM members.

Using a technology-enabled platform, the Michigan chapter has expanded its meetings to four different sites, leveraging expertise from across the state. The chapter recently held its largest meeting focused on provider burnout, with more than 100 attendees across four different sites. It featured a main speaker as well as a multidisciplinary panel of leaders from eight different health systems.

The chapter has successfully incorporated advocacy into its annual planning and actively responds to new legislation affecting hospital medicine. It continues to be an active and valued member of the Michigan medical community and the SHM chapter community at large.

In addition to the service to members, the chapter strives to serve the SHM chapter community at large by collaborating and sharing best practices.

The chapter’s level of originality is not only a benefit to the chapter, but also to SHM’s Chapter program as a whole. Congratulations to the Michigan chapter on being named the Outstanding Chapter of 2018.

 

 

Rising Star Chapter

Knoxville. The Rising Star Chapter Award goes to one chapter that has been active for 2 years or less and in the past 12 months has made improvements to its leadership, stability and growth, and membership.

The recipient of the Rising Star Chapter Award for 2018 is the Knoxville (Tenn.) Chapter of SHM, which has made significant strides since its launch in the spring of 2017. The chapter assembled a group of local hospitalists from Knoxville and the surrounding region to encourage participation and drive quality initiatives in area hospitals.

The Knoxville chapter developed a leadership framework, including officers and board members, and just completed its first formal chapter leadership election. In 2018, the chapter held four meetings, including an event steered toward residents and students. Membership in the chapter has grown by more than 20% since inception. The chapter has engaged in statewide quality initiatives with the Tennessee Hospital Association and has engaged with other chapters across the state.

The Knoxville’s Chapter is an active, enthusiastic organization that is rapidly growing and thriving. Congratulations to the Knoxville chapter on being named the Rising Star Chapter for 2018.
 

 

Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant recipients

SHM is proud to acknowledge the latest winners of its Student Hospitalist Scholar Grant. These medical students were awarded grants to complete scholarly work with an active SHM mentor in a project related to patient safety, quality improvement, or other areas relevant to the field of hospital medicine.

Sandeep Bala
University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine
Poster 382 – The impact of plain language open medical notes on patient activation
Location: Denver (Colo.) Health Hospital

Monisha Bhatia
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Poster 23 – Using electronic medical record phenotypic data to predict discharge destination
Location: Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tenn.

Maximilian Hemmrich
University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine
Oral presentation, 11:45 a.m. – Noon, Tuesday, March 26
Project: Derivation and validation of a COPD readmission risk prediction tool
Location: University of Chicago

Ilana Scandariato Lavina
Weill Cornell Medical College
Poster 424 – Understanding the experience of the long-term hospitalized patient with provider fragmentation: A qualitative study

Yun Li
Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth
Poster 320 – Developing and implementing clinical pathway(s) for hospitalized injection drug users due to injection-related infection sequelae
Location: Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, N.H.

 

 

Resident Travel Grant recipients

We would like to congratulate the latest winners of SHM’s Resident Travel Grant. To qualify for this award, residents submitted an abstract for consideration in the RIV session at HM19 as first authors. Each of them produced outstanding work worthy of recognition:

Daniel Choi, MD – New York Presbyterian Hospital–Weill Cornell
Poster 277 – Improving rates of appropriate ICD deactivation discussions in admitted patients made DNR and/or comfort care

Armond Esmaili, MD – University of California, San Francisco, and the San Francisco VA Medical Center
Poster 649 – Early isolated hypotension, a sepsis “Canary in the Coal Mine”: Timing of antibiotics according to hypotension identifies different sepsis subtypes at differing risks of treatment delay
Poster 8 – Who’s waiting? Predictors of antibiotic delays in hypotensive patients with sepsis

Geoffroy Fauchet, MD – University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora – Rocky Mountain Regional VA Medical Center
Poster 288 – Tackling opioid prescriptions through resident engagement

Nick Zessis, MD – Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Poster 101 – Smartphone-based teaching app increases frequency of residents teaching medical students

David Sterken, MD – University of California, San Francisco
Poster 230 – Safety of antimotility agent use during treatment for Clostridioides difficile infection in malignant hepatology patients

James Anstey, MD – University of California, San Francisco
Poster 57 – The POCUS supervision safety gap: Attending physician knowledge in point-of-care ultrasound lags behind that of internal medicine residents
Poster 147 – Association of post paracentesis albumin dosage and acute kidney injury in hospitalized patients

Nicholas Iverson, MD – University of California, San Francisco
Poster 408 – Implications of using an alternative measure to assess opiate days supplied at discharge

Marwah Shahid, MD – Baylor College of Medicine, Houston
Poster 22 – Topic modeling to evaluate hospital Google reviews

Abhishek Chaturvedi, MD – Allegheny Health Network, Pittsburgh
Poster 152 – Association of socioeconomic and racial disparities with health care utilization and outcomes in opioid overdose–related hospitalizations in the United States: Insights from National Inpatient Sample from 2012 through 2014

Pratyusha Tirumanisetty, MD – Unity Hospital, Rochester (N.Y.) Regional Health
Poster 9 – Does hospital-onset Clostridium difficile infection increase the risk of hospital discharge to skilled nursing facilities? A retrospective case-control study from a community hospital.

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