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Core Competencies Lay Pediatric HM Foundation

NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. HM10 kicked off with a pediatric hospitalist leading the way. Patrick Conway, MD, MSc, a chief medical officer with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and one of pediatric HM’s own, was a part of the opening panel discussion that reviewed the implications of healthcare reform. And as the pediatric track coursed over the next two days, amidst the hustle and bustle of value-laden content, the final pediatric presentation just might have escaped routine notice.

Two days after its electronic release, a live preview of the “Pediatric Hospital Medicine Core Competencies” debuted at HM 2010.1 (The core competencies were printed as a supplement in the April issue of the Journal of Hospital Medicine.)

Erin Stucky, MD, SFHM, talks about the new Pediatric HM Core Competencies.
Erin Stucky, MD, SFHM, talks about the new Pediatric HM Core Competencies.

Mary Ottolini, MD, of Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, D.C., graciously thanked Erin Stucky, MD, Rady Children’s Hospital in San Diego, and Jennifer Maniscalco, MD, Children’s Hospital in Los Angeles, for their collaboration in the core competencies effort, which represented the culmination of years of perseverance and dedication. The core competencies underwent a rigorous development and review process; notably, draft copies were sent to more than 30 academic and certifying societies and stakeholder agencies for input. Vibrant discussion ensued as pediatric, family practice, and med-ped hospitalists engaged in both thoughtful reflection and optimistic forecasts of the relevance and utility of a practical framework to define the field.

These guidelines, however, are just the beginning. Much dialogue centered on the future role of the core competencies in such arenas as education and professional development. It became clear that work remains if pediatric hospitalists are to make the best use of this sentinel publication.

Nonetheless, this journey that is the advancement of a vibrant—and now well-defined—field of medicine has a stellar launching pad from which to take flight. HM10

Dr. Shen is a pediatric hospitalist and director of the hospital medicine program at Dell Children’s Hospital in Austin, Texas.

Reference

  1. Stucky ER, Maniscalco J, Ottolini MC, et al. The pediatric hospital medicine core competencies. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(S2):1-82.

More from the HM10 Special Report

National Imperative

Hospitalists challenged to keep making healthcare better

ONLINE EXCLUSIVE: Audio interview with SHM President Jeff Wiese

SHM's new president talks about his vision for the next generation of hospitalists

Quality Control

As specialty matures, annual meeting flourishes with practical, educational, and social takeaways

Wachter’s World

HM pioneer says healthcare reform offers HM the chance to define cost savings, QI for future generations

Professional Advice

First-class faculty make HM10 pre-courses highly educational, practical

ONLINE EXCLUSIVE: Audio interview with ABIM Learning Session Director Julius Yang

Dr. Yang discusses the HM10 pre-course that prepares hospitalists for ABIM recertification.

Jam-Packed & Well Worth It

A day in the life of one hospitalist’s annual meeting

ONLINE EXCLUSIVE: Audio interview with Nasim Afsarmanesh

Dr. Afsarmanesh discusses the events of her dawn-to-dusk Day 2 at HM10 in National Harbor, Md.

Special Interests

From IT to education to community issues, hospitalists want to be part of the healthcare solution

WORKSHOP WRAPUP

Practice Management Session

“The Case for Unit-Based Hospitalists: Benefits and Challenges”

Practice Management Session

“Hospitalist NPPs 301—Advanced Concepts”

Practice Management Session

"The Patient Experience: What Hospitalists Need to Know About Measuring, Reporting, and Benchmarking"

Clinical Session

"Controversies in Anticoagulation and Thrombosis"

Clinical Session

"The New C. Diff"

Quality Session

"The Value Proposition to C-Suites: Aligning Hospital Resources to Support Hospitalist QI"

Quality Session

"Quality Improvement Curriculum: How to Get Started and to Keep Going"


You may also

DOWNLOAD THE COMPLETE HM10 SPECIAL REPORT SUPPLEMENT

in pdf format (2.3 MB).

Issue
The Hospitalist - 2010(05)
Publications
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NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. HM10 kicked off with a pediatric hospitalist leading the way. Patrick Conway, MD, MSc, a chief medical officer with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and one of pediatric HM’s own, was a part of the opening panel discussion that reviewed the implications of healthcare reform. And as the pediatric track coursed over the next two days, amidst the hustle and bustle of value-laden content, the final pediatric presentation just might have escaped routine notice.

Two days after its electronic release, a live preview of the “Pediatric Hospital Medicine Core Competencies” debuted at HM 2010.1 (The core competencies were printed as a supplement in the April issue of the Journal of Hospital Medicine.)

Erin Stucky, MD, SFHM, talks about the new Pediatric HM Core Competencies.
Erin Stucky, MD, SFHM, talks about the new Pediatric HM Core Competencies.

Mary Ottolini, MD, of Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, D.C., graciously thanked Erin Stucky, MD, Rady Children’s Hospital in San Diego, and Jennifer Maniscalco, MD, Children’s Hospital in Los Angeles, for their collaboration in the core competencies effort, which represented the culmination of years of perseverance and dedication. The core competencies underwent a rigorous development and review process; notably, draft copies were sent to more than 30 academic and certifying societies and stakeholder agencies for input. Vibrant discussion ensued as pediatric, family practice, and med-ped hospitalists engaged in both thoughtful reflection and optimistic forecasts of the relevance and utility of a practical framework to define the field.

These guidelines, however, are just the beginning. Much dialogue centered on the future role of the core competencies in such arenas as education and professional development. It became clear that work remains if pediatric hospitalists are to make the best use of this sentinel publication.

Nonetheless, this journey that is the advancement of a vibrant—and now well-defined—field of medicine has a stellar launching pad from which to take flight. HM10

Dr. Shen is a pediatric hospitalist and director of the hospital medicine program at Dell Children’s Hospital in Austin, Texas.

Reference

  1. Stucky ER, Maniscalco J, Ottolini MC, et al. The pediatric hospital medicine core competencies. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(S2):1-82.

More from the HM10 Special Report

National Imperative

Hospitalists challenged to keep making healthcare better

ONLINE EXCLUSIVE: Audio interview with SHM President Jeff Wiese

SHM's new president talks about his vision for the next generation of hospitalists

Quality Control

As specialty matures, annual meeting flourishes with practical, educational, and social takeaways

Wachter’s World

HM pioneer says healthcare reform offers HM the chance to define cost savings, QI for future generations

Professional Advice

First-class faculty make HM10 pre-courses highly educational, practical

ONLINE EXCLUSIVE: Audio interview with ABIM Learning Session Director Julius Yang

Dr. Yang discusses the HM10 pre-course that prepares hospitalists for ABIM recertification.

Jam-Packed & Well Worth It

A day in the life of one hospitalist’s annual meeting

ONLINE EXCLUSIVE: Audio interview with Nasim Afsarmanesh

Dr. Afsarmanesh discusses the events of her dawn-to-dusk Day 2 at HM10 in National Harbor, Md.

Special Interests

From IT to education to community issues, hospitalists want to be part of the healthcare solution

WORKSHOP WRAPUP

Practice Management Session

“The Case for Unit-Based Hospitalists: Benefits and Challenges”

Practice Management Session

“Hospitalist NPPs 301—Advanced Concepts”

Practice Management Session

"The Patient Experience: What Hospitalists Need to Know About Measuring, Reporting, and Benchmarking"

Clinical Session

"Controversies in Anticoagulation and Thrombosis"

Clinical Session

"The New C. Diff"

Quality Session

"The Value Proposition to C-Suites: Aligning Hospital Resources to Support Hospitalist QI"

Quality Session

"Quality Improvement Curriculum: How to Get Started and to Keep Going"


You may also

DOWNLOAD THE COMPLETE HM10 SPECIAL REPORT SUPPLEMENT

in pdf format (2.3 MB).

NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. HM10 kicked off with a pediatric hospitalist leading the way. Patrick Conway, MD, MSc, a chief medical officer with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and one of pediatric HM’s own, was a part of the opening panel discussion that reviewed the implications of healthcare reform. And as the pediatric track coursed over the next two days, amidst the hustle and bustle of value-laden content, the final pediatric presentation just might have escaped routine notice.

Two days after its electronic release, a live preview of the “Pediatric Hospital Medicine Core Competencies” debuted at HM 2010.1 (The core competencies were printed as a supplement in the April issue of the Journal of Hospital Medicine.)

Erin Stucky, MD, SFHM, talks about the new Pediatric HM Core Competencies.
Erin Stucky, MD, SFHM, talks about the new Pediatric HM Core Competencies.

Mary Ottolini, MD, of Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, D.C., graciously thanked Erin Stucky, MD, Rady Children’s Hospital in San Diego, and Jennifer Maniscalco, MD, Children’s Hospital in Los Angeles, for their collaboration in the core competencies effort, which represented the culmination of years of perseverance and dedication. The core competencies underwent a rigorous development and review process; notably, draft copies were sent to more than 30 academic and certifying societies and stakeholder agencies for input. Vibrant discussion ensued as pediatric, family practice, and med-ped hospitalists engaged in both thoughtful reflection and optimistic forecasts of the relevance and utility of a practical framework to define the field.

These guidelines, however, are just the beginning. Much dialogue centered on the future role of the core competencies in such arenas as education and professional development. It became clear that work remains if pediatric hospitalists are to make the best use of this sentinel publication.

Nonetheless, this journey that is the advancement of a vibrant—and now well-defined—field of medicine has a stellar launching pad from which to take flight. HM10

Dr. Shen is a pediatric hospitalist and director of the hospital medicine program at Dell Children’s Hospital in Austin, Texas.

Reference

  1. Stucky ER, Maniscalco J, Ottolini MC, et al. The pediatric hospital medicine core competencies. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(S2):1-82.

More from the HM10 Special Report

National Imperative

Hospitalists challenged to keep making healthcare better

ONLINE EXCLUSIVE: Audio interview with SHM President Jeff Wiese

SHM's new president talks about his vision for the next generation of hospitalists

Quality Control

As specialty matures, annual meeting flourishes with practical, educational, and social takeaways

Wachter’s World

HM pioneer says healthcare reform offers HM the chance to define cost savings, QI for future generations

Professional Advice

First-class faculty make HM10 pre-courses highly educational, practical

ONLINE EXCLUSIVE: Audio interview with ABIM Learning Session Director Julius Yang

Dr. Yang discusses the HM10 pre-course that prepares hospitalists for ABIM recertification.

Jam-Packed & Well Worth It

A day in the life of one hospitalist’s annual meeting

ONLINE EXCLUSIVE: Audio interview with Nasim Afsarmanesh

Dr. Afsarmanesh discusses the events of her dawn-to-dusk Day 2 at HM10 in National Harbor, Md.

Special Interests

From IT to education to community issues, hospitalists want to be part of the healthcare solution

WORKSHOP WRAPUP

Practice Management Session

“The Case for Unit-Based Hospitalists: Benefits and Challenges”

Practice Management Session

“Hospitalist NPPs 301—Advanced Concepts”

Practice Management Session

"The Patient Experience: What Hospitalists Need to Know About Measuring, Reporting, and Benchmarking"

Clinical Session

"Controversies in Anticoagulation and Thrombosis"

Clinical Session

"The New C. Diff"

Quality Session

"The Value Proposition to C-Suites: Aligning Hospital Resources to Support Hospitalist QI"

Quality Session

"Quality Improvement Curriculum: How to Get Started and to Keep Going"


You may also

DOWNLOAD THE COMPLETE HM10 SPECIAL REPORT SUPPLEMENT

in pdf format (2.3 MB).

Issue
The Hospitalist - 2010(05)
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Core Competencies Lay Pediatric HM Foundation
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