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Embracing constant change in a growing practice

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Although many physicians resist change, learning how to embrace change and making it work for you are keys to a long, successful practice in hospital medicine, said Thomas McIlraith, MD, SFHM, CLHM, immediate past chairman, department of hospital medicine, and immediate past treasurer of the board of directors of Mercy Medical Group in Sacramento, Calif.

Dr. Thomas McIraith, immediate past chairman, department of hospital medicine, and immediate past treasurer of the board of directors of Mercy Medical Group, Sacramento, Calif.
Dr. Thomas McIlraith

During his Monday, April 9, session, “Scaling Up Your Hospital Medicine Group,” he will share what it was like to work through significant changes as the chair of a department that grew in 12 years from 12 hospitalists – averaging fewer than 100 patients per day – to 84 hospitalists averaging more than 500 patients per day.

“I will be discussing my experiences but relating some universal truths about leadership in hospital medicine that can be applied to all areas of hospital medicine and how to manage change in an environment where change is constant,” said Dr. McIlraith, who will share key lessons that he learned. “I will break it down into the cultural, personal, and structural aspects of thriving in this dynamic environment.”

Dr. McIlraith hopes that attendees will come away with a good understanding of what he dubs the “authority/accountability” equation in physician leadership. “This is a principle that is used to assess what is expected of you in order to be successful as a leader, and if your ‘authority’ is commensurate with your ‘accountability,’ ” he said. “The authority piece of the equation takes many forms: resources, personnel, reporting structure, clerical support, and so forth. The key is to make sure that the authority/accountably equation is balanced not only for you but also for your subordinates.”

One example of an imbalanced authority/accountability equation that he’ll discuss in some detail is becoming a figurehead, in which accountability exists without the necessary authority. “If you end up in that position, get out,” Dr. McIlraith said. He will also discuss an example of where the authority/accountability equation is tipped in the opposite direction, with disastrous consequences.

Dr. McIlraith and Kimberly Bell, MD, who will also present at this session, aim to make it interactive. Dr. Bell currently serves as the divisional director of the CHI Franciscan Inpatient Team located in Tacoma, Wash. “We both have a wealth of experience to offer, but we are not the only ones in attendance who have wisdom to share,” Dr. McIlraith said.

Another goal of this session is to help attendees identify other hospital medicine leaders in comparable situations for the purpose of networking outside of the meeting. The session, although aimed at physician leaders, will be relevant to all hospitalists.

Scaling Up Your Hospital Medicine Group
Monday, 1:35-2:35 p.m.

Grand Ballroom 7B

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Although many physicians resist change, learning how to embrace change and making it work for you are keys to a long, successful practice in hospital medicine, said Thomas McIlraith, MD, SFHM, CLHM, immediate past chairman, department of hospital medicine, and immediate past treasurer of the board of directors of Mercy Medical Group in Sacramento, Calif.

Dr. Thomas McIraith, immediate past chairman, department of hospital medicine, and immediate past treasurer of the board of directors of Mercy Medical Group, Sacramento, Calif.
Dr. Thomas McIlraith

During his Monday, April 9, session, “Scaling Up Your Hospital Medicine Group,” he will share what it was like to work through significant changes as the chair of a department that grew in 12 years from 12 hospitalists – averaging fewer than 100 patients per day – to 84 hospitalists averaging more than 500 patients per day.

“I will be discussing my experiences but relating some universal truths about leadership in hospital medicine that can be applied to all areas of hospital medicine and how to manage change in an environment where change is constant,” said Dr. McIlraith, who will share key lessons that he learned. “I will break it down into the cultural, personal, and structural aspects of thriving in this dynamic environment.”

Dr. McIlraith hopes that attendees will come away with a good understanding of what he dubs the “authority/accountability” equation in physician leadership. “This is a principle that is used to assess what is expected of you in order to be successful as a leader, and if your ‘authority’ is commensurate with your ‘accountability,’ ” he said. “The authority piece of the equation takes many forms: resources, personnel, reporting structure, clerical support, and so forth. The key is to make sure that the authority/accountably equation is balanced not only for you but also for your subordinates.”

One example of an imbalanced authority/accountability equation that he’ll discuss in some detail is becoming a figurehead, in which accountability exists without the necessary authority. “If you end up in that position, get out,” Dr. McIlraith said. He will also discuss an example of where the authority/accountability equation is tipped in the opposite direction, with disastrous consequences.

Dr. McIlraith and Kimberly Bell, MD, who will also present at this session, aim to make it interactive. Dr. Bell currently serves as the divisional director of the CHI Franciscan Inpatient Team located in Tacoma, Wash. “We both have a wealth of experience to offer, but we are not the only ones in attendance who have wisdom to share,” Dr. McIlraith said.

Another goal of this session is to help attendees identify other hospital medicine leaders in comparable situations for the purpose of networking outside of the meeting. The session, although aimed at physician leaders, will be relevant to all hospitalists.

Scaling Up Your Hospital Medicine Group
Monday, 1:35-2:35 p.m.

Grand Ballroom 7B

Although many physicians resist change, learning how to embrace change and making it work for you are keys to a long, successful practice in hospital medicine, said Thomas McIlraith, MD, SFHM, CLHM, immediate past chairman, department of hospital medicine, and immediate past treasurer of the board of directors of Mercy Medical Group in Sacramento, Calif.

Dr. Thomas McIraith, immediate past chairman, department of hospital medicine, and immediate past treasurer of the board of directors of Mercy Medical Group, Sacramento, Calif.
Dr. Thomas McIlraith

During his Monday, April 9, session, “Scaling Up Your Hospital Medicine Group,” he will share what it was like to work through significant changes as the chair of a department that grew in 12 years from 12 hospitalists – averaging fewer than 100 patients per day – to 84 hospitalists averaging more than 500 patients per day.

“I will be discussing my experiences but relating some universal truths about leadership in hospital medicine that can be applied to all areas of hospital medicine and how to manage change in an environment where change is constant,” said Dr. McIlraith, who will share key lessons that he learned. “I will break it down into the cultural, personal, and structural aspects of thriving in this dynamic environment.”

Dr. McIlraith hopes that attendees will come away with a good understanding of what he dubs the “authority/accountability” equation in physician leadership. “This is a principle that is used to assess what is expected of you in order to be successful as a leader, and if your ‘authority’ is commensurate with your ‘accountability,’ ” he said. “The authority piece of the equation takes many forms: resources, personnel, reporting structure, clerical support, and so forth. The key is to make sure that the authority/accountably equation is balanced not only for you but also for your subordinates.”

One example of an imbalanced authority/accountability equation that he’ll discuss in some detail is becoming a figurehead, in which accountability exists without the necessary authority. “If you end up in that position, get out,” Dr. McIlraith said. He will also discuss an example of where the authority/accountability equation is tipped in the opposite direction, with disastrous consequences.

Dr. McIlraith and Kimberly Bell, MD, who will also present at this session, aim to make it interactive. Dr. Bell currently serves as the divisional director of the CHI Franciscan Inpatient Team located in Tacoma, Wash. “We both have a wealth of experience to offer, but we are not the only ones in attendance who have wisdom to share,” Dr. McIlraith said.

Another goal of this session is to help attendees identify other hospital medicine leaders in comparable situations for the purpose of networking outside of the meeting. The session, although aimed at physician leaders, will be relevant to all hospitalists.

Scaling Up Your Hospital Medicine Group
Monday, 1:35-2:35 p.m.

Grand Ballroom 7B

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Speed mentoring returns to HM meeting

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About 6 years ago, members of the Society of Hospital Medicine’s Academic Hospitalist Committee got together to try to answer a question: How do we meet the mentoring needs of junior hospitalists?

One answer was inspired by the singles social scene. “Speed mentoring,” modeled after speed dating, became a thing at the Society of Hospital Medicine’s annual meeting in 2013, and it has remained popular going into this year, its 6th appearance.

Joanna Bonsall, MD, PhD, SFHM, assistant professor of medicine at Emory University, Atlanta, has been a part of coordinating the event since the beginning.

“We tried it out for the first year, and it was wildly successful,” she said. “The feedback was enormous, so we’ve continued it ever since.”

Hospitalists looking for mentoring time with senior hospitalists submit their curriculum vitae and a question they’d like to have answered. Then they’re paired with three mentors who have expertise in that field, meeting with each for 15 minutes.

For instance, someone asking – How can I improve my teaching skills with medical students? – would be paired with veteran hospitalists known for their education skills. In its first year, there were 12 slots available. It has since expanded, and this year, there are 20 slots. Registration closed a month before the annual conference.

Dr. Joanna Bonsall, assistant professor of medicine at Emory University, Atlanta
Dr. Joanna Bonsall


Dr. Bonsall said that mentoring, including the speed mentoring event, is all about matching up ambition and talent with ways to put them to use.

“I believe that our field is so full of talent, and I think that because we’re a relatively junior field, there is a lot of untapped talent out there – people who have energy and don’t know what to do with it,” she said. “I feel the same way about faculty development. Mentoring is so key to help connect the energy to things that they can do.”

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About 6 years ago, members of the Society of Hospital Medicine’s Academic Hospitalist Committee got together to try to answer a question: How do we meet the mentoring needs of junior hospitalists?

One answer was inspired by the singles social scene. “Speed mentoring,” modeled after speed dating, became a thing at the Society of Hospital Medicine’s annual meeting in 2013, and it has remained popular going into this year, its 6th appearance.

Joanna Bonsall, MD, PhD, SFHM, assistant professor of medicine at Emory University, Atlanta, has been a part of coordinating the event since the beginning.

“We tried it out for the first year, and it was wildly successful,” she said. “The feedback was enormous, so we’ve continued it ever since.”

Hospitalists looking for mentoring time with senior hospitalists submit their curriculum vitae and a question they’d like to have answered. Then they’re paired with three mentors who have expertise in that field, meeting with each for 15 minutes.

For instance, someone asking – How can I improve my teaching skills with medical students? – would be paired with veteran hospitalists known for their education skills. In its first year, there were 12 slots available. It has since expanded, and this year, there are 20 slots. Registration closed a month before the annual conference.

Dr. Joanna Bonsall, assistant professor of medicine at Emory University, Atlanta
Dr. Joanna Bonsall


Dr. Bonsall said that mentoring, including the speed mentoring event, is all about matching up ambition and talent with ways to put them to use.

“I believe that our field is so full of talent, and I think that because we’re a relatively junior field, there is a lot of untapped talent out there – people who have energy and don’t know what to do with it,” she said. “I feel the same way about faculty development. Mentoring is so key to help connect the energy to things that they can do.”

About 6 years ago, members of the Society of Hospital Medicine’s Academic Hospitalist Committee got together to try to answer a question: How do we meet the mentoring needs of junior hospitalists?

One answer was inspired by the singles social scene. “Speed mentoring,” modeled after speed dating, became a thing at the Society of Hospital Medicine’s annual meeting in 2013, and it has remained popular going into this year, its 6th appearance.

Joanna Bonsall, MD, PhD, SFHM, assistant professor of medicine at Emory University, Atlanta, has been a part of coordinating the event since the beginning.

“We tried it out for the first year, and it was wildly successful,” she said. “The feedback was enormous, so we’ve continued it ever since.”

Hospitalists looking for mentoring time with senior hospitalists submit their curriculum vitae and a question they’d like to have answered. Then they’re paired with three mentors who have expertise in that field, meeting with each for 15 minutes.

For instance, someone asking – How can I improve my teaching skills with medical students? – would be paired with veteran hospitalists known for their education skills. In its first year, there were 12 slots available. It has since expanded, and this year, there are 20 slots. Registration closed a month before the annual conference.

Dr. Joanna Bonsall, assistant professor of medicine at Emory University, Atlanta
Dr. Joanna Bonsall


Dr. Bonsall said that mentoring, including the speed mentoring event, is all about matching up ambition and talent with ways to put them to use.

“I believe that our field is so full of talent, and I think that because we’re a relatively junior field, there is a lot of untapped talent out there – people who have energy and don’t know what to do with it,” she said. “I feel the same way about faculty development. Mentoring is so key to help connect the energy to things that they can do.”

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Welcome to Hospital Medicine 2018

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Welcome to Hospital Medicine 2018 (HM18), the largest conference ever held specifically for hospital medicine. The Society of Hospital Medicine (SHM) is proud that HM18 brings together a broad range of stakeholders in hospital medicine, including physicians of many specialties, acute care providers, administrators, pharmacists, C-suite executives, recruiters, and educators. Your decision to join your colleagues at HM18 demonstrates your commitment to not only the specialty of hospital medicine but also to the patients you serve.

This year’s renowned speakers will present important sessions addressing the rapidly evolving health care landscape. To open the main conference on April 9, Kate Goodrich, MD, MHS, chief medical officer and director of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Center for Clinical Standards and Quality, and a practicing hospitalist, will present her featured address, “Payment Reform is Here: What Hospitalists Need to Know.” You will also hear from the president of SHM, Ron Greeno, MD, FCCP, MHM, about the state of hospital medicine.

On April 9, be sure to attend one of SHM’s Special Interest Forums, where you can choose to network and connect with other hospitalists interested in the same things you are. There are 29 forums from which to choose. On April 10, SHM will open the first-ever International Hospital Medicine Lounge. We hope to welcome more than 100 hospitalists from around the world to HM18.

On April 11, HM18 concludes with the closing keynote, titled “Hospitalists as Drivers of Innovation and System Change: Are We Doing Enough?” presented by Robert M. Wachter, MD, MHM, chief of the department of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, and the author of “Hospital Medicine” and “The Digital Doctor.”

Please make sure to download the HM18 At Hand meeting app, a wonderful resource for every HM18 attendee that puts the meeting at your fingertips. Create an individualized conference experience from your smartphone, tablet, or laptop.

Don’t miss the opportunity to meet one on one with members of SHM’s Board of Directors, who will be available in the SHM Pavilion, located in the Exhibit Hall, during scheduled visit times. Please consult the Meet the Board schedule in the HM18 At Hand app for further information.

Dr. Larry Wellikson
Dr. Larry Wellikson

On behalf of the SHM Board of Directors and staff, welcome to HM18 and to Orlando. Through this conference’s rich selection of educational opportunities, research offerings, and networking events, SHM continues to further its mission to promote excellence in the practice of hospital medicine. SHM remains at the forefront of health care today, continuing to empower hospitalists and revolutionize patient care.

Dr. Wellikson is CEO of SHM.

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Welcome to Hospital Medicine 2018 (HM18), the largest conference ever held specifically for hospital medicine. The Society of Hospital Medicine (SHM) is proud that HM18 brings together a broad range of stakeholders in hospital medicine, including physicians of many specialties, acute care providers, administrators, pharmacists, C-suite executives, recruiters, and educators. Your decision to join your colleagues at HM18 demonstrates your commitment to not only the specialty of hospital medicine but also to the patients you serve.

This year’s renowned speakers will present important sessions addressing the rapidly evolving health care landscape. To open the main conference on April 9, Kate Goodrich, MD, MHS, chief medical officer and director of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Center for Clinical Standards and Quality, and a practicing hospitalist, will present her featured address, “Payment Reform is Here: What Hospitalists Need to Know.” You will also hear from the president of SHM, Ron Greeno, MD, FCCP, MHM, about the state of hospital medicine.

On April 9, be sure to attend one of SHM’s Special Interest Forums, where you can choose to network and connect with other hospitalists interested in the same things you are. There are 29 forums from which to choose. On April 10, SHM will open the first-ever International Hospital Medicine Lounge. We hope to welcome more than 100 hospitalists from around the world to HM18.

On April 11, HM18 concludes with the closing keynote, titled “Hospitalists as Drivers of Innovation and System Change: Are We Doing Enough?” presented by Robert M. Wachter, MD, MHM, chief of the department of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, and the author of “Hospital Medicine” and “The Digital Doctor.”

Please make sure to download the HM18 At Hand meeting app, a wonderful resource for every HM18 attendee that puts the meeting at your fingertips. Create an individualized conference experience from your smartphone, tablet, or laptop.

Don’t miss the opportunity to meet one on one with members of SHM’s Board of Directors, who will be available in the SHM Pavilion, located in the Exhibit Hall, during scheduled visit times. Please consult the Meet the Board schedule in the HM18 At Hand app for further information.

Dr. Larry Wellikson
Dr. Larry Wellikson

On behalf of the SHM Board of Directors and staff, welcome to HM18 and to Orlando. Through this conference’s rich selection of educational opportunities, research offerings, and networking events, SHM continues to further its mission to promote excellence in the practice of hospital medicine. SHM remains at the forefront of health care today, continuing to empower hospitalists and revolutionize patient care.

Dr. Wellikson is CEO of SHM.

Welcome to Hospital Medicine 2018 (HM18), the largest conference ever held specifically for hospital medicine. The Society of Hospital Medicine (SHM) is proud that HM18 brings together a broad range of stakeholders in hospital medicine, including physicians of many specialties, acute care providers, administrators, pharmacists, C-suite executives, recruiters, and educators. Your decision to join your colleagues at HM18 demonstrates your commitment to not only the specialty of hospital medicine but also to the patients you serve.

This year’s renowned speakers will present important sessions addressing the rapidly evolving health care landscape. To open the main conference on April 9, Kate Goodrich, MD, MHS, chief medical officer and director of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Center for Clinical Standards and Quality, and a practicing hospitalist, will present her featured address, “Payment Reform is Here: What Hospitalists Need to Know.” You will also hear from the president of SHM, Ron Greeno, MD, FCCP, MHM, about the state of hospital medicine.

On April 9, be sure to attend one of SHM’s Special Interest Forums, where you can choose to network and connect with other hospitalists interested in the same things you are. There are 29 forums from which to choose. On April 10, SHM will open the first-ever International Hospital Medicine Lounge. We hope to welcome more than 100 hospitalists from around the world to HM18.

On April 11, HM18 concludes with the closing keynote, titled “Hospitalists as Drivers of Innovation and System Change: Are We Doing Enough?” presented by Robert M. Wachter, MD, MHM, chief of the department of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, and the author of “Hospital Medicine” and “The Digital Doctor.”

Please make sure to download the HM18 At Hand meeting app, a wonderful resource for every HM18 attendee that puts the meeting at your fingertips. Create an individualized conference experience from your smartphone, tablet, or laptop.

Don’t miss the opportunity to meet one on one with members of SHM’s Board of Directors, who will be available in the SHM Pavilion, located in the Exhibit Hall, during scheduled visit times. Please consult the Meet the Board schedule in the HM18 At Hand app for further information.

Dr. Larry Wellikson
Dr. Larry Wellikson

On behalf of the SHM Board of Directors and staff, welcome to HM18 and to Orlando. Through this conference’s rich selection of educational opportunities, research offerings, and networking events, SHM continues to further its mission to promote excellence in the practice of hospital medicine. SHM remains at the forefront of health care today, continuing to empower hospitalists and revolutionize patient care.

Dr. Wellikson is CEO of SHM.

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2017-2018 Annual Conference Committee

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The charge of the Annual Conference Committee is to develop the content for the SHM Annual Conference and pre-courses, including topics, speakers, and learning objectives. The 2018 Annual Conference Committee is composed of the following SHM members:

Course Director

Kathleen M. Finn, MD, MPhil, SFHM
Massachusetts General Hospital

Assistant Course Director​

Dustin T. Smith, MD, SFHM
Emory University School of Medicine

Committee Members


Joshua Allen-Dicker, MD, MPH, FHM
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Daniel Fang, MD
Stanford School of Medicine

Margaret C. Fang, MD, MPH, FHM
University of California, San Francisco

Leonard Feldman, MD, SFHM, FAAP, FACP
Johns Hopkins Hospital

Nick Fitterman, MD, SFHM
Northwell Health

Prateek Gandiga, MD
Georgetown University Hospital

Laura Nell Hodo, MD, FHM
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai & Kravis Children’s Hospital

Akshata Hopkins, MD, FHM
Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital

Michael Janjigian, MD
Bellevue Hospital Center

Benji K. Mathews, MD, SFHM
HealthPartners & University of Minnesota Medical School

Heather Nye, MD, PhD, SFHM
University of California, San Francisco

James C. Pile, MD, SFHM
Cleveland Clinic

Linda Prieto, MD, FHM
Morton Plant Hospital

Amith Skandhan, MD, FHM
Southeast Alabama Medical Center

Barbara Slawski, MD, MS, SFHM
Medical College of Wisconsin

Daniel I. Steinberg, MD, FHM
Beth Israel Medical Center

Amanda Trask, MBA, MHA, FACHE, SFHM
Catholic Health Initiatives

Rohit Uppal, MD, MBA, SFHM
TeamHealth

Christopher M. Whinney, MD, FACP, FHM
Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine

Surinder Yadav, MD, SFHM
CEP America

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The charge of the Annual Conference Committee is to develop the content for the SHM Annual Conference and pre-courses, including topics, speakers, and learning objectives. The 2018 Annual Conference Committee is composed of the following SHM members:

Course Director

Kathleen M. Finn, MD, MPhil, SFHM
Massachusetts General Hospital

Assistant Course Director​

Dustin T. Smith, MD, SFHM
Emory University School of Medicine

Committee Members


Joshua Allen-Dicker, MD, MPH, FHM
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Daniel Fang, MD
Stanford School of Medicine

Margaret C. Fang, MD, MPH, FHM
University of California, San Francisco

Leonard Feldman, MD, SFHM, FAAP, FACP
Johns Hopkins Hospital

Nick Fitterman, MD, SFHM
Northwell Health

Prateek Gandiga, MD
Georgetown University Hospital

Laura Nell Hodo, MD, FHM
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai & Kravis Children’s Hospital

Akshata Hopkins, MD, FHM
Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital

Michael Janjigian, MD
Bellevue Hospital Center

Benji K. Mathews, MD, SFHM
HealthPartners & University of Minnesota Medical School

Heather Nye, MD, PhD, SFHM
University of California, San Francisco

James C. Pile, MD, SFHM
Cleveland Clinic

Linda Prieto, MD, FHM
Morton Plant Hospital

Amith Skandhan, MD, FHM
Southeast Alabama Medical Center

Barbara Slawski, MD, MS, SFHM
Medical College of Wisconsin

Daniel I. Steinberg, MD, FHM
Beth Israel Medical Center

Amanda Trask, MBA, MHA, FACHE, SFHM
Catholic Health Initiatives

Rohit Uppal, MD, MBA, SFHM
TeamHealth

Christopher M. Whinney, MD, FACP, FHM
Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine

Surinder Yadav, MD, SFHM
CEP America

The charge of the Annual Conference Committee is to develop the content for the SHM Annual Conference and pre-courses, including topics, speakers, and learning objectives. The 2018 Annual Conference Committee is composed of the following SHM members:

Course Director

Kathleen M. Finn, MD, MPhil, SFHM
Massachusetts General Hospital

Assistant Course Director​

Dustin T. Smith, MD, SFHM
Emory University School of Medicine

Committee Members


Joshua Allen-Dicker, MD, MPH, FHM
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Daniel Fang, MD
Stanford School of Medicine

Margaret C. Fang, MD, MPH, FHM
University of California, San Francisco

Leonard Feldman, MD, SFHM, FAAP, FACP
Johns Hopkins Hospital

Nick Fitterman, MD, SFHM
Northwell Health

Prateek Gandiga, MD
Georgetown University Hospital

Laura Nell Hodo, MD, FHM
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai & Kravis Children’s Hospital

Akshata Hopkins, MD, FHM
Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital

Michael Janjigian, MD
Bellevue Hospital Center

Benji K. Mathews, MD, SFHM
HealthPartners & University of Minnesota Medical School

Heather Nye, MD, PhD, SFHM
University of California, San Francisco

James C. Pile, MD, SFHM
Cleveland Clinic

Linda Prieto, MD, FHM
Morton Plant Hospital

Amith Skandhan, MD, FHM
Southeast Alabama Medical Center

Barbara Slawski, MD, MS, SFHM
Medical College of Wisconsin

Daniel I. Steinberg, MD, FHM
Beth Israel Medical Center

Amanda Trask, MBA, MHA, FACHE, SFHM
Catholic Health Initiatives

Rohit Uppal, MD, MBA, SFHM
TeamHealth

Christopher M. Whinney, MD, FACP, FHM
Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine

Surinder Yadav, MD, SFHM
CEP America

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New consensus on inpatient opioid use

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SHM’s new recommendations to improve opioid prescribing for acute, noncancer pain in hospitalized adults will be the focus of Monday (April 9) morning’s session, “Opioids: What Now?”

Many patients who wind up on opioids for chronic pain start on the medications in an acute pain setting, said presenter Shoshana J. Herzig, MD, MPH, director of hospital medicine research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, both in Boston.

“Our prescribing patterns in the setting of acute pain meaningfully impact downstream outcomes and prescribing practices,” she said. “The degree of importance related to this topic often is underestimated by hospitalists, because we think of it as a more straightforward situation – prescribing for acute pain. In reality, there are nuances to it, and we have data to show that it’s not done well a lot of the time. It’s a big problem.”

Shoshana J. Herzig, MD, MPH, director of hospital medicine research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, in Boston
Beth Israel Deaconess Media Services
Dr. Shoshana J. Herzig

During the session, “we’re going to do a case-based review that highlights the main points of the SHM consensus statement, just published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine [April issue],” Dr. Herzig said. She led the working group that developed the consensus statement. It features 16 suggestions to help hospital-based physicians appropriately employ opioids as part of their acute pain management strategies.

The copresenter will be Teryl K. Nuckols, MD, FHM, associate professor of medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, and director of the division of internal medicine and associate professor of medicine at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles. Dr. Nuckols was senior author of the JHM articles.

The presentation will assess the state of opioid prescribing in hospitalized patients and the challenges to acute pain management in hospitalized adults and explain how to improve prescribing practices to prevent opioid-related adverse events, opioid-use disorder, and long-term opioid use. Dr. Herzig and Dr. Nuckols will discuss how their group developed the new consensus statement by culling the key points from other physician group guidelines and present several case studies for interactive discussion to showcase the consensus statement suggestions. They also will go over topics in need of future research.

“We hope that attending the session and reading over the consensus statement will help to improve the appropriateness as well as the safety of opioid prescribing in the setting of acute pain in the hospital and help physicians recognize common pitfalls,” Dr. Herzig said. These include not remembering to combine opioids with nonopioid-based pharmacologic therapy; inappropriately continuing a patient on intravenous opioids when oral opioids, which have a lower risk of adverse outcomes, would suffice; and being able to identify patients at increased risk for opioid-related adverse events for whom a dose reduction or increased monitoring may be warranted.

 

 


Hospitalists should continue to strive to achieve a proper balance with opioids between offering adequate analgesia for their patients and the risk of adverse events, she said. “The need for judicious prescribing is our main take-home message. I hope that people leave with a better understanding of what a reasonable amount of opioids to prescribe on discharge looks like.”

Dr. Herzig receives financial compensation from SHM for her role as senior deputy editor of the Journal of Hospital Medicine (unrelated to the present work).

Opioids: What Now?​​
Monday, April​ 10:35-11:35 a.m.
Crystal Ballroom G1/A&B

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SHM’s new recommendations to improve opioid prescribing for acute, noncancer pain in hospitalized adults will be the focus of Monday (April 9) morning’s session, “Opioids: What Now?”

Many patients who wind up on opioids for chronic pain start on the medications in an acute pain setting, said presenter Shoshana J. Herzig, MD, MPH, director of hospital medicine research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, both in Boston.

“Our prescribing patterns in the setting of acute pain meaningfully impact downstream outcomes and prescribing practices,” she said. “The degree of importance related to this topic often is underestimated by hospitalists, because we think of it as a more straightforward situation – prescribing for acute pain. In reality, there are nuances to it, and we have data to show that it’s not done well a lot of the time. It’s a big problem.”

Shoshana J. Herzig, MD, MPH, director of hospital medicine research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, in Boston
Beth Israel Deaconess Media Services
Dr. Shoshana J. Herzig

During the session, “we’re going to do a case-based review that highlights the main points of the SHM consensus statement, just published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine [April issue],” Dr. Herzig said. She led the working group that developed the consensus statement. It features 16 suggestions to help hospital-based physicians appropriately employ opioids as part of their acute pain management strategies.

The copresenter will be Teryl K. Nuckols, MD, FHM, associate professor of medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, and director of the division of internal medicine and associate professor of medicine at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles. Dr. Nuckols was senior author of the JHM articles.

The presentation will assess the state of opioid prescribing in hospitalized patients and the challenges to acute pain management in hospitalized adults and explain how to improve prescribing practices to prevent opioid-related adverse events, opioid-use disorder, and long-term opioid use. Dr. Herzig and Dr. Nuckols will discuss how their group developed the new consensus statement by culling the key points from other physician group guidelines and present several case studies for interactive discussion to showcase the consensus statement suggestions. They also will go over topics in need of future research.

“We hope that attending the session and reading over the consensus statement will help to improve the appropriateness as well as the safety of opioid prescribing in the setting of acute pain in the hospital and help physicians recognize common pitfalls,” Dr. Herzig said. These include not remembering to combine opioids with nonopioid-based pharmacologic therapy; inappropriately continuing a patient on intravenous opioids when oral opioids, which have a lower risk of adverse outcomes, would suffice; and being able to identify patients at increased risk for opioid-related adverse events for whom a dose reduction or increased monitoring may be warranted.

 

 


Hospitalists should continue to strive to achieve a proper balance with opioids between offering adequate analgesia for their patients and the risk of adverse events, she said. “The need for judicious prescribing is our main take-home message. I hope that people leave with a better understanding of what a reasonable amount of opioids to prescribe on discharge looks like.”

Dr. Herzig receives financial compensation from SHM for her role as senior deputy editor of the Journal of Hospital Medicine (unrelated to the present work).

Opioids: What Now?​​
Monday, April​ 10:35-11:35 a.m.
Crystal Ballroom G1/A&B

SHM’s new recommendations to improve opioid prescribing for acute, noncancer pain in hospitalized adults will be the focus of Monday (April 9) morning’s session, “Opioids: What Now?”

Many patients who wind up on opioids for chronic pain start on the medications in an acute pain setting, said presenter Shoshana J. Herzig, MD, MPH, director of hospital medicine research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, both in Boston.

“Our prescribing patterns in the setting of acute pain meaningfully impact downstream outcomes and prescribing practices,” she said. “The degree of importance related to this topic often is underestimated by hospitalists, because we think of it as a more straightforward situation – prescribing for acute pain. In reality, there are nuances to it, and we have data to show that it’s not done well a lot of the time. It’s a big problem.”

Shoshana J. Herzig, MD, MPH, director of hospital medicine research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, in Boston
Beth Israel Deaconess Media Services
Dr. Shoshana J. Herzig

During the session, “we’re going to do a case-based review that highlights the main points of the SHM consensus statement, just published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine [April issue],” Dr. Herzig said. She led the working group that developed the consensus statement. It features 16 suggestions to help hospital-based physicians appropriately employ opioids as part of their acute pain management strategies.

The copresenter will be Teryl K. Nuckols, MD, FHM, associate professor of medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, and director of the division of internal medicine and associate professor of medicine at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles. Dr. Nuckols was senior author of the JHM articles.

The presentation will assess the state of opioid prescribing in hospitalized patients and the challenges to acute pain management in hospitalized adults and explain how to improve prescribing practices to prevent opioid-related adverse events, opioid-use disorder, and long-term opioid use. Dr. Herzig and Dr. Nuckols will discuss how their group developed the new consensus statement by culling the key points from other physician group guidelines and present several case studies for interactive discussion to showcase the consensus statement suggestions. They also will go over topics in need of future research.

“We hope that attending the session and reading over the consensus statement will help to improve the appropriateness as well as the safety of opioid prescribing in the setting of acute pain in the hospital and help physicians recognize common pitfalls,” Dr. Herzig said. These include not remembering to combine opioids with nonopioid-based pharmacologic therapy; inappropriately continuing a patient on intravenous opioids when oral opioids, which have a lower risk of adverse outcomes, would suffice; and being able to identify patients at increased risk for opioid-related adverse events for whom a dose reduction or increased monitoring may be warranted.

 

 


Hospitalists should continue to strive to achieve a proper balance with opioids between offering adequate analgesia for their patients and the risk of adverse events, she said. “The need for judicious prescribing is our main take-home message. I hope that people leave with a better understanding of what a reasonable amount of opioids to prescribe on discharge looks like.”

Dr. Herzig receives financial compensation from SHM for her role as senior deputy editor of the Journal of Hospital Medicine (unrelated to the present work).

Opioids: What Now?​​
Monday, April​ 10:35-11:35 a.m.
Crystal Ballroom G1/A&B

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New tracks bring focus to HM18 program

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The theme for HM18 could well be “in with the new, and in with the new.”

Conference planners have managed to pack HM18 with five new tracks: Great Debate, Nurse Practitioner/Physician Assistant (NP/PA), Palliative Care, Seasoning Your Career, and a new Career Development workshop track. And they did this while eliminating only one track that was on the schedule last year – Technology – and without adding any extra days to the meeting.

Dr. Kathleen Finn, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
Dr. Kathleen Finn

The trick was including more half-day tracks. With more tracks in smaller time chunks, the schedule provides more flexibility, and attendees have more choices to find what they’re looking for, said Kathleen Finn, MD, MPhil, SFHM, an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and the HM18 course director.

“We decided, since there were a bunch of themes that we really wanted to cover, we would do half-day tracks. The shorter tracks also are a way to gauge interest in a topic without making a big commitment to it,” Dr. Finn said. “The grouping of topics in smaller tracks in the Day-at-a-Glance helps people easily see a collection of lectures or a theme they might want to attend.”

While choosing themes for the conference, the planners were trying to stay true to their own theme: timeliness.

Assistant course director Dustin Smith, MD, SFHM, an associate professor of medicine at Emory University, Atlanta, said much of the information for this year’s conference came from the 2017 annual meeting, including attendance at sessions, speaker reviews, and session ratings.

“It’s building on momentum from the previous meeting,” he said. “Sometimes we choose things to offer that we know are going to go well, and sometimes we choose things that we hope go well, and all of a sudden we see [that they] go very, very well.” For instance, he said, the topic of sepsis was so popular last year that it has its own pre-course this year.

 

 


The data on which the HM18 program is built don’t stop there. The 23 members of the planning committee all bring their own thoughts and experiences, as well as input from colleagues at their own centers. Then there are the submissions for workshop topics: Any SHM member can submit an idea, and those ideas help organizers see patterns of interest that can affect the planning of the rest of the sessions.

Here are more details on the new tracks:
 

Great Debate

The annual meeting has traditionally had a “Great Debate” on perioperative medicine, but the format – with carefully chosen speakers who are dynamic and entertaining – will be used to cover pulmonary medicine and infectious diseases this year as well.

“It’s a hugely successful talk,” Dr. Finn said. “We can tell by our numbers that lots of people go, and it’s always funny, and it’s a very clever way of discussing the latest literature – by having two very dynamic speakers present a case and then debate the two options of the case and then use the literature to support the answer.”

 

 

NP/PA

This track includes topics that are chosen by the committee for advanced practice professionals.

“There are many hospitalist programs that include NP/PAs, and everybody is struggling with how best to incorporate NPs and PAs into the group practice and have everybody work at the top of their license and work well together,” Dr. Finn said.

“The idea, too, is to be very inclusive of all providers and offering a track that focuses on NP/PAs but also includes physicians, physician leaders, and physician administrators,” Dr. Smith said. “It’s not designed for one type of practicing professional; it should be a good educational track for all.”
 

Palliative Care

This was a topic that had been sprinkled throughout programs in previous years, but Dr. Finn and Dr. Smith said it was considered too important not to have its own track this year.

“I think hospitalists often are the doctors caring for patients at the end of their lives since many Americans die in the hospital,” Dr. Finn said. “As a result, this is a skill set that as hospitalists we need to be very good at.”

 

 

Seasoning Your Career

This is a track geared toward one of this year’s themes: With “hospital medicine” now a concept that’s more than 2 decades old, how do hospitalists keep up the momentum in their careers, how do they take stock, how do they make the important decisions they face as they move ahead in their jobs?

“Hospital medicine is now more than 20 years old – many hospitalists are now mid-career,” Dr. Finn said. “This track can help people reflect on and rethink their career. Do you want to expand what you’re doing? Do you want to change it? How do you make this a lifelong career?”
 

Career Development

There have always been workshops with a career-development focus, but this year, six of them were chosen to be placed under the heading of an official “Career Development” workshop track.

“Are there other skills you want to take on for the second half of your career?” Dr. Finn said. “Do you want to take on leadership? Do you want to learn how to better give your peers feedback? Do you want to promote women in your group? Do you want to prevent burnout or use emotional intelligence to improve your career?”

 

 


Aside from the new tracks, the course directors also drew attention to other new elements of the HM18 program.

For instance, there are new topics in the Rapid Fire sessions. In the “Managing the Patient on Your Service: Appendicitis, Bowel, and Biliary Obstruction” session, a general surgeon will talk about how to manage these surgical issues when the patient is on a medical service. In “Interventional Radiology: What Every Hospitalist Needs to Know,” an interventional radiologist will discuss when hospitalists may want to call in an interventional radiologist or refer to a hospital that has an interventional radiologist. And “Vulnerable Populations and Hospitalists” will focus on social determinants of health.

As for catchy Disney-influenced titles, such as “The Mad Hatter: Updates in Delirium” and “Waiting in Line for ‘It’s a Small World’ and Other Things We Do for No Reason,” part of the credit can go to Dr. Finn’s niece. She said she “hired” her to come up with a list of Disney, Pixar, and Harry Potter movies and catchphrases. Then the committee worked them into the session titles.

“One of the hopes for me at this meeting is that people bring their inner child and explore new ideas, new topics, and new career possibilities,” Dr. Finn said.
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The theme for HM18 could well be “in with the new, and in with the new.”

Conference planners have managed to pack HM18 with five new tracks: Great Debate, Nurse Practitioner/Physician Assistant (NP/PA), Palliative Care, Seasoning Your Career, and a new Career Development workshop track. And they did this while eliminating only one track that was on the schedule last year – Technology – and without adding any extra days to the meeting.

Dr. Kathleen Finn, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
Dr. Kathleen Finn

The trick was including more half-day tracks. With more tracks in smaller time chunks, the schedule provides more flexibility, and attendees have more choices to find what they’re looking for, said Kathleen Finn, MD, MPhil, SFHM, an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and the HM18 course director.

“We decided, since there were a bunch of themes that we really wanted to cover, we would do half-day tracks. The shorter tracks also are a way to gauge interest in a topic without making a big commitment to it,” Dr. Finn said. “The grouping of topics in smaller tracks in the Day-at-a-Glance helps people easily see a collection of lectures or a theme they might want to attend.”

While choosing themes for the conference, the planners were trying to stay true to their own theme: timeliness.

Assistant course director Dustin Smith, MD, SFHM, an associate professor of medicine at Emory University, Atlanta, said much of the information for this year’s conference came from the 2017 annual meeting, including attendance at sessions, speaker reviews, and session ratings.

“It’s building on momentum from the previous meeting,” he said. “Sometimes we choose things to offer that we know are going to go well, and sometimes we choose things that we hope go well, and all of a sudden we see [that they] go very, very well.” For instance, he said, the topic of sepsis was so popular last year that it has its own pre-course this year.

 

 


The data on which the HM18 program is built don’t stop there. The 23 members of the planning committee all bring their own thoughts and experiences, as well as input from colleagues at their own centers. Then there are the submissions for workshop topics: Any SHM member can submit an idea, and those ideas help organizers see patterns of interest that can affect the planning of the rest of the sessions.

Here are more details on the new tracks:
 

Great Debate

The annual meeting has traditionally had a “Great Debate” on perioperative medicine, but the format – with carefully chosen speakers who are dynamic and entertaining – will be used to cover pulmonary medicine and infectious diseases this year as well.

“It’s a hugely successful talk,” Dr. Finn said. “We can tell by our numbers that lots of people go, and it’s always funny, and it’s a very clever way of discussing the latest literature – by having two very dynamic speakers present a case and then debate the two options of the case and then use the literature to support the answer.”

 

 

NP/PA

This track includes topics that are chosen by the committee for advanced practice professionals.

“There are many hospitalist programs that include NP/PAs, and everybody is struggling with how best to incorporate NPs and PAs into the group practice and have everybody work at the top of their license and work well together,” Dr. Finn said.

“The idea, too, is to be very inclusive of all providers and offering a track that focuses on NP/PAs but also includes physicians, physician leaders, and physician administrators,” Dr. Smith said. “It’s not designed for one type of practicing professional; it should be a good educational track for all.”
 

Palliative Care

This was a topic that had been sprinkled throughout programs in previous years, but Dr. Finn and Dr. Smith said it was considered too important not to have its own track this year.

“I think hospitalists often are the doctors caring for patients at the end of their lives since many Americans die in the hospital,” Dr. Finn said. “As a result, this is a skill set that as hospitalists we need to be very good at.”

 

 

Seasoning Your Career

This is a track geared toward one of this year’s themes: With “hospital medicine” now a concept that’s more than 2 decades old, how do hospitalists keep up the momentum in their careers, how do they take stock, how do they make the important decisions they face as they move ahead in their jobs?

“Hospital medicine is now more than 20 years old – many hospitalists are now mid-career,” Dr. Finn said. “This track can help people reflect on and rethink their career. Do you want to expand what you’re doing? Do you want to change it? How do you make this a lifelong career?”
 

Career Development

There have always been workshops with a career-development focus, but this year, six of them were chosen to be placed under the heading of an official “Career Development” workshop track.

“Are there other skills you want to take on for the second half of your career?” Dr. Finn said. “Do you want to take on leadership? Do you want to learn how to better give your peers feedback? Do you want to promote women in your group? Do you want to prevent burnout or use emotional intelligence to improve your career?”

 

 


Aside from the new tracks, the course directors also drew attention to other new elements of the HM18 program.

For instance, there are new topics in the Rapid Fire sessions. In the “Managing the Patient on Your Service: Appendicitis, Bowel, and Biliary Obstruction” session, a general surgeon will talk about how to manage these surgical issues when the patient is on a medical service. In “Interventional Radiology: What Every Hospitalist Needs to Know,” an interventional radiologist will discuss when hospitalists may want to call in an interventional radiologist or refer to a hospital that has an interventional radiologist. And “Vulnerable Populations and Hospitalists” will focus on social determinants of health.

As for catchy Disney-influenced titles, such as “The Mad Hatter: Updates in Delirium” and “Waiting in Line for ‘It’s a Small World’ and Other Things We Do for No Reason,” part of the credit can go to Dr. Finn’s niece. She said she “hired” her to come up with a list of Disney, Pixar, and Harry Potter movies and catchphrases. Then the committee worked them into the session titles.

“One of the hopes for me at this meeting is that people bring their inner child and explore new ideas, new topics, and new career possibilities,” Dr. Finn said.

The theme for HM18 could well be “in with the new, and in with the new.”

Conference planners have managed to pack HM18 with five new tracks: Great Debate, Nurse Practitioner/Physician Assistant (NP/PA), Palliative Care, Seasoning Your Career, and a new Career Development workshop track. And they did this while eliminating only one track that was on the schedule last year – Technology – and without adding any extra days to the meeting.

Dr. Kathleen Finn, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston
Dr. Kathleen Finn

The trick was including more half-day tracks. With more tracks in smaller time chunks, the schedule provides more flexibility, and attendees have more choices to find what they’re looking for, said Kathleen Finn, MD, MPhil, SFHM, an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and the HM18 course director.

“We decided, since there were a bunch of themes that we really wanted to cover, we would do half-day tracks. The shorter tracks also are a way to gauge interest in a topic without making a big commitment to it,” Dr. Finn said. “The grouping of topics in smaller tracks in the Day-at-a-Glance helps people easily see a collection of lectures or a theme they might want to attend.”

While choosing themes for the conference, the planners were trying to stay true to their own theme: timeliness.

Assistant course director Dustin Smith, MD, SFHM, an associate professor of medicine at Emory University, Atlanta, said much of the information for this year’s conference came from the 2017 annual meeting, including attendance at sessions, speaker reviews, and session ratings.

“It’s building on momentum from the previous meeting,” he said. “Sometimes we choose things to offer that we know are going to go well, and sometimes we choose things that we hope go well, and all of a sudden we see [that they] go very, very well.” For instance, he said, the topic of sepsis was so popular last year that it has its own pre-course this year.

 

 


The data on which the HM18 program is built don’t stop there. The 23 members of the planning committee all bring their own thoughts and experiences, as well as input from colleagues at their own centers. Then there are the submissions for workshop topics: Any SHM member can submit an idea, and those ideas help organizers see patterns of interest that can affect the planning of the rest of the sessions.

Here are more details on the new tracks:
 

Great Debate

The annual meeting has traditionally had a “Great Debate” on perioperative medicine, but the format – with carefully chosen speakers who are dynamic and entertaining – will be used to cover pulmonary medicine and infectious diseases this year as well.

“It’s a hugely successful talk,” Dr. Finn said. “We can tell by our numbers that lots of people go, and it’s always funny, and it’s a very clever way of discussing the latest literature – by having two very dynamic speakers present a case and then debate the two options of the case and then use the literature to support the answer.”

 

 

NP/PA

This track includes topics that are chosen by the committee for advanced practice professionals.

“There are many hospitalist programs that include NP/PAs, and everybody is struggling with how best to incorporate NPs and PAs into the group practice and have everybody work at the top of their license and work well together,” Dr. Finn said.

“The idea, too, is to be very inclusive of all providers and offering a track that focuses on NP/PAs but also includes physicians, physician leaders, and physician administrators,” Dr. Smith said. “It’s not designed for one type of practicing professional; it should be a good educational track for all.”
 

Palliative Care

This was a topic that had been sprinkled throughout programs in previous years, but Dr. Finn and Dr. Smith said it was considered too important not to have its own track this year.

“I think hospitalists often are the doctors caring for patients at the end of their lives since many Americans die in the hospital,” Dr. Finn said. “As a result, this is a skill set that as hospitalists we need to be very good at.”

 

 

Seasoning Your Career

This is a track geared toward one of this year’s themes: With “hospital medicine” now a concept that’s more than 2 decades old, how do hospitalists keep up the momentum in their careers, how do they take stock, how do they make the important decisions they face as they move ahead in their jobs?

“Hospital medicine is now more than 20 years old – many hospitalists are now mid-career,” Dr. Finn said. “This track can help people reflect on and rethink their career. Do you want to expand what you’re doing? Do you want to change it? How do you make this a lifelong career?”
 

Career Development

There have always been workshops with a career-development focus, but this year, six of them were chosen to be placed under the heading of an official “Career Development” workshop track.

“Are there other skills you want to take on for the second half of your career?” Dr. Finn said. “Do you want to take on leadership? Do you want to learn how to better give your peers feedback? Do you want to promote women in your group? Do you want to prevent burnout or use emotional intelligence to improve your career?”

 

 


Aside from the new tracks, the course directors also drew attention to other new elements of the HM18 program.

For instance, there are new topics in the Rapid Fire sessions. In the “Managing the Patient on Your Service: Appendicitis, Bowel, and Biliary Obstruction” session, a general surgeon will talk about how to manage these surgical issues when the patient is on a medical service. In “Interventional Radiology: What Every Hospitalist Needs to Know,” an interventional radiologist will discuss when hospitalists may want to call in an interventional radiologist or refer to a hospital that has an interventional radiologist. And “Vulnerable Populations and Hospitalists” will focus on social determinants of health.

As for catchy Disney-influenced titles, such as “The Mad Hatter: Updates in Delirium” and “Waiting in Line for ‘It’s a Small World’ and Other Things We Do for No Reason,” part of the credit can go to Dr. Finn’s niece. She said she “hired” her to come up with a list of Disney, Pixar, and Harry Potter movies and catchphrases. Then the committee worked them into the session titles.

“One of the hopes for me at this meeting is that people bring their inner child and explore new ideas, new topics, and new career possibilities,” Dr. Finn said.
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Product Theaters

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Monday, April 9

12:15 - 1:15 p.m., Product Theater 1
Resetting Chronic HF Therapy in Hospitalized Patients with HFrEF

Richard Wright, MD
Chairman of the Board, Pacific Heart Institute
Santa Monica, CA
Sponsored by Novartis Pharmaceuticals

12:15 - 1:15 p.m., Product Theater 2
The Role of the Hospitalist in Hepatic Encephalopathy

Hameed Q. Ali, DO, FHM
Clinical Assistant Professor
Department of Internal Medicine
Texas A&M Health Science Center
Temple, Texas
Sponsored by Salix Pharmaceuticals

12:15 - 1:15 p.m., Product Theater 3
Clinical Data and Real-World Evidence to Support NVAF Treatment Decision Making

James F. Neuenschwander II, MD, FACEP
Research Director in the Emergency Department and Attending Physician
Genesis Healthcare Systems
Zanesville, Ohio
Sponsored by Janssen Pharmaceuticals

Tuesday, April 10

12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Product Theater 1
Expert Conversations in Heart Failure: Connecting the Pieces
Thomas Arne, Jr., DO, FACC
Sergey Kachur, MD
Sponsored by Novartis Pharmaceuticals

12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Product Theater 2 Opioid-Induced Constipation
Jeff Gudin, MD
Director, Pain and Palliative Care
Englewood Hospital and Medical Center
Englewood, NJ
Sponsored by Salix Pharmaceuticals

12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Product Theater 3
Challenges of Treating DVT and PE in the Hospital and After Discharge 
Dr. Andrew Miller, Emergency Medicine, Lehigh Valley Hospital, Allentown, PA​
Sponsored by Pfizer

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Monday, April 9

12:15 - 1:15 p.m., Product Theater 1
Resetting Chronic HF Therapy in Hospitalized Patients with HFrEF

Richard Wright, MD
Chairman of the Board, Pacific Heart Institute
Santa Monica, CA
Sponsored by Novartis Pharmaceuticals

12:15 - 1:15 p.m., Product Theater 2
The Role of the Hospitalist in Hepatic Encephalopathy

Hameed Q. Ali, DO, FHM
Clinical Assistant Professor
Department of Internal Medicine
Texas A&M Health Science Center
Temple, Texas
Sponsored by Salix Pharmaceuticals

12:15 - 1:15 p.m., Product Theater 3
Clinical Data and Real-World Evidence to Support NVAF Treatment Decision Making

James F. Neuenschwander II, MD, FACEP
Research Director in the Emergency Department and Attending Physician
Genesis Healthcare Systems
Zanesville, Ohio
Sponsored by Janssen Pharmaceuticals

Tuesday, April 10

12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Product Theater 1
Expert Conversations in Heart Failure: Connecting the Pieces
Thomas Arne, Jr., DO, FACC
Sergey Kachur, MD
Sponsored by Novartis Pharmaceuticals

12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Product Theater 2 Opioid-Induced Constipation
Jeff Gudin, MD
Director, Pain and Palliative Care
Englewood Hospital and Medical Center
Englewood, NJ
Sponsored by Salix Pharmaceuticals

12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Product Theater 3
Challenges of Treating DVT and PE in the Hospital and After Discharge 
Dr. Andrew Miller, Emergency Medicine, Lehigh Valley Hospital, Allentown, PA​
Sponsored by Pfizer

Monday, April 9

12:15 - 1:15 p.m., Product Theater 1
Resetting Chronic HF Therapy in Hospitalized Patients with HFrEF

Richard Wright, MD
Chairman of the Board, Pacific Heart Institute
Santa Monica, CA
Sponsored by Novartis Pharmaceuticals

12:15 - 1:15 p.m., Product Theater 2
The Role of the Hospitalist in Hepatic Encephalopathy

Hameed Q. Ali, DO, FHM
Clinical Assistant Professor
Department of Internal Medicine
Texas A&M Health Science Center
Temple, Texas
Sponsored by Salix Pharmaceuticals

12:15 - 1:15 p.m., Product Theater 3
Clinical Data and Real-World Evidence to Support NVAF Treatment Decision Making

James F. Neuenschwander II, MD, FACEP
Research Director in the Emergency Department and Attending Physician
Genesis Healthcare Systems
Zanesville, Ohio
Sponsored by Janssen Pharmaceuticals

Tuesday, April 10

12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Product Theater 1
Expert Conversations in Heart Failure: Connecting the Pieces
Thomas Arne, Jr., DO, FACC
Sergey Kachur, MD
Sponsored by Novartis Pharmaceuticals

12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Product Theater 2 Opioid-Induced Constipation
Jeff Gudin, MD
Director, Pain and Palliative Care
Englewood Hospital and Medical Center
Englewood, NJ
Sponsored by Salix Pharmaceuticals

12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Product Theater 3
Challenges of Treating DVT and PE in the Hospital and After Discharge 
Dr. Andrew Miller, Emergency Medicine, Lehigh Valley Hospital, Allentown, PA​
Sponsored by Pfizer

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Value over volume

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Kate Goodrich, MD, MHS, chief medical officer at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, opens HM18 on April 9 with a plenary talk focused on the rising cost of health care in the United States, and how hospitalists can be part of the solution.

Dr. Kate Goodrich of the George Washington Hospital Center in Washington
Dr. Kate Goodrich

“What I want people to understand is the evolution within our health care system from one where we pay for volume to paying for value, and the role that Medicare can play in that,” Dr. Good­rich said in an interview. “Medicare has traditionally been sort of a passive payer, if you will, a passive payer of claims without a great deal of emphasis on the cost of care and the quality of care. [Now there is] a groundswell of concern nationally, not just here at CMS but nationwide, around the rising cost of care, and our quality of care is not as good as it should be for the amount that we spend.”

Dr. Goodrich said she will discuss how “that came to be, and what CMS and other payers in the country are trying to do about it.” She said the U.S. is in a “truly transformative era in our health care system in changing how we pay for care, in service of better outcomes for patients and lower costs. I would like to give attendees the larger picture, of how we got here and what’s happening both at CMS and nationally to try and reverse some of those trends.”

As value-based purchasing programs – and the push to pay for value over volume in Medicare and the private sector – continue to become the norm, the expected trend of sicker, more complex patients entering the hospital already is happening, Dr. Goodrich said. She is experiencing it in her own clinical work, which continues in addition to her role at CMS.

“I can confirm from my own personal experience [that] I have absolutely encountered that exact trend,” she said. “I feel like every time I go in the hospital, my patients are sicker and more complex. That is the population of patients that hospitalists are dealing with. That’s why we are actually in that practice. We enjoy taking care of those types of patients and the challenges they bring, both on a clinical level, but I would say also even on a social and economic level.”

Dr. Goodrich said that trend will present one of the key challenges hospitalists face in the future, especially as paying for value entails more two-sided risk.

“In a value-based purchasing world, transitioning to payments based on quality and cost is harder, because by nature the sicker patients cost more and it is harder to improve their outcomes. They come to you already quite sick,” she said. “That’s a dilemma that a lot of hospitalists face, wondering ‘How is this going to affect me if I am already seeing the sickest of the sick?’”

 

 


Integration of data and technology innovation will be critical to better serving this sicker population, but physicians currently spend too much time entering data into computers and don’t get much useful information out of it.

“How do we make [health care IT] usable for the average front-line nurse or doctor who didn’t go to school to learn how to code and analyze data?” Dr. Goodrich asked. “How do we get platforms and analytics that are developed using human-centered design principles to make it very understandable and actionable to the front-end clinician, but also to patients and consumers? What is really needed to truly drive improvement is not just access to the data but usability.”

She said this problem is directly related to the usability of electronic health records. “That is a significant focus right now for the Office of the National Coordinator [of Health Information Technology] – to move away from just [adopting] EHRs, to promoting interoperability and also the usability aspects that exactly get to the problems we’ve identified.”
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Kate Goodrich, MD, MHS, chief medical officer at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, opens HM18 on April 9 with a plenary talk focused on the rising cost of health care in the United States, and how hospitalists can be part of the solution.

Dr. Kate Goodrich of the George Washington Hospital Center in Washington
Dr. Kate Goodrich

“What I want people to understand is the evolution within our health care system from one where we pay for volume to paying for value, and the role that Medicare can play in that,” Dr. Good­rich said in an interview. “Medicare has traditionally been sort of a passive payer, if you will, a passive payer of claims without a great deal of emphasis on the cost of care and the quality of care. [Now there is] a groundswell of concern nationally, not just here at CMS but nationwide, around the rising cost of care, and our quality of care is not as good as it should be for the amount that we spend.”

Dr. Goodrich said she will discuss how “that came to be, and what CMS and other payers in the country are trying to do about it.” She said the U.S. is in a “truly transformative era in our health care system in changing how we pay for care, in service of better outcomes for patients and lower costs. I would like to give attendees the larger picture, of how we got here and what’s happening both at CMS and nationally to try and reverse some of those trends.”

As value-based purchasing programs – and the push to pay for value over volume in Medicare and the private sector – continue to become the norm, the expected trend of sicker, more complex patients entering the hospital already is happening, Dr. Goodrich said. She is experiencing it in her own clinical work, which continues in addition to her role at CMS.

“I can confirm from my own personal experience [that] I have absolutely encountered that exact trend,” she said. “I feel like every time I go in the hospital, my patients are sicker and more complex. That is the population of patients that hospitalists are dealing with. That’s why we are actually in that practice. We enjoy taking care of those types of patients and the challenges they bring, both on a clinical level, but I would say also even on a social and economic level.”

Dr. Goodrich said that trend will present one of the key challenges hospitalists face in the future, especially as paying for value entails more two-sided risk.

“In a value-based purchasing world, transitioning to payments based on quality and cost is harder, because by nature the sicker patients cost more and it is harder to improve their outcomes. They come to you already quite sick,” she said. “That’s a dilemma that a lot of hospitalists face, wondering ‘How is this going to affect me if I am already seeing the sickest of the sick?’”

 

 


Integration of data and technology innovation will be critical to better serving this sicker population, but physicians currently spend too much time entering data into computers and don’t get much useful information out of it.

“How do we make [health care IT] usable for the average front-line nurse or doctor who didn’t go to school to learn how to code and analyze data?” Dr. Goodrich asked. “How do we get platforms and analytics that are developed using human-centered design principles to make it very understandable and actionable to the front-end clinician, but also to patients and consumers? What is really needed to truly drive improvement is not just access to the data but usability.”

She said this problem is directly related to the usability of electronic health records. “That is a significant focus right now for the Office of the National Coordinator [of Health Information Technology] – to move away from just [adopting] EHRs, to promoting interoperability and also the usability aspects that exactly get to the problems we’ve identified.”

Kate Goodrich, MD, MHS, chief medical officer at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, opens HM18 on April 9 with a plenary talk focused on the rising cost of health care in the United States, and how hospitalists can be part of the solution.

Dr. Kate Goodrich of the George Washington Hospital Center in Washington
Dr. Kate Goodrich

“What I want people to understand is the evolution within our health care system from one where we pay for volume to paying for value, and the role that Medicare can play in that,” Dr. Good­rich said in an interview. “Medicare has traditionally been sort of a passive payer, if you will, a passive payer of claims without a great deal of emphasis on the cost of care and the quality of care. [Now there is] a groundswell of concern nationally, not just here at CMS but nationwide, around the rising cost of care, and our quality of care is not as good as it should be for the amount that we spend.”

Dr. Goodrich said she will discuss how “that came to be, and what CMS and other payers in the country are trying to do about it.” She said the U.S. is in a “truly transformative era in our health care system in changing how we pay for care, in service of better outcomes for patients and lower costs. I would like to give attendees the larger picture, of how we got here and what’s happening both at CMS and nationally to try and reverse some of those trends.”

As value-based purchasing programs – and the push to pay for value over volume in Medicare and the private sector – continue to become the norm, the expected trend of sicker, more complex patients entering the hospital already is happening, Dr. Goodrich said. She is experiencing it in her own clinical work, which continues in addition to her role at CMS.

“I can confirm from my own personal experience [that] I have absolutely encountered that exact trend,” she said. “I feel like every time I go in the hospital, my patients are sicker and more complex. That is the population of patients that hospitalists are dealing with. That’s why we are actually in that practice. We enjoy taking care of those types of patients and the challenges they bring, both on a clinical level, but I would say also even on a social and economic level.”

Dr. Goodrich said that trend will present one of the key challenges hospitalists face in the future, especially as paying for value entails more two-sided risk.

“In a value-based purchasing world, transitioning to payments based on quality and cost is harder, because by nature the sicker patients cost more and it is harder to improve their outcomes. They come to you already quite sick,” she said. “That’s a dilemma that a lot of hospitalists face, wondering ‘How is this going to affect me if I am already seeing the sickest of the sick?’”

 

 


Integration of data and technology innovation will be critical to better serving this sicker population, but physicians currently spend too much time entering data into computers and don’t get much useful information out of it.

“How do we make [health care IT] usable for the average front-line nurse or doctor who didn’t go to school to learn how to code and analyze data?” Dr. Goodrich asked. “How do we get platforms and analytics that are developed using human-centered design principles to make it very understandable and actionable to the front-end clinician, but also to patients and consumers? What is really needed to truly drive improvement is not just access to the data but usability.”

She said this problem is directly related to the usability of electronic health records. “That is a significant focus right now for the Office of the National Coordinator [of Health Information Technology] – to move away from just [adopting] EHRs, to promoting interoperability and also the usability aspects that exactly get to the problems we’ve identified.”
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Welcome to Orlando and HM18

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Welcome to HM18 and Orlando! This is the annual conference’s first time in Orlando, a city dubbed “the happiest place on earth,” which conjures up magic and curiosity and brings out the kid in everyone. As Walt Disney noted, “Adults are only kids, grown up.” So we hope you have brought your sense of adventure and curiosity, as we have a lot planned for you!

Over the next 3 days, we invite you to network with nearly 5,000 hospitalist colleagues from around the “small world.” Introduce yourself to total strangers and discover you have a lot in common. This conference provides a wonderful opportunity to share best practices and discuss ideas.

Please have fun taking advantage of the wide array of learning opportunities the Annual Conference Committee developed for HM18. We hope the topics will grab your interest and pique your curiosity. We encourage you (and your inner kid) to try on new ideas, attend lectures that catch your eye, and roll up your sleeves to dive into interactive workshops. For extra fun, the committee created catchy Orlando-themed titles for many of the talks. We hope they make you smile!

The Annual Conference Committee members will be wearing large buttons to identify themselves. We welcome any feedback about the meeting. Please take the time to share your thoughts with us, and we are happy to help in any way. The committee members worked hard to create a pre-course day and meeting with something for everyone, knowing there is great diversity under the hospitalist tent. We also strove to make it relevant and timely. The driving force behind the content was “What do practicing hospitalists need and want to know now?”

HM18 contains an abundance of clinical content. Enjoy the 2 days of Clinical Update talks to hear the latest evidence from a diversity of fields. New this year is Updates in Addiction Medicine, given the large opioid crisis that affecting health care. There are 3 days of Rapid Fire talks to answer the clinical questions we all have while caring for patients. The Perioperative/Co-Management track is back with is unique and useful content. We even repeat some of the most popular talks on Tuesday, so you will be able to attend all the “can’t miss” sessions.

New this year is a focus on careers and how to make yours enjoyable and sustainable. Hospital medicine is more than 20 years old, and there are increasing numbers of mid-career hospitalists. The Career Development track offers a series of topics in case you want to spice up your current role, change your schedule, or plan for retirement. Accompanying this are career development workshops that provide practical skills to do just that.

We have also added a new NP/PA track, a palliative care track, and The Great Debate track. Come watch two entertaining speakers have a “smackdown” on a clinical topic. You’ll learn something while laughing.

 

 


We’ve also brought back your favorites: practice management, quality, high value care, diagnostic reasoning, academic/research, pediatrics, medical education, and health policy tracks. Don’t forget to check out our interactive workshops. Nearly 150 workshop ideas were submitted, and we are proud to feature 18 of the best.

Of course, you must attend the highly anticipated Updates in Hospital Medicine talk and Plenary Sessions, and be sure to catch the Research, Innovations, and Clinical Vignettes (RIV) Poster Competition. Check out the Exhibit Hall and join a Special Interest Forum! Remember to download the SHM events app, and make sure you get your MOC credit from 34 different lectures.

Dr. Kathleen Finn, a hospitalist at Massachusetts General, Boston
Dr. Kathleen Finn

This conference would not be possible without the tireless effort of SHM staff and leadership, our amazing speakers and faculty, and the committee members. We are excited you are here, and we hope this conference nurtures your curiosity, expands your career, and provides you with valuable educational and networking opportunities.

We sincerely thank you for attending HM18! Enjoy Orlando.

Dr. Finn is an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and course director of HM18.

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Welcome to HM18 and Orlando! This is the annual conference’s first time in Orlando, a city dubbed “the happiest place on earth,” which conjures up magic and curiosity and brings out the kid in everyone. As Walt Disney noted, “Adults are only kids, grown up.” So we hope you have brought your sense of adventure and curiosity, as we have a lot planned for you!

Over the next 3 days, we invite you to network with nearly 5,000 hospitalist colleagues from around the “small world.” Introduce yourself to total strangers and discover you have a lot in common. This conference provides a wonderful opportunity to share best practices and discuss ideas.

Please have fun taking advantage of the wide array of learning opportunities the Annual Conference Committee developed for HM18. We hope the topics will grab your interest and pique your curiosity. We encourage you (and your inner kid) to try on new ideas, attend lectures that catch your eye, and roll up your sleeves to dive into interactive workshops. For extra fun, the committee created catchy Orlando-themed titles for many of the talks. We hope they make you smile!

The Annual Conference Committee members will be wearing large buttons to identify themselves. We welcome any feedback about the meeting. Please take the time to share your thoughts with us, and we are happy to help in any way. The committee members worked hard to create a pre-course day and meeting with something for everyone, knowing there is great diversity under the hospitalist tent. We also strove to make it relevant and timely. The driving force behind the content was “What do practicing hospitalists need and want to know now?”

HM18 contains an abundance of clinical content. Enjoy the 2 days of Clinical Update talks to hear the latest evidence from a diversity of fields. New this year is Updates in Addiction Medicine, given the large opioid crisis that affecting health care. There are 3 days of Rapid Fire talks to answer the clinical questions we all have while caring for patients. The Perioperative/Co-Management track is back with is unique and useful content. We even repeat some of the most popular talks on Tuesday, so you will be able to attend all the “can’t miss” sessions.

New this year is a focus on careers and how to make yours enjoyable and sustainable. Hospital medicine is more than 20 years old, and there are increasing numbers of mid-career hospitalists. The Career Development track offers a series of topics in case you want to spice up your current role, change your schedule, or plan for retirement. Accompanying this are career development workshops that provide practical skills to do just that.

We have also added a new NP/PA track, a palliative care track, and The Great Debate track. Come watch two entertaining speakers have a “smackdown” on a clinical topic. You’ll learn something while laughing.

 

 


We’ve also brought back your favorites: practice management, quality, high value care, diagnostic reasoning, academic/research, pediatrics, medical education, and health policy tracks. Don’t forget to check out our interactive workshops. Nearly 150 workshop ideas were submitted, and we are proud to feature 18 of the best.

Of course, you must attend the highly anticipated Updates in Hospital Medicine talk and Plenary Sessions, and be sure to catch the Research, Innovations, and Clinical Vignettes (RIV) Poster Competition. Check out the Exhibit Hall and join a Special Interest Forum! Remember to download the SHM events app, and make sure you get your MOC credit from 34 different lectures.

Dr. Kathleen Finn, a hospitalist at Massachusetts General, Boston
Dr. Kathleen Finn

This conference would not be possible without the tireless effort of SHM staff and leadership, our amazing speakers and faculty, and the committee members. We are excited you are here, and we hope this conference nurtures your curiosity, expands your career, and provides you with valuable educational and networking opportunities.

We sincerely thank you for attending HM18! Enjoy Orlando.

Dr. Finn is an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and course director of HM18.

Welcome to HM18 and Orlando! This is the annual conference’s first time in Orlando, a city dubbed “the happiest place on earth,” which conjures up magic and curiosity and brings out the kid in everyone. As Walt Disney noted, “Adults are only kids, grown up.” So we hope you have brought your sense of adventure and curiosity, as we have a lot planned for you!

Over the next 3 days, we invite you to network with nearly 5,000 hospitalist colleagues from around the “small world.” Introduce yourself to total strangers and discover you have a lot in common. This conference provides a wonderful opportunity to share best practices and discuss ideas.

Please have fun taking advantage of the wide array of learning opportunities the Annual Conference Committee developed for HM18. We hope the topics will grab your interest and pique your curiosity. We encourage you (and your inner kid) to try on new ideas, attend lectures that catch your eye, and roll up your sleeves to dive into interactive workshops. For extra fun, the committee created catchy Orlando-themed titles for many of the talks. We hope they make you smile!

The Annual Conference Committee members will be wearing large buttons to identify themselves. We welcome any feedback about the meeting. Please take the time to share your thoughts with us, and we are happy to help in any way. The committee members worked hard to create a pre-course day and meeting with something for everyone, knowing there is great diversity under the hospitalist tent. We also strove to make it relevant and timely. The driving force behind the content was “What do practicing hospitalists need and want to know now?”

HM18 contains an abundance of clinical content. Enjoy the 2 days of Clinical Update talks to hear the latest evidence from a diversity of fields. New this year is Updates in Addiction Medicine, given the large opioid crisis that affecting health care. There are 3 days of Rapid Fire talks to answer the clinical questions we all have while caring for patients. The Perioperative/Co-Management track is back with is unique and useful content. We even repeat some of the most popular talks on Tuesday, so you will be able to attend all the “can’t miss” sessions.

New this year is a focus on careers and how to make yours enjoyable and sustainable. Hospital medicine is more than 20 years old, and there are increasing numbers of mid-career hospitalists. The Career Development track offers a series of topics in case you want to spice up your current role, change your schedule, or plan for retirement. Accompanying this are career development workshops that provide practical skills to do just that.

We have also added a new NP/PA track, a palliative care track, and The Great Debate track. Come watch two entertaining speakers have a “smackdown” on a clinical topic. You’ll learn something while laughing.

 

 


We’ve also brought back your favorites: practice management, quality, high value care, diagnostic reasoning, academic/research, pediatrics, medical education, and health policy tracks. Don’t forget to check out our interactive workshops. Nearly 150 workshop ideas were submitted, and we are proud to feature 18 of the best.

Of course, you must attend the highly anticipated Updates in Hospital Medicine talk and Plenary Sessions, and be sure to catch the Research, Innovations, and Clinical Vignettes (RIV) Poster Competition. Check out the Exhibit Hall and join a Special Interest Forum! Remember to download the SHM events app, and make sure you get your MOC credit from 34 different lectures.

Dr. Kathleen Finn, a hospitalist at Massachusetts General, Boston
Dr. Kathleen Finn

This conference would not be possible without the tireless effort of SHM staff and leadership, our amazing speakers and faculty, and the committee members. We are excited you are here, and we hope this conference nurtures your curiosity, expands your career, and provides you with valuable educational and networking opportunities.

We sincerely thank you for attending HM18! Enjoy Orlando.

Dr. Finn is an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and course director of HM18.

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Global attendees: Visit the International Lounge

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Over the past several years, the Society of Hospital Medicine has become more involved in developing global relationships in an attempt to become a resource for hospital medicine movements in other countries. As part of this initiative, HM18 will host an International Lounge on Tuesday, April 10, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Anaheim Room at the Orlando Marriott World Center.

“SHM has been taking a more deliberate approach to cultivating international relationships,” said Ethan Gray, CAE, vice president of membership for the society. “Although we are still in the beginning phases of establishing a global footprint that will provide enduring resources that respond to the needs of international members similar to those we provide to our U.S. members, we are making efforts toward that end.”

Ethan Gray, VP of membership, SHM
Ethan Gray, VP of membership, SHM

The International Lounge at HM18 is one such effort. Its purpose is to provide worldwide attendees with enhanced networking opportunities, information on how to launch an SHM chapter, and the opportunity to interact with SHM staff and board leaders.

“On Monday, HM18 will be hosting an International Special Interest Forum, which will allow global participants to share their experiences and interact with thought leaders from the United States and abroad, including SHM board members,” continued Mr. Gray. “The International Lounge is an extension of our global outreach at the annual meeting.”

The International Lounge will offer informal networking. As the SHM staff liaison, Mr. Gray will be on hand to answer any questions from and interact with global attendees. SHM board members also will be available on a rotating schedule throughout the day to network, dialogue, and share their knowledge and expertise.

As SHM expands its international activities, it is dedicating staff resources at its Philadelphia headquarters to international chapter development, including facilitating virtual communities on its Hospital Medical Exchange (HMX).

“Those visiting the lounge will be able to pick up a written fact sheet on the elements needed to create an SHM chapter,” stated Mr. Gray. “And, I will be available to discuss chapter launch requisites and any other questions they might have.”

 

 


Items covered in the fact sheet will include criteria for establishing an SHM international chapter, definition of a potential chapter’s geographic area, and the requirements for demonstrating necessary interest and leadership at the local level. It also will describe the SHM resources that will be available to international chapters – dedicated staff and physician leader liaisons, data support and management, creation of a chapter-specific HMX community to facilitate virtual networking and communications, meeting support, and counsel on how to build and maintain chapter audience and membership.

In addition, the lounge will have a global map that identifies geographic concentrations of international attendees and photos from recent international chapter meetings.

SHM has been surveying the field beyond U.S. borders through the initiation of conversations with organizations abroad. These efforts allow the society to learn from and support hospital medicine leaders and health systems around the world.

“The hospital medicine movement is in various stages of development outside the United States,” explained Mr. Gray. “Many factors influence the rate at which a hospital medicine model can become implemented, including the structure of the health system, education and training curricula, existing scope of practice and care-delivery constructs, fluidity of government and systems, and other factors.

“We urge participants from abroad to visit the International Lounge to meet and share information with their counterparts from other countries, learn more about SHM and what it has to offer, find out about the potential for launching an SHM chapter, and interact with SHM staff and board members,” concluded Mr. Gray. “We have so much to learn from each other.”

International Lounge
Tuesday, April 10, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.

Anaheim Room

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Over the past several years, the Society of Hospital Medicine has become more involved in developing global relationships in an attempt to become a resource for hospital medicine movements in other countries. As part of this initiative, HM18 will host an International Lounge on Tuesday, April 10, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Anaheim Room at the Orlando Marriott World Center.

“SHM has been taking a more deliberate approach to cultivating international relationships,” said Ethan Gray, CAE, vice president of membership for the society. “Although we are still in the beginning phases of establishing a global footprint that will provide enduring resources that respond to the needs of international members similar to those we provide to our U.S. members, we are making efforts toward that end.”

Ethan Gray, VP of membership, SHM
Ethan Gray, VP of membership, SHM

The International Lounge at HM18 is one such effort. Its purpose is to provide worldwide attendees with enhanced networking opportunities, information on how to launch an SHM chapter, and the opportunity to interact with SHM staff and board leaders.

“On Monday, HM18 will be hosting an International Special Interest Forum, which will allow global participants to share their experiences and interact with thought leaders from the United States and abroad, including SHM board members,” continued Mr. Gray. “The International Lounge is an extension of our global outreach at the annual meeting.”

The International Lounge will offer informal networking. As the SHM staff liaison, Mr. Gray will be on hand to answer any questions from and interact with global attendees. SHM board members also will be available on a rotating schedule throughout the day to network, dialogue, and share their knowledge and expertise.

As SHM expands its international activities, it is dedicating staff resources at its Philadelphia headquarters to international chapter development, including facilitating virtual communities on its Hospital Medical Exchange (HMX).

“Those visiting the lounge will be able to pick up a written fact sheet on the elements needed to create an SHM chapter,” stated Mr. Gray. “And, I will be available to discuss chapter launch requisites and any other questions they might have.”

 

 


Items covered in the fact sheet will include criteria for establishing an SHM international chapter, definition of a potential chapter’s geographic area, and the requirements for demonstrating necessary interest and leadership at the local level. It also will describe the SHM resources that will be available to international chapters – dedicated staff and physician leader liaisons, data support and management, creation of a chapter-specific HMX community to facilitate virtual networking and communications, meeting support, and counsel on how to build and maintain chapter audience and membership.

In addition, the lounge will have a global map that identifies geographic concentrations of international attendees and photos from recent international chapter meetings.

SHM has been surveying the field beyond U.S. borders through the initiation of conversations with organizations abroad. These efforts allow the society to learn from and support hospital medicine leaders and health systems around the world.

“The hospital medicine movement is in various stages of development outside the United States,” explained Mr. Gray. “Many factors influence the rate at which a hospital medicine model can become implemented, including the structure of the health system, education and training curricula, existing scope of practice and care-delivery constructs, fluidity of government and systems, and other factors.

“We urge participants from abroad to visit the International Lounge to meet and share information with their counterparts from other countries, learn more about SHM and what it has to offer, find out about the potential for launching an SHM chapter, and interact with SHM staff and board members,” concluded Mr. Gray. “We have so much to learn from each other.”

International Lounge
Tuesday, April 10, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.

Anaheim Room

Over the past several years, the Society of Hospital Medicine has become more involved in developing global relationships in an attempt to become a resource for hospital medicine movements in other countries. As part of this initiative, HM18 will host an International Lounge on Tuesday, April 10, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Anaheim Room at the Orlando Marriott World Center.

“SHM has been taking a more deliberate approach to cultivating international relationships,” said Ethan Gray, CAE, vice president of membership for the society. “Although we are still in the beginning phases of establishing a global footprint that will provide enduring resources that respond to the needs of international members similar to those we provide to our U.S. members, we are making efforts toward that end.”

Ethan Gray, VP of membership, SHM
Ethan Gray, VP of membership, SHM

The International Lounge at HM18 is one such effort. Its purpose is to provide worldwide attendees with enhanced networking opportunities, information on how to launch an SHM chapter, and the opportunity to interact with SHM staff and board leaders.

“On Monday, HM18 will be hosting an International Special Interest Forum, which will allow global participants to share their experiences and interact with thought leaders from the United States and abroad, including SHM board members,” continued Mr. Gray. “The International Lounge is an extension of our global outreach at the annual meeting.”

The International Lounge will offer informal networking. As the SHM staff liaison, Mr. Gray will be on hand to answer any questions from and interact with global attendees. SHM board members also will be available on a rotating schedule throughout the day to network, dialogue, and share their knowledge and expertise.

As SHM expands its international activities, it is dedicating staff resources at its Philadelphia headquarters to international chapter development, including facilitating virtual communities on its Hospital Medical Exchange (HMX).

“Those visiting the lounge will be able to pick up a written fact sheet on the elements needed to create an SHM chapter,” stated Mr. Gray. “And, I will be available to discuss chapter launch requisites and any other questions they might have.”

 

 


Items covered in the fact sheet will include criteria for establishing an SHM international chapter, definition of a potential chapter’s geographic area, and the requirements for demonstrating necessary interest and leadership at the local level. It also will describe the SHM resources that will be available to international chapters – dedicated staff and physician leader liaisons, data support and management, creation of a chapter-specific HMX community to facilitate virtual networking and communications, meeting support, and counsel on how to build and maintain chapter audience and membership.

In addition, the lounge will have a global map that identifies geographic concentrations of international attendees and photos from recent international chapter meetings.

SHM has been surveying the field beyond U.S. borders through the initiation of conversations with organizations abroad. These efforts allow the society to learn from and support hospital medicine leaders and health systems around the world.

“The hospital medicine movement is in various stages of development outside the United States,” explained Mr. Gray. “Many factors influence the rate at which a hospital medicine model can become implemented, including the structure of the health system, education and training curricula, existing scope of practice and care-delivery constructs, fluidity of government and systems, and other factors.

“We urge participants from abroad to visit the International Lounge to meet and share information with their counterparts from other countries, learn more about SHM and what it has to offer, find out about the potential for launching an SHM chapter, and interact with SHM staff and board members,” concluded Mr. Gray. “We have so much to learn from each other.”

International Lounge
Tuesday, April 10, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.

Anaheim Room

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