From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Apr 1 17:00:15 2022 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter) Date: Fri Mar 22 11:23:11 2024 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, April 4-8, 2022 Message-ID: [cid:image002.jpg@01D845E9.F315AC50] DOM Week April 1, 2022 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (If you have items for DOM week, please email amyf@uw.edu) Faculty news In memoriam: Dr. Christopher Blagg [Christopher Blagg]Dr. Christopher Blagg, professor emeritus (Nephrology) passed away peacefully on March 31, 2022. A native of England, he earned his medical degree from the University of Leeds School of Medicine. His involvement with dialysis care began in 1958, before long-term dialysis was a viable treatment for kidney failure. In 1968, he moved to Seattle to work with Dr. Belding Scribner, the first Division Head of Nephrology at UW. Together, they worked to establish dialysis care as a community resource and advocated for Medicare funding of long-term dialysis care. As Executive Director of the Northwest Kidney Centers for 27 years, Blagg oversaw the establishment of a network of community-based dialysis facilities in King County. He will be remembered as a brilliant, dedicated physician, passionate about advancing the care of people with kidney failure, and the nation's most stalwart champion of home hemodialysis. ________________________________ Farewell to Dom Reilly [Faculty headshot of Dr. Dom Reilly, a terrific doctor who retired March 31, 2022.]Dr. Dominic Reilly, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) has retired from the University of Washington after 30 years of service. He joined our faculty in 1992 and founded the UW Medicine Consult Group at UWMC-Montlake. Since 2012, he has worked to ensure that the department is fairly and fully reimbursed for clinical work. During his career, he published several articles in peer-reviewed journals and received numerous teaching awards. His indefatigable energy and passion will be missed by colleagues, staff, and patients. DEI news 2022 UW Tri-Campus DEI Forum [http://thewholeu.uw.edu/wp-content/uploads/DEI-Fall-Forum-Poster-scaled-1.jpeg]Save the date: The UW Professional Staff Organization (PSO) and departments across UW's three campuses are joining together to facilitate a virtual 2-half-day Diversity Equity Inclusion (DEI) Forum, focused on Action. The goal is to create an intersectional space for those interested in advocating for equity to come together to share ideas, network, and build coalitions to advance anti-racism and social justice efforts across UW and beyond. This includes intersecting aspects of identity such as race, ability, age, gender, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, and religion. The Forum is developed by staff, for staff, but open to faculty and students as well. April 20 & 21. For more information and to register. Education news [49559AB3]UW medical school ranked No. 1 for primary care training The University of Washington School of Medicine has received the No. 1 ranking for primary care education in the 2022 edition of U.S. News & World Report's "Best Graduate Schools" for the 27th time since the category was introduced in 1995. We ranked No. 16 among the top 25 medical schools in the country for internal medicine, and are second in the nation in federal grant funding with $996 million of federal grants in 2020. ________________________________ [Dr. Hugo Carmona]Innovation in Fellowship Education Award The University of Washington has received the 2022 Innovation in Fellowship Education Award from the American Thoracic Society for "Hacking Innovation into Fellowship Education." Dr. Hugo Carmona, assistant professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is lead author. Research news The Future of Cancer Research and Care Today marks the first day of Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, a unified adult cancer research and care center that brings together Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and Seattle Cancer Care Alliance (SCCA) into a single, independent, nonprofit organization that is also a clinically integrated part of UW Medicine and UW Medicine's cancer program. ________________________________ When Culture and Preventative Care Collide African immigrants in the U.S. are disproportionately affected by delayed diagnosis of a variety of health conditions, including some cancers, HIV, and hepatitis B. Differences in culture, life and health care experiences likely influence decisions to seek health services. [cid:image014.png@01D845E9.F315AC50]In an effort to address barriers to HIV testing faced by local African immigrant communities, a UW team led by Shukri Hassan, and Drs. Rena Patel and Roxanne Kerani (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) collaborated with the Somali, Ethiopian, and Eritrean health boards in King County to design and implement a community-based participatory research project, known as Harambee! The first phase of this project achieved a more than 50% uptake of HIV testing. In phase 2.0 they identified a number of factors that shape attitudes of Somali, Ethiopian and Eritrean immigrant communities and deter them from seeking preventative care. Overall, four major themes emerged: (1) cultural beliefs and attitudes shaping community views of health care, (2) religious beliefs/views on manifestation of illness (3) immigrant shared experiences, and (4) structural barriers related to health systems. Phase 3.0 will incorporate messaging around preventative health care into an HIV stigma reduction intervention led by religious and other community leaders in the King County Somali, Ethiopian, and Eritrean communities. Read the full story in Public Health Post. ________________________________ [cid:image016.jpg@01D845E9.F315AC50]Matthew Nguyen, student assistant working with Dr. Stephen Plymate (Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine) has been awarded a Mary Gates Research Scholarship. Mary Gates Research Scholarships are competitive scholarships intended to enhance the educational experiences of undergraduate students at the University of Washington while they are engaged in research guided by faculty. Recent publications Dr. Lauren Beste, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) is senior author of "Hepatitis B Virus-Related Care Quality In Patients With Hepatitis B/Hiv Coinfection Versus Hepatitis B Monoinfection: A National Cohort Study" in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dr. Maria Corcorran, acting assistant professor, is lead author and Dr. H. Nina Kim, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is senior author of "Correlates of 90-day Mortality Among People Who Do and Do Not Inject Drugs with Infective Endocarditis in Seattle, Washington" in Open Forum Infectious Diseases. DOM co-authors are Jenell Stewart, Kristine Lan, Ayushi Gupta, Sara Glick, Chetan Seshadri, Edward Gibbons, Robert Harrington, and Shireesha Dhanireddy. Drs. Seth Cohen, Chloe Bryson-Cahn, Catherine Liu, Steven Pergam, John Lynch, Estella Whimbey (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) and Nandita Mani (General Internal Medicine) are co-authors of "Variants of Concern Are Overrepresented Among Postvaccination Breakthrough Infections of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) in Washington State" in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dr. Larry Corey, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is co-author of "High Asymptomatic Carriage with the Omicron Variant in South Africa" in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dr. Mary (Nora) Disis, professor (Medical Oncology) wrote "JAMA Oncology-The Year in Review, 2021." Raymond Doty, research scientist, is lead author, and Dr. Jan Abkowitz, professor and head (Hematology) is senior author of "Studies in a mosaic DBA patient and chimeric mice reveal erythroid cell-extrinsic contributions to erythropoiesis" in Blood. Dr. Susan Graham, professor, is lead author and Dr. W. Conrad Liles, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is senior author of "Elevated Plasma von Willebrand Factor Levels Are Associated With Subsequent Ischemic Stroke in Persons With Treated HIV Infection" in Open Forum Infectious Diseases. DOM co-authors are Robin Nance, Mark Wurfel, Heidi Crane and Jos? L?pez. Dr. Teal Hallstrand, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is senior author of "Location of eosinophils in the airway wall is critical for specific features of airway hyperresponsiveness and T2 inflammation in asthma" in European Respiratory Journal. DOM co-authors are Ryan Murphy, Ying Lai, Matthew Altman, William Altemeier and Charles Frevert. Dr. Rashmi Sharma, assistant professor (General Internal Medicine) is senior author of "Characterizing uncertainty in goals-of-care discussions among black and white patients: a qualitative study" in BMC Palliative Medicine. Dr. Erik Swenson, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is senior author of "ERS/ATS technical standard on interpretive strategies for routine lung function tests" in European Respiratory Journal. DOM co-authors are Bruce Culver and Teal Hallstrand. Dr. Matthew Triplette, assistant professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) co-wrote the editorial "Screening high risk populations for lung cancer" in BMJ. In the news Dr. Philip Greenberg, professor (Medical Oncology) talked to GeekWire in "Biotech vet Phil Greenberg on his new cancer-fighting startup and immunotherapy's next phase." Dr. Irl Hirsch, professor (Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition) is quoted in "U.S. House passes bill to cap insulin cost at $35 per month" in Healio Endocrinology. Dr. Christine Johnston, associate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "Mix and Match mRNA Boosters? It May Be a Good Idea, Experts Say" in MedPage Today. Dr. Joshua Liao, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) and associate chair, co-wrote "How to fix the two-tier U.S. health payment system" in STAT. Dr. Lisa Maier, clinical associate professor (Dermatology) is quoted in "Foot Dermatitis Can Be Allergic Reaction to Topical Antifungals" and "Hidden Formaldehyde in Products Linked to Allergic Reactions" in Medscape. Dr. Leo Morales, professor (General Internal Medicine) is quoted in "How Physicians and Patients Can Bridge Cultural Divides" in Brain and Life. Dr. Anna Wald, professor and head (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "FDA expected to OK 4th COVID-19 vaccine dose for adults over 50, UW doctor weighs in" from KIRO News. Dr. Pandora (Luke) Wander, assistant professor (General Internal Medicine) is quoted in "COVID-19 linked to increased risk for new-onset diabetes in men, but not women" in Healio Endocrinology. Events of interest Medicine Grand Rounds Dr. Jason Deen, associate professor of pediatrics and medicine (Cardiology) will present "Cardiovascular Risk Stratifications of American Indians" at Medicine Grand Rounds on Friday, April 8, 2022,12-1pm, via zoom. Weekly Calendar, April 4-8, 2022 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up Michael Hlastala Symposium: A Career Prospective Dr. Michael Hlastala was a long-time member of the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care, having been faculty nearly since the inception of the Division of Respiratory Diseases. April 14, 1:30pm, via zoom. Speakers: Bill Altemeier, Robb Glenny, Tom Robertson, and Erik Swenson. Symposium in Medical Ethics on Race, Health and Justice The Benjamin Rabinowitz Symposium in Medical Ethics on "Race, Health and Justice" is a one-day, cross disciplinary symposium which will present theoretical and empirical research on racial injustice and its impact on health and well-being. The Keynote Speaker is George Yancy, Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Philosophy at Emory University. April 15. For more information and to register, please visit the UW Dept. of Philosophy website. Trauma Stewardship Institute Workshop UW Medicine and the School of Medicine are partnering with Laura van Dernoot Lipsky and the Trauma Stewardship Institute to address the accumulative toll of the pandemic on UW Medicine healthcare staff and providers through a 2-hour system-wide workshop. Recordings will be posted online for those unable to attend live. June 21, 4-6pm Register here ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor (206) 685-3685 amyf@uw.edu [cid:image002.jpg@01CF4461.CA7ADDC0] [YouTube_Logo_svg.png] [cid:image024.jpg@01D845E9.F315AC50] To subscribe/unsubscribe from this list, go to: https://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/domweek ________________________________ Privileged, confidential or patient identifiable information may be contained in this message. This information is meant only for the use of the intended recipients. If you are not the intended recipient, or if the message has been addressed to you in error, do not read, disclose, reproduce, distribute, disseminate or otherwise use this transmission. Instead, please notify the sender by reply e-mail, and then destroy all copies of the message and any attachments. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Name: image024.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 1007 bytes Desc: image024.jpg URL: From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Apr 8 17:03:29 2022 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter) Date: Fri Mar 22 11:23:12 2024 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, April 11-15, 2022 Message-ID: [cid:image013.jpg@01D84B6A.8F6B7370] DOM Week April 8, 2022 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (If you have items for DOM week, please email amyf@uw.edu) Diversity, Equity and Inclusion news [cid:image014.jpg@01D84B6A.8F6B7370]April is National Minority Health Month National Minority Health Month is a dedicated time to bring attention to inequities in healthcare access and disparities in health outcomes experienced by racial and ethnic minority communities, as well as promote initiatives that work to improve the health of diverse communities. View information and UW community events on our MedNews site. Education news New chief residents Congratulations to the new chief residents for academic year 2023-24: UWMC * Shiv Bhandari (Inpatient) * Celia Haering (Inpatient) * Nikki Zarling (Outpatient - Roosevelt)) HMC * Mack Holmberg (Inpatient) * Karen Rico (Outpatient) * Nick Wang (Quality and Safety) NAIVASHA * TBD SEATTLE VA * Maria Cassera (Inpatient) * Juri de Jong (Quality and Safety) * Thomas Hollowed (Clinician-Teacher fellow, outpatient chief) * Rebecca Stephens (Clinician-Teacher fellow, outpatient chief) * Erica Storm (Inpatient) BELLTOWN CLINIC * Arita Thatte Research news ITHS Receives $63M in Research Funding [picture of Dr. Nora Disis in lab]The National Institutes of Health announced a Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) of more than $63 million to the Institute of Translational Health Sciences (ITHS), to be disbursed over the next five years. It is the institute's fourth such award. "I am delighted to have the CTSA renewed for the next five years," said Dr. Mary (Nora) Disis, professor (Medical Oncology), ITHS director and associate dean for translational science at the UW School of Medicine. "ITHS has made great strides in supporting clinical and translational research over the last five years with the formation of the UW Medicine's Clinical Trials Office, the creation of numerous research networks across the WWAMI (Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana, Idaho) region, and significantly increased resources for research on the electronic health record." Read the full story from ITHS. ________________________________ [cid:image016.jpg@01D84B6A.8F6B7370]UW Medicine to get up to $5.3M for TB research center The goal of the Seattle Tuberculosis Research Advancement Center will be to develop the next generation of TB researchers by funding and mentoring new investigators, supporting lab and clinical research, and facilitating collaboration between research institutions within and outside of the university. "We wanted the name to reflect that this effort seeks to include people who are working, or want to work, on TB at institutions all over the city," said Dr. Chetan Seshadri, associate professor (Allergy & Infectious Diseases). He will co-lead the center with Rhea Coler, a UW affiliate professor of global health and senior investigator at the Seattle Childrens' Research Institute, and David Sherman, professor and chair of the UW Department of Microbiology. Read the full story from UW Medicine Newsroom. Recent publications Dr. Lee Cranmer, professor (Medical Oncology) is co-author of "Efficacy and Safety of TRC105 Plus Pazopanib vs Pazopanib Alone for Treatment of Patients With Advanced Angiosarcoma: A Randomized Clinical Trial" in JAMA Oncology. Drs. Paul Drain, associate professor and Adrienne Shapiro, acting assistant professor (Allergy & Infectious Diseases) are co-authors of "Tuberculosis screening among ambulatory people living with HIV: a systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis in Lancet Infectious Diseases. Dr. David Fredricks, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is lead author of "Vaginal and Extra-Vaginal Bacterial Colonization and Risk for Incident Bacterial Vaginosis in a Population of Women Who Have Sex With Men" in Journal of Infectious Diseases. Drs. Heather Greenlee, associate professor (Medical Oncology) is lead author of "Risk of Cardiovascular Disease in Women With and Without Breast Cancer: The Pathways Heart Study" in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. DOM co-author is Dr. Richard Cheng associate professor (Cardiology). Dr. Nicholas Johnson, associate professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is co-author of "mRNA Vaccine Effectiveness Against COVID-19 Hospitalization Among Solid Organ Transplant Recipients" in the Journal of Infectious Diseases. Dr. Nicole Kim, fellow (Gastroenterology) is lead author and Dr. George Ioannou professor (Gastroenterology) is senior author of "The COVID-19 Pandemic Highlights Opportunities to Improve Hepatocellular Carcinoma Screening and Diagnosis in a National Health System" in the American Journal of Gastroenterology. Dr. Stephanie Lee, professor (Medical Oncology) is senior author of "Yin and Yang of Psychological Health in the Cancer Experience: Does Positive Psychology Have a Role?" in Journal of Clinical Oncology. Dr. Masahiro Narita, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is co-author of "Evaluation of the latent tuberculosis care cascade among public health clinics in the United States" in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Drs. Bruce Psaty, professor, Paul K. Crane, professor, Shubhabrata Mukherjee, research associate professor (General Internal Medicine), Joshua Bis, research scientist (CHRU), Gail P. Jarvik, professor, Ellen M. Wijsman, professor (Medical Genetics), Wayne C. McCormick, professor, and Chang-En Yu, research associate professor (Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine) are co-authors of "New insights into the genetic etiology of Alzheimer's disease and related dementias" in Nature Genetics Dr. Veena Shankaran, professor (Medical oncology) is senior author of "Financial Navigation in Cancer Care Delivery: State of the Evidence, Opportunities for Research, and Future Directions" in Journal of Clinical Oncology. Dr. Asa Tapley, fellow (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is co-author of "High Asymptomatic Carriage with the Omicron Variant in South Africa" in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dr. Katherine Tuttle, clinical professor (Nephrology) is co-author of "Premature Death in Kidney Transplant Recipients: The Time for Trials is Now" in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. In the news Dr. Sergei Doulatov, associate professor (Hematology) is quoted in "Gene deletion behind anomaly in blood cancer cells" in EurekAlert! Dr. Katherine Tuttle, clinical professor (Nephrology) is quoted in "How long covid is accelerating a revolution in medical research" in the Washington Post. Events of interest Medicine Grand Rounds Dr. Michael DeBaun, (Vanderbilt University) will present "Academic Activism: choosing the right time and the right place" at Medicine Grand Rounds on Friday, April 15, 2022,12-1pm, via zoom. Symposium in Medical Ethics on Race, Health and Justice The Benjamin Rabinowitz Symposium in Medical Ethics on "Race, Health and Justice" is a one-day, cross disciplinary symposium which will present theoretical and empirical research on racial injustice and its impact on health and well-being. The Keynote Speaker is George Yancy, Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Philosophy at Emory University. April 15. For more information and to register, please visit the UW Dept. of Philosophy website. Fred Hutch Minority Health Month Events In honor of National Minority Health Month, Fred Hutch will be hosting weekly seminars throughout the month on various topics followed by Brave Space Discussions to dive into the week's topic. For more information visit the Fred Hutch website. April 13 at 12pm | "Advocation for the LGBTQIA+ and the People Living with HIV in the Latin Community," presented by Enrique Maymi-Torres & Martha Zuniga April 20 at 12pm | "Changing the Standard: Embracing an Inclusion Paradigm for Health" (hosted by CERE], presented by Matthew Rose April 27 at 12pm | "Advancing NH/Pl Autonomy: How Institutional allies can come alongside Pasifika communities to combat NH/Pl data and policy erasure" (hosted by CERE], presented by Joseph Seia Access via this Zoom link for all seminars. Weekly Calendar, April 11-15, 2022 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up 2022 PNW Palliative Care Conference Cambia Palliative Care Center of Excellence is pleased to invite you to the 2022 PNW Palliative Care Conference. Entitled, "Lifting Voices & Building Bridges: Working Towards an Inclusive Future for Palliative Care", this event will take place 8:00 AM - 4:00 PM PST on June 13, 2022 at the Lynnwood Convention Center in Lynnwood, WA. Join us and register here: https://cpcce.uw.edu/news/annual-conference/2022-agenda-register Trauma Stewardship Institute Workshop UW Medicine and the School of Medicine are partnering with Laura van Dernoot Lipsky and the Trauma Stewardship Institute to address the accumulative toll of the pandemic on UW Medicine healthcare staff and providers through a 2-hour system-wide workshop. Recordings will be posted online for those unable to attend live. June 21, 4-6pm Register here ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor (206) 685-3685 amyf@uw.edu [cid:image002.jpg@01CF4461.CA7ADDC0] [YouTube_Logo_svg.png] [cid:image020.jpg@01D84B6A.8F6B7370] To subscribe/unsubscribe from this list, go to: https://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/domweek ________________________________ Privileged, confidential or patient identifiable information may be contained in this message. This information is meant only for the use of the intended recipients. If you are not the intended recipient, or if the message has been addressed to you in error, do not read, disclose, reproduce, distribute, disseminate or otherwise use this transmission. Instead, please notify the sender by reply e-mail, and then destroy all copies of the message and any attachments. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Name: image020.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 913 bytes Desc: image020.jpg URL: From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Apr 15 16:53:38 2022 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter) Date: Fri Mar 22 11:23:12 2024 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, April 18-22, 2022 Message-ID: [cid:image001.jpg@01D850E9.569CD370] DOM Week April 15, 2022 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (If you have items for DOM week, please email amyf@uw.edu) Faculty news [cid:image003.jpg@01D850E9.569CD370]Dr. Philip Greenberg, professor (Medical Oncology) has been elected American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) President-Elect for 2022-2023. An internationally recognized pioneer in the field of cancer immunobiology, Greenberg has made groundbreaking contributions examining host T-cell responses to pathogenic viral infections. His work has led to crucial insights into the understanding of the mechanisms by which T cells distinguish tumor cells from normal cells and has fueled the advancement of adoptive T-cell therapy approaches in various cancers, including leukemia. His research also showed that CD4-positive helper T cells work both collaboratively and independently of CD8-positive cytotoxic T cells to eradicate tumor cells. This work has since been applied to the development of treatments for late-stage melanoma and leukemia. Read the full news release from the AACR. ________________________________ [Head shot of Myla Morales-Tomas]Myla Morales-Tomas, teaching associate (Rheumatology) has been recognized as a change maker by the American College of Rheumatology. A rheumatology change maker is anyone in the field of rheumatology working to start or support an initiative or intervention, bring a program or idea to reality, or improve the quality of life of a group or community: A true leader, an inspired visionary, or front-line professional willing to do whatever it takes to keep things going. ________________________________ Women Faculty Leadership Series Sponsored by the Dean's Standing Committee on Women in Medicine and Science, this four-part series is designed to empower UW School of Medicine women faculty with tools to thrive in their careers. * Negotiations: Advocating for Self and Others. May 11, 12-1pm * Not Imposter Syndrome. June 14, 9-10am * Difficult Conversations. September 20, 4-5pm * How to Build and Lead Diverse Teams - Strategy. January 12, 2023, 9-10am For more information and to register, please visit the SOM faculty website. Staff news [cid:image007.jpg@01D850E9.569CD370]Staff Spotlight: Sean Greenlee Our April staff spotlight is on Sean Greenlee, program manager for diversity, equity and inclusion in the Department of Medicine. Learn more about him on our news site. ________________________________ Core Competency Series The next DOM Core Competency Series is "A Day in the Life: A Medical Student, Resident, and Fellow Perspective," presented by Katie Hawkins (4th-Year Medical Student), Dr. Linda Liu (Harborview Inpatient Chief Medical Resident) and Dr. Busola Oluwole (Hematology-Oncology Fellow). May 11, 12-1pm, via zoom (Meeting ID: 966 2035 0832, Passcode: 393414) Diversity, Equity and Inclusion news Health Equity Conversations [cid:image009.jpg@01D850E9.569CD370]The DOM health systems team is supporting Health Equity Conversations, a new limited series podcast hosted by Joshua Liao, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) and associate chair, and featuring people and groups around the country working on payment and other systems change efforts to improve health equity. The series builds off a prior call to action and efforts to raise awareness about these issues in peer-reviewed and other venues. Listen to a brief series introduction by Dr. Liao. Education news Spotlight on resident research [A person in a suit smiling Description automatically generated with medium confidence]The Spotlight on Resident Scholarship highlights research, quality improvement, medical education, advocacy, and other scholarly activities of UW Internal Medicine residents. In their research, "Uncovering relationships between body composition and outcomes from immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy," Dr. Duncan Hussey and collaborators retrospectively used radiographic measures of pre-treatment lean muscle mass and levels of blood albumin in effort to better predict which renal cancer patients will have greater mortality after dual checkpoint inhibitor therapy. This study lays a foundation for future research to examine whether nutritional and body composition biomarkers could be used to personalize counseling and treatment plans for patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma. Read more on the Residency website. Research news Breast cancer treatment linked to increased risk of cardiovascular disease [cid:image013.jpg@01D850E9.569CD370]A new study in the Journal of Clinical Oncology shows that women receiving certain common therapies for breast cancer may be at increased risk for heart attack, stroke, heart failure, other cardiovascular events, and death. Study authors say that even though more women are surviving breast cancer because of the increased effectiveness of treatments, the linkage of cancer therapy to increased cardiovascular events means researchers must now focus on understanding potential mechanisms and toxicities to develop clinical strategies protecting the heart health of breast cancer survivors. "We hope to raise awareness that women who are breast cancer survivors must receive comprehensive, ongoing follow-up care and monitoring for cardiovascular risk, and scientists and clinicians must prioritize research that will reduce this risk," said Dr. Heather Greenlee, associate professor (Medical Oncology) and lead author of the JCO article. Read the full story from Hutch News. ________________________________ Researching the effects of long COVID [cid:image015.jpg@01D850E9.569CD370]Doctors generally define long COVID as a post-acute condition that causes a wide range of symptoms for over a month after testing positive for the virus. But some mysteries, like the condition's biggest risk factors, still perplex scientists. Last month, UW Medicine, Swedish Health Services and the Institute for Systems Biology in Seattle joined the nationwide National Institutes of Health study and will contribute data from Pacific Northwest patients. The study - known as RECOVER (Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery) - is expected to be the largest and most comprehensive long COVID research effort in the U.S. to date. "I think it'll give us value essentially in the numbers - the numbers of enrollees and their clinical characterization, and the numbers of blood tests and types of abnormalities we may be able to confirm with larger studies," said Dr. Helen Chu, associate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases), and the study's lead UW Medicine investigator. Read more in "Long COVID grips some Washingtonians and perplexes scientists; new research underway" in the Seattle Times. ________________________________ [cid:image017.jpg@01D850E9.569CD370]Dr. Brian Kraemer, research professor (Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine) has received $250,000 from the Washington Research Foundation (WRF) to develop small molecules to treat Alzheimer's disease. Kraemer will use the latest funding from WRF to further develop and test the small molecules he has identified, concentrating on their ability to safely inhibit MSUT2 and cross the blood-brain barrier. If successful, it could set the stage for first-in-human studies to develop new AD drugs with his technology. Read the press release from the WRF. Recent publications Dr. Lindley Barbee, associate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is lead author of "Management of Neisseria gonorrhoeae in the United States: Summary of Evidence From the Development of the 2020 Gonorrhea Treatment Recommendations and the 2021 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Sexually Transmitted Infection Treatment Guidelines" in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Drs. Michael Boeckh and Grace John-Stewart (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) are co-authors of "Cytomegalovirus Viremia and Clinical Outcomes in Kenyan Children Diagnosed With Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) in Hospital" in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Drs. Melinda Biernacki, Elizabeth Krakow, Paul Martin, Mary Flowers, and Stanley Riddell (Medical Oncology) are co-authors of "Naive T-Cell Depletion to Prevent Chronic Graft-Versus-Host Disease" in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. Dr. Andrew Cowan, associate professor (Medical Oncology) is co-author of "ASTCT Clinical Practice Recommendations for Transplantation and Cellular Therapies in Multiple Myeloma" in Transplantation and Cellular Therapy. Dr. Benjamin Freedman, associate professor (Nephrology) is co-author of "Multivalent designed proteins neutralize SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern and confer protection against infection in mice" in Science Translational Medicine. Dr. Terry Gernsheimer, professor (Hematology) is co-author of "Rilzabrutinib, an Oral BTK Inhibitor, in Immune Thrombocytopenia" in NEJM. Dr. Christine Johnston, associate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) wrote "Diagnosis and Management of Genital Herpes: Key Questions and Review of the Evidence for the 2021 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Sexually Transmitted Infections Treatment Guidelines" in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dr. Sarah Lee, assistant professor, is lead author, and Dr. Andrew Cowan, associate professor (Medical Oncology) is senior author of "Ciltacabtagene autoleucel. CAR-T therapy targeting B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA), Treatment of multiple myeloma" in Drugs of the Future. Jennifer Logue and Dr. Helen Chu (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) are co-authors of "Detailed analysis of antibody responses to SARS-CoV-2 vaccination and infection in macaques" in PLOS Pathogens. Dr. R. Scott McClelland, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is co-author of "Diagnosis and Management of Trichomonas vaginalis: Summary of Evidence Reviewed for the 2021 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Sexually Transmitted Infections Treatment Guidelines" in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dr. Andrew Portuguese, fellow, is lead author and Dr. Evan Hall, assistant professor (Medical Oncology) is senior author of "Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Use in Solid Organ Transplant Recipients: A Systematic Review" in JNCCN. DOM co-authors are Scott Tykodi, Christopher Blosser, and John Thompson. Dr. Eugene Yang, clinical professor (Cardiology) is senior author of "Comparison of American and European Guidelines for Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease: JACC Guideline Comparison" in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. In the news Dr. Anthony Back, professor (Medical Oncology) talked to KUOW in "Could a psychedelic trip help burned out health care workers cope? This scientist thinks so." Dr. Jocelyn Cooper, R2, is quoted in "Cefazolin may be safe option before surgery for patients with penicillin allergy labels" in Healio Asthma/Allergy. Dr. Christopher Damman, clinical associate professor (Gastroenterology) is quoted in "Adding key foods to a diet will help restore gut health" from UW Medicine Newsroom. Dr. Mary (Nora) Disis, professor (Medical Oncology) is quoted in "New generation of cancer-preventing vaccines could wipe out tumors before they form" in Science. Dr. Vishesh Kapur, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) co-wrote "Look back at the past before 'springing forward'" in the Seattle Times. Dr. John Lynch, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "COVID cases rising in western Washington" from KIRO 7 news. Dr. Arun Sridhar, assistant professor (Cardiology) is quoted in "How the COVID-19 Pandemic Has Taken a Toll on Heart Health" in CNET. Events of interest Medicine Grand Rounds Dr. Alvin Calderon, (Virginia Mason Franciscan Health) will present "Growth Mindset in Medical Education" at Medicine Grand Rounds on Friday, April 22, 2022,12-1pm, via zoom. Weekly Calendar, April 18-22, 2022 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up 2022 PNW Palliative Care Conference Cambia Palliative Care Center of Excellence is pleased to invite you to the 2022 PNW Palliative Care Conference: "Lifting Voices & Building Bridges: Working Towards an Inclusive Future for Palliative Care." June 13, 8am-4pm. Please register for this event. Trauma Stewardship Institute Workshop UW Medicine and the School of Medicine are partnering with Laura van Dernoot Lipsky and the Trauma Stewardship Institute to address the accumulative toll of the pandemic on UW Medicine healthcare staff and providers through a 2-hour system-wide workshop. Recordings will be posted online for those unable to attend live. June 21, 4-6pm. Register here. ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor (206) 685-3685 amyf@uw.edu [cid:image002.jpg@01CF4461.CA7ADDC0] [YouTube_Logo_svg.png] [cid:image021.jpg@01D850E9.569CD370] To subscribe/unsubscribe from this list, go to: https://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/domweek ________________________________ Privileged, confidential or patient identifiable information may be contained in this message. This information is meant only for the use of the intended recipients. If you are not the intended recipient, or if the message has been addressed to you in error, do not read, disclose, reproduce, distribute, disseminate or otherwise use this transmission. Instead, please notify the sender by reply e-mail, and then destroy all copies of the message and any attachments. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Name: image021.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 914 bytes Desc: image021.jpg URL: From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Apr 22 16:58:33 2022 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter) Date: Fri Mar 22 11:23:12 2024 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, April 25-29, 2022 Message-ID: [cid:image007.jpg@01D8566A.31383940] DOM Week April 22, 2022 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (If you have items for DOM week, please email amyf@uw.edu) Awards Diversity Academic Development Scholarship Award [cid:image017.jpg@01D8566A.31383940]Congratulations to Dr. Busola Oluwole, fellow (Hematology), the 2022 recipient of the Diversity Academic Development Scholar Award. Established in 2020, the Department of Medicine Diversity Academic Development Scholar Awards (DADSA) were developed to promote and foster the transition of meritorious trainees to the roles of junior faculty and principal investigator. Dr. Oluwole will present her research at Grand Rounds in the fall. ________________________________ Fialkow Award [cid:image019.jpg@01D8566A.31383940]Congratulations to Dr. Andrew Stergachis, assistant professor (Medical Genetics), who is the 2022 recipient of the Fialkow Award. The Fialkow Scholar Award is awarded annually to recognize the outstanding achievements of junior faculty in medicine in research, teaching, clinical work, and academic citizenship. The award honors the late UW Dean of Medicine and Chair of Medicine Dr. Philip Fialkow and his wife, the late Helen Fialkow. Dr. Stergachis will formally receive the award and present at Medicine Grand Rounds in the fall. ________________________________ Minority Faculty Mentoring Award Consider nominating a colleague for the Minority Faculty Mentoring Award. This award recognizes the need for excellence in mentoring of under-represented faculty groups to achieve diversity and inclusion, key elements that can unleash creativity and innovation so that we can meet the health care needs of our region. Nominees need not be a member of an under-represented group. This award is supported through the Office of the Dean, Office of Academic Affairs, the Office of Healthcare Equity and the Committee on Minority Faculty Advancement (CMFA). For additional information, or to submit your nomination letters please contact Nora Coronado. Nominations are due April 29. Education news AAIM/CDIM awards and elections Clerkship Directors in Internal Medicine (CDIM), part of the Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine (AAIM), is the organization of individuals responsible for teaching internal medicine to medical students. At the AAIM conference last week, the following were announced: Dr. Douglas Paauw, professor (General Internal Medicine) and director, Medicine Student Programs, was awarded the highest honor from CDIM, the 2022 CDIM Ruth-Marie E. Fincher, MD, Service Award. Dr. Susan Merel, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) was recently elected as one of the councilors for CDIM. Together with John Choe (APDIM councilor) and Whitney Harper (PAAC councilor), this is the first time the University of Washington has had three national councilors to AAIM at the same time. Dr. John Choe, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) has been selected to co-chair the Learner Handoffs Standards Task Force, one of several AAIM task forces charged with addressing some of the 2021 UME to GME transition recommendations from the Coalition for Physician Accountability (COPA). Showcasing innovations in education Staff members from our Internal Medicine Residency Program presented two posters at the AAIM conference last week, showcasing innovations in education. Learn more about these innovations by clicking on the links below: * Cultivating Equity, Diversity and Inclusion: A Newsletter (Andr?a Campbell, Gevelle Cullen, and Whitney Harper) * Program Administrator Experiences and Future Recommendations for Virtual Recruitment (Andr?a Campbell and Whitney Harper) [cid:image021.jpg@01D8566A.31383940] Faculty news Robb Glenny stepping down as division head [cid:image022.jpg@01D8566A.31383940]Dr. Robb Glenny joined the University of Washington in 1987 as a fellow, rose through the ranks to professor, and has been head of the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine since 2005. Under his leadership, the division grew significantly from 30 to now 100 faculty members while enhancing its international recognition for the breadth of its training program, clinical expertise, and innovative research. In 2017, Sleep Medicine was added to the Division's name to better reflect the scope of the clinical work, training and scholarship in the division. He has agreed to stay on as division head while a national search is conducted. Read more about him on our news site. ________________________________ Drs. Tyler Albert, assistant professor, and Paul Cornia, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) gave the University of New Mexico Department of Internal Medicine Grand Rounds on 4/21/22. Their talk was titled, "Finding Authenticity in Medical Education Research." Clinical news Clinicians grapple with decisions in crisis-care simulation The COVID-19 pandemic has led healthcare organizations to draft plans for critical patient care in the event of shortages of resources such as ventilators. Invoking "crisis-care" standards at a hospital would prompt the deployment of a triage team-three or four seasoned clinicians and a medical ethicist responsible to determine which patients have the best chance of survival and prioritizing these people to receive scarce resources while deprioritizing others. [cid:image023.jpg@01D8566A.31383940]Dr. Catherine Butler, assistant professor (Nephrology) is lead author of a new study published in JAMA Network Open that conveys the moral distress that triage team members experienced while participating in a simulated crisis-care event in which they had to decide which patients would and would not be prioritized to receive life-sustaining resources. "This was a setting to try to operationalize a process for making life-and-death patient decisions in a way that most medical professionals have never faced before," she said. Read the full story from UW Medicine Newsroom. ________________________________ QI Match [https://qimatch.com/includes/images/logo_long.png]The Center for Scholarship in Patient Care Quality and Safety is proud to announce the (re)-launch of QI Match. QI Match is an online web platform to match collaborators to quality improvement and patient safety initiatives across UW Medicine. Projects get posted to the site and any faculty, student, staff, or trainee can notify the project lead of their interest. Projects that are posted to QI Match may be a single event (such as a patient safety root cause analysis or a QI focus group) or longer term QI projects. Get started today. Recent publications Dr. David Dugdale, professor (General Internal Medicine) is lead author of "Association Between a Population Health Intervention and Hypertension Control" in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. DOM co-author is Joshua Liao. Dr. Jordan Gauthier, assistant professor (Medical Oncology) is lead author of "Impact of CD19 CAR T-cell product type on outcomes in relapsed or refractory aggressive B-NHL" in Blood. DOM co-authors are Alexandre Hirayama, Joshua Hill, Mayzar Shadman, Victor Chow, Ajay Gopal, David Maloney, Cameron Turtle and Mohamed Sorror. Dr. Kellen Hirsch, R2, is lead author, and Dr. Larry Dean, professor (Cardiology) is senior author of "Spontaneous coronary artery dissection and exogenous estrogen in a transgender female" in CCI . DOM co-author is Vidhushei Yogeswaran. Dr. Mack Holmberg, R2, is lead author of "Supporting sexual and gender minority health-care workers" in Nature Reviews Nephrology. Dr. Jeffrey Krimmel-Morrison, clinical instructor (General Internal Medicine) is lead author of "How to Keep Training-After Residency Training" in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. Dr. Benjamin Lidgard, acting instructor, is lead author, and Dr. Nisha Bansal, associate professor (Nephrology) is senior author of "Patient-Reported Symptoms and Subsequent Risk of Myocardial Infarction in Chronic Kidney Disease" in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. DOM co-authors are Leila Zelnick and Kevin O'Brien. Dr. Gary Lyman, professor (Medical Oncology) is senior author of "Association Between Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor (G-CSF) Use and Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS) or Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) Among Elderly Patients with Breast, Lung, or Prostate Cancer" in Advances in Therapy. Drs. R. Scott McClelland, Connie Celum and Jared Baeten (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) are co-authors of "Efficacy of Single-Dose Human Papillomavirus Vaccination among Young African Women" in NEJM Evidence. Dr. Graham Nichol, professor (General Internal Medicine) is co-author of "PROmotion of COvid-19 VA(X)ccination in the Emergency Department-PROCOVAXED: study protocol for a cluster randomized controlled trial" in Trials. Dr. Andrew Vincent Raikhelis, chief resident, is lead author, and Dr. James Town, assistant professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is senior author of "Determining consistency of care after resuscitation from in-hospital cardiac arrest, a retrospective analysis at a tertiary care academic medical center" in Heart & Lung. DOM co-author is David Carlbom. Dr. Joshua Veatch, acting assistant professor, is lead author, and Dr. Stanley Riddell, professor (Medical Oncology) is senior author of "Neoantigen-specific CD4+ T cells in human melanoma have diverse differentiation states and correlate with CD8+ T cell, macrophage, and B cell function" in Cancer Cell. DOM co-authors are Sylvia Lee, Ata Moshiri, Shailender Bhatia, Scott Tykodi, Evan Hall, John Thompson, and A. McGarry Houghton. Dr. Susan Wong, assistant professor, is lead author, and Dr. Ann O'Hare, professor (Nephrology) is senior author of "The VA Life-Sustaining Treatment Decisions Initiative: A qualitative analysis of veterans with advanced kidney disease" in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. DOM co-author is Taryn Oestreich. In the news Dr. Jeffrey Duchin, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "New CDC team: A weather service to forecast what's next in pandemic" in the Washington Post. Dr. John Lynch, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "Children are grimy, and that's (mostly) ok" in Popular Science. Dr. Robert Rakita, clinical professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "'It's Just Scaring People, and It's Not Saving Lives'" in The Atlantic. Dr. Eugene Yang, clinical professor (Cardiology) is quoted in "Have a history of allergies? It could mean a higher risk of heart disease, study finds" in McClatchy DC Bureau. Events of interest Medicine Grand Rounds Dr. Elizabeth Phelan (Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine) will present "Age-friendly healthcare: What is it, and how do we get there?" at Medicine Grand Rounds on Friday, April 29, 2022,12-1pm, via zoom. Public Health Policy for Pandemic Preparedness Save the date: Dr. Helen Chu, associate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is giving the 2022 Wolfle Memorial Lecture in Science & Policy "Public Health Policy for Pandemic Preparedness: Lessons from the Seattle Flu Study" on May 3, 5-7pm, Parrington Hall and via zoom. Registration required. Weekly Calendar, April 25-29, 2022 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up Core Competency Series The next DOM Core Competency Series is "A Day in the Life: A Medical Student, Resident, and Fellow Perspective," presented by Katie Hawkins (4th-Year Medical Student), Dr. Linda Liu (Harborview Inpatient Chief Medical Resident) and Dr. Busola Oluwole (Hematology-Oncology Fellow). May 11, 12-1pm, via zoom (Meeting ID: 966 2035 0832, Passcode: 393414) Women Faculty Leadership Series Sponsored by the Dean's Standing Committee on Women in Medicine and Science, this four-part series is designed to empower UW School of Medicine women faculty with tools to thrive in their careers. * Negotiations: Advocating for Self and Others. May 11, 12-1pm * Not Imposter Syndrome. June 14, 9-10am * Difficult Conversations. September 20, 4-5pm * How to Build and Lead Diverse Teams - Strategy. January 12, 2023, 9-10am For more information and to register, please visit the SOM faculty website. Pacific NW Sepsis Conference Registration is now open for the 10th Annual Pacific Northwest Sepsis Conference on June 6-7, with both an in-person and virtual attendance option. Speakers include local, national, and international sepsis experts. They will explore sepsis in different populations and healthcare settings both adult & pediatric and examine the updated Surviving Sepsis International Guidelines of care and the science behind these evidence-based recommendations. Additional sessions include why equity matters in sepsis care, the global burden of sepsis, phenotypes in sepsis, post-sepsis syndrome, case studies in sepsis, and resiliency for healthcare providers. 2022 PNW Palliative Care Conference Cambia Palliative Care Center of Excellence is pleased to invite you to the 2022 PNW Palliative Care Conference: "Lifting Voices & Building Bridges: Working Towards an Inclusive Future for Palliative Care." June 13, 8am-4pm. Please register for this event. Trauma Stewardship Institute Workshop UW Medicine and the School of Medicine are partnering with Laura van Dernoot Lipsky and the Trauma Stewardship Institute to address the accumulative toll of the pandemic on UW Medicine healthcare staff and providers through a 2-hour system-wide workshop. Recordings will be posted online for those unable to attend live. June 21, 4-6pm. Register here. ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor amyf@uw.edu [cid:image002.jpg@01CF4461.CA7ADDC0] [YouTube_Logo_svg.png] [cid:image028.jpg@01D8566A.31383940] To subscribe/unsubscribe from this list, go to: https://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/domweek ________________________________ Privileged, confidential or patient identifiable information may be contained in this message. This information is meant only for the use of the intended recipients. If you are not the intended recipient, or if the message has been addressed to you in error, do not read, disclose, reproduce, distribute, disseminate or otherwise use this transmission. Instead, please notify the sender by reply e-mail, and then destroy all copies of the message and any attachments. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 21749 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 8794 bytes Desc: image003.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image005.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 5502 bytes Desc: image005.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Name: image027.png Type: image/png Size: 8489 bytes Desc: image027.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image028.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 1005 bytes Desc: image028.jpg URL: From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Apr 29 16:35:46 2022 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter) Date: Fri Mar 22 11:23:12 2024 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, May 2-6, 2022 Message-ID: [cid:image001.jpg@01D85BE7.2A5EAB90] DOM Week April 29, 2022 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (If you have items for DOM week, please email amyf@uw.edu) Awards [cid:image002.jpg@01D85BE7.2A5EAB90]Dr. J. Randall Curtis, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is the 2022 recipient of the American Thoracic Society's Outstanding Clinician Award. This award is presented to an individual who has made substantial contributions in the clinical care of patients with lung disease on a local or national level. Awardees are recognized by patients and families as caring and dedicated healthcare providers and by their peers as having made substantial contributions to the clinical care of patients with respiratory disease. ________________________________ [cid:image004.jpg@01D85BE7.2A5EAB90]Dr. Effie Petersdorf, professor (Medical Oncology) has received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy. The Lifetime Achievement Award is presented to an eminent scientist or physician who has made continuing contributions to the BMT and cellular therapy fields through the advancement of knowledge via basic or clinical science. ________________________________ Gender Equity Awards - deadline extended [image005.png@01D82FE8]We have extended the nomination deadline for the inaugural Department of Medicine Gender Equity Awards to June 3. In particular, we are soliciting staff nominations. Four awards will be presented: One faculty or trainee and one staff award in two categories: Mentorship and Trailblazer. The Mentorship Awards honor those who have encouraged and supported women and gender minorities in their academic and professional endeavors. The Trailblazer Awards honors those who have blazed a trail for women and gender minorities, served as a catalyst for change that enhances the success of women and gender minorities, and/or who have made noteworthy contributions to the department, school or larger community. Please visit our website for more information. Education news Doug Paauw stepping down as Medicine Student Programs Director [cid:image008.jpg@01D85BE7.2A5EAB90]Dr. Douglas Paauw, professor (General Internal Medicine) is stepping down from his role as Director of Medicine Student Programs on June 30, 2022. Paauw is a graduate of our UW Internal Medicine Residency Program (1988) and was Chief Medical Resident at Harborview Medical Center. He was appointed to the faculty at UW as an assistant professor in 1990, and has been the director for student teaching for the Department of Medicine since 1992. Read more about Dr. Paauw on our news site. ________________________________ Senior Scholarship Day The IM Residency Program invites you to join in celebrating our graduating seniors' impressive scholarship. Senior Scholarship Day will be on June 9 from 9-11am via zoom. They are highlighting scholarship from 31 graduating seniors this year and the event will feature invited oral presentations followed by moderated virtual poster discussions. Audience members will vote on awards for presentation style, innovation, and impact. Faculty news [cid:image010.jpg@01D85BE7.2A5EAB90]As UW Medicine continues to grow its population health work, Dr. Jacob Berman, clinical assistant professor (General Internal Medicine) will be taking on the new role of Associate Medical Director for Population Health Integration for UW Medicine. In this role, Dr. Berman will help lead UW Medicine's work on expanding and strengthening population health efforts beyond the core UW Medicine primary care network, with initial focus on collaboration across specialty clinics, hospital services, and clinical departments. ________________________________ [cid:image012.jpg@01D85BE7.2A5EAB90]Dr. Barak Gaster, professor (General Internal Medicine) was appointed to the national Leadership Committee for the CDC's Healthy Brain Initiative, to develop the fourth edition of the Healthy Brain Initiative (HBI) Road Map series. Informed by experts and stakeholders, the HBI Road Map offers actions public health agencies and their partners can use to promote cognitive health, address cognitive impairment, and help meet the needs of caregivers. This effort has spurred considerable creative activity at the state and local level, resulting in unprecedented public health action. ________________________________ [cid:image014.jpg@01D85BE7.2A5EAB90]Faculty spotlight: Joshua Liao Our latest faculty spotlight is on Dr. Joshua Liao, professor (General Internal Medicine) and associate chair for health systems. Read more about him on our news site. ________________________________ [cid:image016.jpg@01D85BE7.2A5EAB90]In the latest Thrivecast, "How to give feedback," Dr. Addie McClintock, assistant professor (General Internal Medicine) provides guidance on how to ensure a safe space to provide feedback, emphasizing learning and teamwork as primary goals. Hosted by Dr. Trish Kritek, Thrivecast provides tips to help clinicians, educators, and researchers thrive professionally in their careers, covering topics from time management and organization to leadership and self-advocacy. ________________________________ [cid:image018.jpg@01D85BE7.2A5EAB90]Dr. Brenda Sandmaier, professor (Medical Oncology), is the new president of the American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy (ASTCT). ASTCT is an international professional membership association of more than 3,000 physicians, investigators and other health care professionals from more than 45 countries. Their mission is dedicated to improving the application and success of blood and marrow transplantation and related cellular therapies. Read more about her work from Hutch News. Research news Kidney Research Institute leadership changes Dr. Ian de Boer, professor (Nephrology) will be the new director of the Kidney Research Institute (KRI) effective May 2, 2022. [cid:image020.jpg@01D85BE7.2A5EAB90]The Kidney Research Institute was established in 2008 as a collaboration between UW Medicine and the Northwest Kidney Centers with the mission to conduct research that can improve the lives of people with kidney disease. Dr. de Boer is a highly acclaimed researcher recognized worldwide for his expertise in diabetic kidney disease and vitamin D metabolism. He has been the associate director of the KRI since 2016. He takes the helm from inaugural director Dr. Jonathan Himmelfarb, who led the KRI for 14 years, overseeing the efforts of the KRI investigators to build collaborations across the various schools within the University of Washington and nationwide, procure nearly $200 million in aggregate extra-mural funding, enroll over 8000 participants in registry and/or clinical studies of kidney diseases, and generate over 1500 research publications. Read more on our news site. ________________________________ [cid:image022.jpg@01D85BE7.2A5EAB90]Drs. Luke Wander, assistant professor (General Internal Medicine) and Sakeneh Zraika, research associate professor (Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition) have received an R01 for nearly 2 million for their project "Circulating miRNAs as predictive biomarkers of beta cell treatment response: The Restoring Insulin Secretion Study." The goal is to identify miRNAs that are related to preservation or improvement in beta-cell function in prediabetes or early type 2 diabetes in youth and adults. Recent publications Drs. Connie Celum, professor, and Jared Baeten, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) are co-authors of "Characterizing HIV-preventive, plasma tenofovir concentrations. A pooled participant-level data analysis from HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) clinical trials" in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dr. J. Randall Curtis, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is senior author of "Stress-Related Disorders of Family Members of Patients Admitted to the Intensive Care Unit With COVID-19" in JAMA Internal Medicine. DOM co-authors are Priscilla Armstrong, Ruth Engelberg, Joanna Heywood, Tijana Milinic, and James Wykowski. Dr. Jason Dominitz, professor (Gastroenterology) is co-author of "Diagnosis and Management of Cancer Risk in the Gastrointestinal Hamartomatous Polyposis Syndromes: Recommendations From the US Multi-Society Task Force on Colorectal Cancer" in the American Journal of Gastroenterology. Dr. Jason Goldman, clinical assistant professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is co-author of "Risk Factors for Severe COVID-19 Differ by Age for Hospitalized Adults" in Scientific Reports. Dr. Benjamin Lidgard, acting instructor, is lead author, and Dr. Bryan Kestenbaum, professor (Nephrology) is senior author of "Association of Proximal Tubular Secretory Clearance with Long-Term Decline in Cognitive Function" in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. DOM co-authors are Nisha Bansal, Leila Zelnick and Andrew Hoofnagle. Dr. Rayan Najjar, fellow, is lead author and Dr. Namrata Singh, assistant professor (Rheumatology) is senior author of "Predictors of Thirty-Day Hospital Readmissions in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus in the US: A Nationwide Study" in Arthritis Care and Research. DOM co-author is Grant Hughes. Dr. Ganesh Raghu, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is co-senior author of "Soluble ECM promotes organotypic formation in lung alveolar model" in Biomaterials, and co-author of "Phase 2B Study of Inhaled RVT-1601 for Chronic Cough in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis: A Multicenter, Randomized, Placebo-controlled Study (SCENIC Trial)" in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. Raghava Reddy, research scientist, is co-lead author, and Dr. Benjamin Freedman, associate professor (Nephrology) is senior author of "Modelling ciliopathy phenotypes in human tissues derived from pluripotent stem cells with genetically ablated cilia" in Nature Biomedical Engineering. DOM co-authors are Christine Tran and Hongxia Fu. Read more in "Cilia-free stem cells offer new path to study rare diseases" from UW Medicine Newsroom. Dr. Adrienne Shapiro, acting assistant professor, is lead author and Dr. Rachel Bender Ignacio, assistant professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is senior author of "Time to knock monoclonal antibodies off the platform for patients hospitalised with COVID-19" in Lancet Infectious Diseases. Dr. Lucas Zarling, R2, is lead author, and Roland Walter, professor (Hematology) is senior author of "Utility of the Treatment-Related Mortality (TRM) score to predict outcomes of adults with acute myeloid leukemia undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation" in Leukemia. DOM co-authors are Brenda Sandmaier, Filippo Milano, H. Joachim Deeg, Frederick Appelbaum, and Rainer Storb. In the news Dr. John Amory, professor and interim head (General Internal Medicine) is quoted in "Tucker Carlson Has a Cure for Declining Virility" in the New York Times. Dr. Bradley Anawalt, professor (General Internal Medicine) and vice chair, is quoted in "What You Need to Know Before You Take Testosterone" in Esquire. Dr. Christopher Damman, clinical associate professor (Gastroenterology) is quoted in "What to Feed Your Microbes" in Discover. Drs. Shireesha Dhanireddy, professor, is quoted in "'Sweetheart Deal:' Inside sex work and addiction on Seattle's Aurora Avenue" from KUOW. Dr. Matthew Golden, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "The CDC needs the public's help to reverse the upward trend in STIs" in Popular Science. Drs. Rupali Jain, clinical associate professor, and Shireesha Dhanireddy, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) talked to KIRO News in "Administration expands availability of COVID antiviral pill." Dr. Farah Khan, clinical assistant professor (Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition) is quoted in "The link between diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis" in Health Central. Dr. Eugene Yang, clinical professor (Cardiology) is quoted in "U.S. Task Force Rejects Daily Aspirin for Heart Health in People Over 60" in Health Day. Events of interest Medicine Grand Rounds Dr. Herman Alfred Taylor, Jr. (Morehouse School of Medicine) will present the Murray Lecture in Cardiology "How Race Frustrates Precision Medicine (and What to Do About it)" at Medicine Grand Rounds on Friday, May 6, 2022,12-1pm, via zoom. Public Health Policy for Pandemic Preparedness Dr. Helen Chu, associate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is giving the 2022 Wolfle Memorial Lecture in Science & Policy "Public Health Policy for Pandemic Preparedness: Lessons from the Seattle Flu Study" on May 3, 5-7pm, Parrington Hall and via zoom. Registration required. Weekly Calendar, May 2-6, 2022 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up Core Competency Series The next DOM Core Competency Series is "A Day in the Life: A Medical Student, Resident, and Fellow Perspective," presented by Katie Hawkins (4th-Year Medical Student), Dr. Linda Liu (Harborview Inpatient Chief Medical Resident) and Dr. Busola Oluwole (Hematology-Oncology Fellow). May 11, 12-1pm, via zoom (Meeting ID: 966 2035 0832, Passcode: 393414) Women Faculty Leadership Series Sponsored by the Dean's Standing Committee on Women in Medicine and Science, this four-part series is designed to empower UW School of Medicine women faculty with tools to thrive in their careers. * Negotiations: Advocating for Self and Others. May 11, 12-1pm * Not Imposter Syndrome. June 14, 9-10am * Difficult Conversations. September 20, 4-5pm * How to Build and Lead Diverse Teams - Strategy. January 12, 2023, 9-10am For more information and to register, please visit the SOM faculty website. Pacific NW Sepsis Conference Registration is now open for the 10th Annual Pacific Northwest Sepsis Conference on June 6-7, with both an in-person and virtual attendance option. Speakers include local, national, and international sepsis experts. They will explore sepsis in different populations and healthcare settings both adult & pediatric and examine the updated Surviving Sepsis International Guidelines of care and the science behind these evidence-based recommendations. Additional sessions include why equity matters in sepsis care, the global burden of sepsis, phenotypes in sepsis, post-sepsis syndrome, case studies in sepsis, and resiliency for healthcare providers. 2022 PNW Palliative Care Conference Cambia Palliative Care Center of Excellence is pleased to invite you to the 2022 PNW Palliative Care Conference: "Lifting Voices & Building Bridges: Working Towards an Inclusive Future for Palliative Care." June 13, 8am-4pm. More information and to register. Trauma Stewardship Institute Workshop UW Medicine and the School of Medicine are partnering with Laura van Dernoot Lipsky and the Trauma Stewardship Institute to address the accumulative toll of the pandemic on UW Medicine healthcare staff and providers through a 2-hour system-wide workshop. Recordings will be posted online for those unable to attend live. June 21, 4-6pm. Register here. ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor amyf@uw.edu [cid:image002.jpg@01CF4461.CA7ADDC0] [YouTube_Logo_svg.png] [cid:image027.jpg@01D85BE7.2A5EAB90] To subscribe/unsubscribe from this list, go to: https://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/domweek ________________________________ Privileged, confidential or patient identifiable information may be contained in this message. This information is meant only for the use of the intended recipients. 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