From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Jul 7 16:06:19 2023 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter) Date: Fri Mar 22 11:23:16 2024 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, July 10-14, 2023 Message-ID: [cid:image024.jpg@01D9B0EC.F565F310] DOM Week July 7, 2023 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (If you have items for DOM week, please email amyf@uw.edu) Awards Tina Juul-Dam Primary Care Award [cid:image025.jpg@01D9B0EC.F565F310]Congratulations to Drs. Roxanne Hicks, R3, and Rebecca Stephens, acting instructor (General Internal Medicine), this year?s recipients of the Tina Juul-Dam Primary Care Award, voted on by the medicine residents. The award memorializes Dr. Juul-Dam, a third-year resident who died in 2004 while on rotation in Alaska, and celebrates her spirit, dedication to patients, passion for primary care, and motivation of others. ________________________________ Top Doctors 2023 [cid:image027.jpg@01D9B0EC.F565F310]Over 100 Department of Medicine faculty are recognized in the July/August 2023 issue of Seattle Magazine's Top Doctors. Several volunteer clinical faculty also made the list. Top doctors are nominated by their colleagues for providing exceptional patient care. View the list on our news site. EDI news Equity Impact Review Tool The UW Medicine Office of Healthcare Equity (OHCE) has developed an Equity Impact Review Tool (EIRT) to help with decisions about hiring, budgets, policies, procedures, and everyday issues. The tool leads decision-makers through a series of six steps that explicitly identify potential equity issues and initiates a process to produce more equitable outcomes. For more information, please visit the OHCE website. Faculty news Vice Chair for Education [cid:image028.jpg@01D9B0EC.F565F310]Dr. Ken Steinberg has accepted the newly created position of Department of Medicine Vice Chair for Education, effective Aug. 1. He has been program director for our IM residency program since 2007. The Vice Chair for Education position was developed as part of our strategic plan (education workgroup year one deliverable) and in response to feedback from department stakeholders. In this new role, Steinberg will oversee our existing education programs, and lead efforts to develop education programs and systems in collaboration with the department and partners within the School of Medicine, UW Medicine, GME, the Graduate School, WWAMI and other units across the University. He will also lead the development of more robust and visible department resources around education, in support of a more equitable and inclusive learning environment for students, trainees, and for the faculty and staff who support them. He has graciously agreed to stay on as program director while we launch and conduct a national search. ?Ken has been an outstanding leader and advocate for our residents and I am thrilled to continue to partner with him in this new leadership role,? said Department Chair Dr. Barbara Jung. ________________________________ [cid:image029.jpg@01D9B0EC.F565F310]Dr. Karen Stout, professor (Cardiology) has been elected to the School of Medicine Appointments and Promotions Council. This council reviews around 120-150 promotions per year across the 31 departments in the School of Medicine. Research news Spotlight on resident research: Using Viruses to Inhibit DNA Damage in Cancer [cid:image030.jpg@01D9B0EC.F565F310]Dr. Adam Cheng, R2, and colleagues are interested in understanding how different types of DNA damage lead to oncogenesis. Their lab discovered that many of the mutations that lead to cancerous cell behavior result from cellular misregulation of mutagenic enzymes, specifically a 7-member family of APOBEC enzymes. Learn more on the residency website. ________________________________ U.S. maternal mortality by race and ethnicity [cid:image031.jpg@01D9B0EC.F565F310]A new study by investigators from the UW Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) and Mass General Brigham found that maternal mortality rates have worsened from 1999 to 2019, hitting some racial and ethnic groups and states harder than others. The results were published this week in JAMA. ?These disparities in maternal mortality are just the tip of the iceberg and tell us a lot about the health risks facing people in the states where these deaths are most likely to occur, " said senior author Dr. Gregory Roth, associate professor (Cardiology) and Director of the Program in Cardiovascular Health Metrics at IHME. ?In the U.S., maternal deaths are often caused by vascular diseases like severe high blood pressure or blood clots. So maternal deaths share many of the same drivers as heart attacks, strokes, and heart failure. Our state-by-state research emphasizes where we need to focus our prevention efforts and which groups are suffering the most.? Read the IHME news release. ________________________________ [cid:image032.jpg@01D9B0EC.F565F310]Dr. Pavan Bhatraju, associate professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) was awarded a Clinical Research Award from the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation for $450,000 over 3 years entitled, ?Evaluation of Antibiotic Associated Nephrotoxicity in Cystic Fibrosis?. Investigators in the DOM include Chris Goss, Kathy Ramos, and Leila Zelnick. Education news [cid:image034.jpg@01D9B0EC.F565F310]Congratulations to Dr. Maria Cassera, VA Chief Medical Resident, who has been accepted into the 2023 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) Foundation Emerging Liver Scholars Program. This program provides medical residents the opportunity to explore hepatology as a career through educational and professional development programming, learning directly from leaders in the field, and networking with hepatology key opinion leaders and peers from around the globe. Recent publications Dr. Jonathan Avery, R3, is lead author of ?Risks factor and outcomes for isolated catheter-related deep venous thrombosis in patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation? in Thrombosis Research. DOM co-authors are Stephanie Lee and David Garcia. Dr. Crystal Brown, assistant professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is lead author and Dr. Bessie Young, professor (Nephrology) is senior author of ?Perspectives About Racism and Patient-Clinician Communication Among Black Adults With Serious Illness? in JAMA Network Open. DOM co-authors are Arisa Marshall, Kristine Cueva, David Horne, and J. Randall Curtis. Dr. Andrew Cowan, associate professor, is lead author, and Dr. Damian Green, associate professor (Medical Oncology) is senior author of ??-Secretase inhibitor in combination with BCMA chimeric antigen receptor T-cell immunotherapy for individuals with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma: a phase 1, first-in-human trial? in The Lancet Oncology. DOM co-authors are Brian Till, Edward Libby, Mazyar Shadman, Jordan Gauthier, Aude Chapuis, Filippo Milano, David Maloney and Stanley Riddell. Dr. Green is also interviewed about the findings for the Lancet Oncology?s podcast ?In conversation with?? Dr. Petros Grivas, professor (Medical Oncology) is senior author of ?Avelumab First-Line Maintenance for Advanced Urothelial Carcinoma: Results From the JAVELIN Bladder 100 Trial After ?2 Years of Follow-Up? in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. Dr. Joshua Hill, associate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is senior author of ?Serial quantitation of plasma microbial cell-free DNA before and after diagnosis of pulmonary invasive mold infections in hematopoietic cell transplant recipients? in the Journal of Infectious Diseases. DOM co-authors are Michael Boeckh and Cynthia Fisher. Dr. Anne Larson, clinical professor (Gastroenterology) is co-author of ?Acute Liver Failure Guideline? in the American Journal of Gastroenterology. Dr. Stanley Riddell, professor (Medical Oncology) is senior author of ?Compromised antigen binding and signaling interfere with bispecific CD19 and CD79a chimeric antigen receptor function? in Blood Advances. Drs. Olusegun Soge, associate professor, and Matthew Golden, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) are co-authors of ?Mycoplasma genitalium in the US (MyGeniUS): Surveillance Data from Sexual Health Clinics in Four US Regions? in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dr. Chaitra Ujjani, clinical professor (Medical Oncology) is co-author of ?Pirtobrutinib after a Covalent BTK Inhibitor in Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia? in the New England Journal of Medicine. In the news Dr. Rotonya Carr, professor and head (Gastroenterology) talked to KING 5 News in ?UW launches new center to explore the microbiome.? Dr. Eric Chow, clinical assistant professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in ?What does Covid-19 look like this summer?? from KUOW. Dr. Helen Chu, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in ?Federal Officials Hatch a Three-Pronged Defense Against Another ?Tripledemic?? and ?Three Vaccines for Fall: What You Need to Know? in the New York Times. Dr. Christopher Damman, clinical associate professor (Gastroenterology) wrote ?Fiber is your body?s natural guide to weight management - rather than cutting carbs out of your diet, eat them in their original fiber packaging instead? in The Conversation and is quoted in ?Probiotics, prebiotics and postbiotics: The microbe garden in your gut? in the Washington Post. Dr. Irl Hirsch, professor (Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition) is quoted in ?Noninvasive blood glucose monitor compares favorably to fingersticks in diabetes? in Healio. Weekly Calendar, July 10-14, 2023 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up Wellness Retreat The SKY Wellness Retreat is a dynamic, experiential and immersive self-development retreat for students, staff and faculty. Participants develop a daily evidence-based breath-work and meditation practice, gain stress-management and leadership skills, develop strategies for social connection, and engage in peer-driven service initiatives. Space is limited and on a first come, first serve basis. July 14-16. Sign up here. Research Fellows Orientation Course Everything you need to know to survive & thrive in academics! Please join us for the annual Department of Medicine Workshop: ?Surviving and Thriving During the Research Years?, a course covering skills necessary for academic success, such as grant writing, teaching & oral presentations, job negotiations, appointments & promotions, and breakout sessions on opportunities in industry or the public health & policy sector. The course is designed for fellows navigating their research path and is open to fellows and early-stage faculty from all departments. There is no charge to attend this course. Aug. 23, 8:30am-3pm, Brotman Auditorium, South Lake Union. For more details and to register, please visit our website. ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor (206) 685-3685 amyf@uw.edu [cid:image002.jpg@01CF4461.CA7ADDC0] [YouTube_Logo_svg.png] [cid:image037.jpg@01D9B0EC.F565F310] 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... 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Name: image037.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 913 bytes Desc: image037.jpg URL: From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Jul 14 15:55:21 2023 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter) Date: Fri Mar 22 11:23:16 2024 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, July 17-21, 2023 Message-ID: [cid:image001.jpg@01D9B66B.95F5F360] DOM Week July 14, 2023 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (If you have items for DOM week, please email amyf@uw.edu) Awards Call for nominations: 2024 Distinguished Alumni Awards Nominations for the 2024 UW School of Medicine Distinguished Alumni Awards are now open. Honor the colleagues and classmates who inspire you by nominating them for one of four awards: the Distinguished Alumnus/Alumna Award, the Alumni Humanitarian Award, the Alumni Service Award and the Alumni Early Achievement Award. EDI news Gender Equity Lunch Series: Clinical Faculty Promotions [cid:image003.png@01D9B66B.95F5F360]Please save the date for our next Gender Equity Lunch Series on Friday, Sept. 22, 12-1pm, via zoom. Our panel of moderators will provide mentorship and guidance on the promotion process for clinical faculty in the Department of Medicine, and talk about the new promotion criteria for full-time clinical faculty. Please RSVP. Faculty news [cid:image005.jpg@01D9B66B.95F5F360]Faculty spotlight: Matthew Smith Our latest faculty spotlight is on Matthew Smith, a teaching associate in the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine who started and leads the 3 Wishes Project at UWMC-Montlake. Learn more about him on our news site. ________________________________ [cid:image007.jpg@01D9B66B.95F5F360]Dr. Joshua Liao, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) has accepted a position as the next Division Chief of General Internal Medicine at UT Southwestern. Dr. Liao has served in a number of roles at UW, including as the Associate Chair for Health Systems in the department. In that capacity, he has led efforts to foster connection among individuals and groups interested in health systems and innovation while building a nationally recognized policy unit that has become the formal evaluation partner of the Washington Health Care Authority, the largest purchaser of health care services in the state. These efforts, and the department's national reputation in health systems work, will continue to expand through collaborations between faculty assuming the helm at UW and Dr. Liao after he transitions into his new role this winter. ________________________________ Blood cancer experts receive endowed chairs [cid:image009.jpg@01D9B66B.95F5F360]Dr. Roland Walter, associate professor (Medical Oncology) was named the fourth recipient of the distinguished Jos? Carreras/E. Donnall Thomas Endowed Chair for Cancer Research. The chair was established in 2007 by the Seattle-based Friends of Jos? Carreras International Leukemia Foundation. [cid:image011.jpg@01D9B66B.95F5F360]Dr. Mazyar Shadman, associate professor (Medical Oncology) is the recipient of the Innovators Network Endowed Chair. Established in 2019, this chair was created as a catalyst for leading-edge cancer research and supports an early-career scientist whose work includes evidence of patient benefit, creativity and novel approach to research, and collaborative use of data science and/or emerging technology. Learn more from Hutch News. Research news In historic procedure, donor liver protects heart transplant [picture of Dr. Shin Lin listening to Adriana Rodriguez's transplanted heart]Doctors in Seattle are reporting a history-making case in which a patient received two donor organs, a liver and a heart, to prevent the extremely high likelihood that her body would reject a donor heart transplanted alone. In doing so, they successfully tested the concept that a donor liver can confer robust immunoprotection on a subsequent heart transplant. The dual-organ recipient, Adriana Rodriguez, 31, of Bellingham, Washington, has recovered well since the Jan. 14, 2023, procedures, said Dr. Shin Lin, associate professor (Cardiology). He is the lead author of the paper describing the novel approach, newly published in the Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation. Read the full story from UW Medicine Newsroom. ________________________________ Neurons that track, regulate blood-sugar levels are found [cid:image015.jpg@01D9B66B.95F5F360]New research has discovered neurons within the brain which detect and respond to changes in the level of sugar within the bloodstream. Understanding how this blood-sugar detection system works and how these neurocircuits operate would give researchers and doctors greater insights into how our brains regulate our blood sugar and, perhaps, how to target them therapeutically to treat metabolic diseases like diabetes and obesity, according to the study authors. "We've known for a long time that many neurons can detect sugar locally within the brain," said Dr. Michael Schwartz, professor (Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition) and co-director of the UW Medicine Diabetes Institute. "What is new, however, is the evidence that a subset of neurons located in the hypothalamus can sense and respond to sugar in the bloodstream itself, analogous to the cells in the pancreas that secrete insulin." Read the full story from UW Medicine Newsroom. ________________________________ Research spotlight: Rozenn Lemaitre [cid:image017.jpg@01D9B66B.95F5F360]The Nutrition Obesity Research Center (NORC) has spotlighted affiliate investigator Dr. Rozenn Lemaitre, research professor (General Internal Medicine). Learn more about Dr. Lemaitre and her research on the NORC website. Recent publications Dr. Joshua Bloomstein, R1, is co-author of "Impact of Gut Bacterial Metabolites on Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis: Current Status and Future Perspectives" in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology. Dr. Stacey Cohen, associate professor (Medical Oncology) is lead author of "Practical recommendations for using ctDNA in clinical decision making" in Nature. Dr. Heidi Crane, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is co-author of "Early Antiretroviral Therapy Not Associated With Higher Cryptococcal Meningitis Mortality in People With Human Immunodeficiency Virus in High-Income Countries: An International Collaborative Cohort Study" in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dr. Lucas Donovan, associate professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is lead author of "Strategies to Assess the Effect of Continuous Positive Airway Pressure on Long-Term Clinically Important Outcomes among Patients with Symptomatic Obstructive Sleep Apnea: An Official American Thoracic Society Workshop Report" in the Annals of the American Thoracic Society. Dr. Andrea Kalus, associate professor (Dermatology) is lead author and Dr. Irl Hirsch, professor (Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition) is senior author of "Evaluation of Insulin Pump Infusion Sites in Type 1 Diabetes: The DERMIS Study" in Diabetes Care. DOM co-authors are Michi Shinohara, Jesica Baran, Xiaofu Dong, and Dori Khakpour. Dr. Neha Sathe, acting instructor, is lead author and Drs. W. Conrad Liles, professor and associate chair, and Pavan Bhatraju, associate professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) are senior authors of "Biomarker Signatures of Severe Acute Kidney Injury in a Critically Ill Cohort of COVID-19 and Non-COVID-19 Acute Respiratory Illness" in Critical Care Explorations. DOM Co-authors Ana Mostaghim, Elizabeth Barnes, Sharon Sahi, Sana Sakr, and Eric Morrell. Dr. Anna Wald, professor and head (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is senior author of "Prior Herpes Simplex Virus Infection and the Risk of Herpes Zoster" in the Journal of Infectious Diseases. DOM co-author is David Koelle. Dr. David Watkins, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) is lead author of "Best Investments in Chronic, Noncommunicable Disease Prevention and Control in Low- and Lower-Middle-Income Countries" in the Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis. In the news Drs. Erin Kross, associate professor, Robert Lee, assistant professor, and Ruth Engelberg, research professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) joined GeriPal, a geriatrics and palliative care podcast, to discuss "Jumpstarting Goals of Care." Weekly Calendar, July 17-21, 2023 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up Research Fellows Orientation Course Everything you need to know to survive & thrive in academics! Please join us for the annual Department of Medicine Workshop: "Surviving and Thriving During the Research Years", a course covering skills necessary for academic success, such as grant writing, teaching & oral presentations, job negotiations, appointments & promotions, and breakout sessions on opportunities in industry or the public health & policy sector. The course is designed for fellows navigating their research path and is open to fellows and early-stage faculty from all departments. There is no charge to attend this course. Aug. 23, 8:30am-3pm, Brotman Auditorium, South Lake Union. For more details and to register, please visit our website. ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor (206) 685-3685 amyf@uw.edu [cid:image002.jpg@01CF4461.CA7ADDC0] [YouTube_Logo_svg.png] [cid:image021.jpg@01D9B66B.95F5F360] 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... 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Name: image021.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 913 bytes Desc: image021.jpg URL: From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Jul 21 16:28:00 2023 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter) Date: Fri Mar 22 11:23:16 2024 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, July 24-28, 2023 Message-ID: [cid:image001.jpg@01D9BBF0.4EDF4320] DOM Week July 21, 2023 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (If you have items for DOM week, please email amyf@uw.edu) Division Spotlight: Dermatology [cid:image003.png@01D9BBF0.4EDF4320]As part of our 75th Anniversary, we are spotlighting each of our divisions over the course of the year, in the order they were established. The Division of Dermatology was established in 1961 by Dr. James Case. After Dr. Case's untimely death, Dr. George Odland led the division for 26 years. Odland's passion for innovation and research helped the division become a nationally recognized leader for its contributions to skin biology research. Learn more on our news site. Faculty news Faculty spotlight: Jan Abkowitz [cid:image005.jpg@01D9BBF0.4EDF4320]Our latest faculty spotlight is on Dr. Jan Abkowitz, professor and head of the Division of Hematology. Learn more about her on our news site. ________________________________ Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health Policy Fellows Program [cid:image007.jpg@01D9BBF0.4EDF4320]Dr. Nancy Connolly, clinical assistant professor (General Internal Medicine) is one of six named by the National Academy of Medicine (NAM) and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) to the 2023-2024 class of RWJF Health Policy Fellows. The fellows were chosen in a national competition for highly accomplished health and behavioral/social science professionals who have an interest in health policy. Their experiences in Washington, D.C., will enrich their understanding of federal policy formation and how federal and state governments relate to the mission of their home institutions and local communities. Dr. Connolly works with the homeless and those suffering from mental health and addiction challenges. In 2022, she ran for Washington State Representative in the 46th legislative district. "I am absolutely thrilled to have this opportunity to learn policy from world class experts," she said. "I feel so honored and grateful to have the support and confidence of the RWJF and National Academies of Medicine. I am looking forward to using my past experience and continual learning to help us all move toward a more equitable and healthier state and country." Staff news Staff spotlight: Peg Cheng [Peg Cheng]Our latest staff spotlight is on Peg Cheng, administrator of program operations for the Genetic Counseling Graduate Program and the Medical Genetics DEI Champion for the Department of Medicine. Learn more about her on our news site. Research news Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute Awards The Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) announced funding awards totaling $208 million to support 17 new comparative clinical effectiveness research studies. Congratulations to the following from the department who received awards: * Drs. Laura Feemster and Lucas Donovan (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine): "Functional improvement in Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease with a Telehealth LifeStyle and Exercise Intervention (FOCuSEd)." * Dr. Julie Gralow (Medical Oncology): "Comparing Oral Drug Dosing Strategies in Older Patients with Metastatic Breast Cancer to Maximize Tolerance and Reduce Discontinuation: The CDK4/6 Inhibitor Dosing Knowledge (CDK) Study." * Dr. Rajnish Mehrotra (Nephrology): "Implementing Treatments for Depression for Patients Undergoing Long-Term Dialysis." Learn more on our news site. ________________________________ [cid:image011.jpg@01D9BBF0.4EDF4320]Dr. Tyler Albert, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) is a co-investigator on a project titled "Evaluating Harassment of Learners: Assessing Differences Across Clinical Learning Environments" that received a $10,000 award as a Building Trust through Diversity 2023 Grant from the ABIM, ACP, AAIM, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, and the Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation. ________________________________ [cid:image013.jpg@01D9BBF0.4EDF4320]Dr. Cory Simpson, assistant professor (Dermatology) received a two-year grant from National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases for $100,000 for his project "Mechanisms of reticulophagy and ER stress mitigation in epidermis." He and his lab will apply CRISPR gene editing and live confocal microscopy to an organoid model of human skin to understand how the epidermis matures to form an effective barrier tissue. More specifically, they will determine the mechanism that epidermal cells called keratinocytes use to break down their organelles during cornification by examining a degradative process known as autophagy. Recent publications Dr. Andrew Coveler, associate professor (Medical Oncology) is lead author of "Phase 1 dose-escalation study of SEA-CD40: a non-fucosylated CD40 agonist, in advanced solid tumors and lymphomas" in the Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer. Dr. Susan Graham, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is lead author of "U.S. patient preferences for long-acting HIV treatment: a discrete choice experiment" in the Journal of the International AIDS Society. DOM co-author is Ann Collier. Dr. Scott Hagan, assistant professor (General Internal Medicine) is quoted in "The Risks of Taking Drugs Like Ozempic When You're Over 65" in the New York Times. Dr. Evan Hall, assistant professor (Medical Oncology) is co-author of "Safety and Activity of Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors in People Living With HIV and Cancer: A Real-World Report From the Cancer Therapy Using Checkpoint Inhibitors in People Living With HIV-International (CATCH-IT) Consortium" in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. Dr. Shin Lin, associate professor (Cardiology) is co-author of "Organization of the human intestine at single-cell resolution" in Nature. Dr. Anna Morenz, clinician researcher, is lead author and Dr. Joshua Liao, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) is senior author of "Association Between Capitated Payments and Preventive Care Among U.S. Adults" in AJPM Focus. DOM co-author is Lingmei Zhou. Glenda Roberts, director of external relations and patient engagement, and Nicolae Leca, professor (Nephrology) are co-authors of "Kidney Transplant Practice in Pandemic Times: Lessons Learned for the Future" in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. Dr. Adrienne Shapiro, assistant professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is lead author of "Intramuscular Versus Intravenous SARS-CoV-2 Neutralizing Antibody Sotrovimab for Treatment of COVID-19 (COMET-TAIL): A Randomized Non-inferiority Clinical Trial" in Open Forum Infectious Diseases. Dr. David Watkins, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) is lead author of "Measuring the global burden of diabetes: implications for health policy, practice, and research" in The Lancet. In the news Dr. Helen Chu, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "The FDA approved a new preventative shot for RSV, the leading cause of infant hospitalization in the US" in Vox. Dr. Lee Cranmer, professor (Medical Oncology) is spotlighted in The Huddle about his work as a sarcoma specialist. Dr. Irl Hirsch, professor (Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition) is quoted in "US Senate committee calls for transparency on insulin affordability, pushes for reform" in Healio Endocrinology. Dr. Barbara Jung, professor and chair, wrote "Prior authorization, by any other name, threatens Washingtonians' health" in The Olympian. Dr. Hannah Linden, professor (Medical Oncology) discusses "FES PET for ER-Positive Breast Cancer: How Can It Help?" in Medscape. Dr. Leo Morales, professor (General Internal Medicine) is quoted in "Long COVID a Growing Threat to Latino Communities" in Latino Rebels. Dr. Anna Morenz, clinician researcher (General Internal Medicine) co-wrote the op-ed "Unmet Promises From the State Legislature: The Urgent Need for Primary Care Investment in Washington State" in the South Seattle Emerald. Weekly Calendar, July 24-28, 2023 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up Research Fellows Orientation Course Everything you need to know to survive & thrive in academics! Please join us for the annual Department of Medicine Workshop: "Surviving and Thriving During the Research Years", a course covering skills necessary for academic success, such as grant writing, teaching & oral presentations, job negotiations, appointments & promotions, and breakout sessions on opportunities in industry or the public health & policy sector. The course is designed for fellows navigating their research path and is open to fellows and early-stage faculty from all departments. There is no charge to attend this course. Aug. 23, 8:30am-3pm, Brotman Auditorium, South Lake Union. For more details and to register, please visit our website. ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor (206) 685-3685 amyf@uw.edu [cid:image002.jpg@01CF4461.CA7ADDC0] [YouTube_Logo_svg.png] [cid:image017.jpg@01D9BBF0.4EDF4320] 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... 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Name: image017.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 913 bytes Desc: image017.jpg URL: From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Jul 28 15:56:36 2023 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter) Date: Fri Mar 22 11:23:16 2024 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, July 31-August 4, 2023 Message-ID: [cid:image001.jpg@01D9C16C.14091AB0] DOM Week July 28, 2023 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (If you have items for DOM week, please email amyf@uw.edu) Staff news Staff spotlight award nominees [cid:image003.png@01D9C16C.14091AB0]The Staff Spotlight Award aims to recognize and celebrate exceptional staff members who are dedicated to supporting our organization's mission of teaching, healing, discovery and diversity, and upholding core values. We had 15 outstanding nominees for our first round of awards and we will announce the inaugural recipients next week. Learn about the nominees on our website. Faculty news [cid:image005.png@01D9C16C.14091AB0]In the latest Thrivecast, "Transitioning from Trainee to Faculty," Dr. Hugo Carmona, assistant professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) shares learnings and strategies in his own transition from fellow to faculty at UW. 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. DEI news EDItorial special EDItion: Seattle Summer Food Guide [Sweet Alchemy Ice Creamery Delivery & Takeout | Menu & Review | Seattle WA | Fantuan Delivery]The EDItorial is a monthly Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Awareness Newsletter created by our IM residency program staff. Each month they highlight different marginalized groups with opportunities to engage, support, and participate on international, national, and local levels. The July newsletter highlights local eateries and bars in the greater Seattle area. The establishments featured are BIPOC, LGBQTIA and/or women owned. Read the EDItorial on the IM residency website. ________________________________ UW Medicine ranked one of the best employers for women Forbes ranked UW Medicine No. 14 in the nation in its annual ranking of America's Best Employers for Women. They highlighted success in promoting women to top leadership positions across the organization and in providing other benefits such as childcare and eldercare services at a reduced cost. Research news Pre-transplant microbiome sets the stage for GVHD [cid:image009.jpg@01D9C16C.14091AB0]Bone marrow transplants have saved the lives of thousands of blood cancer patients, but graft-vs.-host disease, or GVHD, remains a debilitating and even life-threatening complication. A new study from Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center points to patients' pre-transplant gut microbiome as a major player in the development and severity of GVHD. In particular the findings point toward approaches to modulate this pathway that can be tested clinically, said Dr. Geoffrey Hill, professor (Medical Oncology), and senior author of the study, published last week in Immunity. Hill directs Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation at Fred Hutch. Read the full story from Hutch News. ________________________________ [cid:image011.jpg@01D9C16C.14091AB0]Psilocybin study focuses on patients with metastatic cancer Recruitment has begun for a small study of whether psilocybin, in the setting of group psychotherapy, can reduce anxiety related to a diagnosis of metastatic cancer. "Studies have explored psilocybin's value among people with cancer, but in a format of two therapists to one patient. Other researchers have seen impressive benefits of psilocybin in reducing anxiety and depression in a group setting. I am asking the question of whether we could have a similar benefit for people with cancer in a group," said Dr. Anthony Back, professor (Medical Oncology), who will lead the study at UW. Read the full story from UW Medicine Newsroom. ________________________________ RNA stability may play a role in prostate cancer [cid:image013.jpg@01D9C16C.14091AB0]Mutations in a genetic region that regulates RNA stability could influence prostate cancer outcomes and drug resistance, according to new work from scientists at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center published today in Cell Reports. "The basic takeaway is that the lifecycle of an RNA [molecule] is really important for prostate cancer - and it's functionally associated with patient outcomes," said Fred Hutch prostate cancer expert Dr. Andrew Hsieh, associate professor (Medical Oncology), the study's senior author. Read the full story from Hutch News. ________________________________ Study looks at Achilles' heel of insulin pump technology [cid:image015.jpg@01D9C16C.14091AB0]Since the insulin pump started widespread use in the early 1980s, it's become the option of choice for type 1 diabetes patients to manage their glucose levels in a way that doesn't require testing their blood sugar and injecting insulin multiple times daily. But now, a first-of-its kind study is looking at the issue of patients "running out of real estate" due to pump sites becoming fibrotic, irritated and less effective at delivering insulin. The UW Medicine-led study was published July 14 in the journal Diabetes Care, a publication of the American Diabetes Association. "No one had done a human study on what happened to the skin under these sites until now," said senior author Dr. Irl Hirsch, professor (Metabolism, Endocrinology, and Nutrition). Read the full story from UW Medicine Newsroom. Recent publications Dr. Michael Boeckh, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is co-author of "Within-host rhinovirus evolution in upper and lower respiratory tract highlights capsid variability and mutation-independent compartmentalization" in the Journal of Infectious Diseases. Drs. H. Nina Kim, professor, and Mari Kitahata, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) are co-authors of "Prevalence and determinants of hepatitis delta infection in HIV/hepatitis-B coinfected adults in care in the United States" in the Journal of Viral Hepatitis. Kristi Kooiker, research scientist, is lead author and Dr. Farid Moussavi-Harami, assistant professor (Cardiology) is senior author of "Danicamtiv Increases Myosin Recruitment and Alters Cross-Bridge Cycling in Cardiac Muscle" in Circulation Research. Dr. Ajit Limaye, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is senior author of "A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Optimized CMV Preemptive Therapy and Antiviral Prophylaxis for CMV Disease Prevention in CMV High-Risk (D+R-) Kidney Transplant Recipients" in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. DOM co-authors are Robert Rakita and Cynthia Fisher. Dr. Kate Markey, assistant professor (Medical Oncology) is co-author of "Tissue-specific features of the T cell repertoire after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation in human and mouse" in Science Translational Medicine. Drs. Bruce Montgomery, professor, and Petros Grivas, professor (Medical Oncology) are co-authors of "Racial and sex differences in tumor genomics in urothelial carcinoma" in Urologic Oncology. Dr. June Spector, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) is lead author of "Occupational heat-related illness in Washington State: A descriptive study of day of illness and prior day ambient temperatures among cases and clusters, 2006-2021" in the American Journal of Industrial Medicine. In the news Dr. Tia Babu, assistant professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "Studies seek to define-and treat-long COVID" in NW Asian Weekly. Dr. Irl Hirsch, professor (Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition) is quoted in "Affording the Cost of New Obesity Drugs? We Can't Afford Not to" in Medscape. Dr. Joel Kaufman, professor (General Internal Medicine) is quoted in "Heart Attack Risk Rises Significantly on Extremely Hot, Polluted Days" in the Wall Street Journal. Dr. Masaoki Kawasumi, assistant professor (Dermatology) is quoted in "Discover how caffeine affects our skin cancer risk" from the Whole U. Dr. John Lynch, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) spoke and provided a document on COVID vaccine mandates at the U.S. House Oversight and Accountability Committee: "Because I Said So: Examining the Science and Impact of COVID-19 Vaccine Mandates - United States House Committee on Oversight and Accountability." Dr. Bonnie Ronish, clinical assistant professor (General Internal Medicine) is quoted in "How PFAS impact your health" in US Times Post. Events of interest Quiet week: July 31-August 4 As we continue to rebuild resilience and focus on mental health, we would like to preserve department-wide quiet weeks throughout the year. During these weeks, we hope that individuals can limit non-essential meetings to recharge and reflect, as well as thoughtfully minimize emails. We realize that this will not be possible for everyone, but encourage all to take breaks when they are able. Upcoming quiet weeks: November 20-24, 2023 December 25-29, 2023 Weekly Calendar, July 31 - August 4, 2023 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up Research Fellows Orientation Course Everything you need to know to survive & thrive in academics! Please join us for the annual Department of Medicine Workshop: "Surviving and Thriving During the Research Years", a course covering skills necessary for academic success, such as grant writing, teaching & oral presentations, job negotiations, appointments & promotions, and breakout sessions on opportunities in industry or the public health & policy sector. The course is designed for fellows navigating their research path and is open to fellows and early-stage faculty from all departments. There is no charge to attend this course. Aug. 23, 8:30am-3pm, Brotman Auditorium, South Lake Union. For more details and to register, please visit our website. ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor (206) 685-3685 amyf@uw.edu [cid:image002.jpg@01CF4461.CA7ADDC0] [YouTube_Logo_svg.png] [cid:image019.jpg@01D9C16C.14091AB0] 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... 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