From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Oct 4 15:55:30 2024 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter via domweek) Date: Fri Oct 4 15:55:37 2024 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, October 7-11, 2024 Message-ID: [cid:image001.jpg@01DB1675.D1A1ACE0] DOM Week October 4, 2024 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (If you have items for DOM week, please email amyf@uw.edu) [Barbara Jung]Barbara Jung joining UC San Diego as Associate Vice Chancellor and Dean Congratulations to Department Chair Dr. Barbara Jung, who has accepted the position of Associate Vice Chancellor and Dean of the School of Medicine at the University of California San Diego, effective Jan. 1, 2025. She has been a transformative leader in her six years as chair, navigating us through the pandemic and launching our strategic plan, among countless other achievements. The dean is working on interim transition leadership plans, and will be launching a national search to identify the next Chair of the Department of Medicine. Awards Best doctor award [Karina Mendoza]Dr. Karina Mendoza, clinical instructor (General Internal Medicine) won the 2024 bronze best doctor award in the second annual Seattle Times Best of the PNW contest. This program highlights the businesses, people, and places that make the Pacific Northwest unique, as chosen by the local community. This year?s contest saw more than 10,000 businesses, organizations, and individuals compete in 290 categories, with over 500,000 votes cast by the community. The University of Washington (Education), UW Medicine (Urgent Care) and Fred Hutch (Cancer Care) also received awards. ________________________________ Patient care award [Yong Ki Shin]Dr. Yong Ki Shin, clinical professor (WWAMI ? Western Washington) has received the 2024 Ralph O. Claypoole Sr. Memorial Award for Devotion of a Career in Internal Medicine to the Care of Patients, awarded by the American College of Physicians (ACP). The award is bestowed upon an outstanding practitioner of internal medicine whose career has been devoted to the care of patients. He also received mastership in the American College of Physicians (MACP). ________________________________ Call for nominations: Awards of Excellence [cid:image008.jpg@01DB1675.D1A1ACE0]For more than five decades, the UW Awards of Excellence have honored faculty, staff, students and alumni whose accomplishments are an outstanding reflection of our University?s core values and mission of public service. These exceptional individuals enrich and diversify our community through their innovation, collaboration, dedication and passion for creating positive impact. Please consider nominating a colleague for one of these awards. Nominations are currently open for all Awards of Excellence. Education news Perspective of a bipolar physician and his program director [Justin Bullock and Cary Paine]Dr. Justin Bullock, clinician researcher (Nephrology) and his fellowship director Dr. Cary Paine wrote ?This Armor of Mine: Perspective of a bipolar physician and his program director,? published in CHEST Advocates. ?Now at the end of my medical training, I look back and see that surviving medical training as a bipolar doctor is much like navigating a battlefield,? Bullock wrote. He shared the armor he suits up with to help him be successful, which includes a helmet of clarity, breastplate of introspection, belt of accommodation, shoes of peace, and shield of proactive defense. ?With respect to accommodations, creativity, flexibility, and a strong aversion to the phrase ?that?s the way we?ve always done it? are indispensable,? wrote Paine. ?Ultimately, it is essential to remember that a program director?s primary responsibility is the safety and well-being of our trainees and the patients who we serve, not the upholding of tradition or dogma.? Staff news Careers in DOM [cid:image012.jpg@01DB1675.D1A1ACE0]Our team of central and division staff is always growing and evolving. Help us expand our community and broaden our outreach to potential applicants. Follow us on LinkedIn where we share employee highlights and featured positions and please refer candidates considering a career in the department to our new Careers page. Faculty news [Moe Hagman]Dr. Melissa (Moe) Hagman, clinical professor (General Internal Medicine) and program director, Boise Internal Medicine Residency, has received mastership in the American College of Physicians (MACP). MACP is one of the most prestigious awards in the college, honoring fellows who demonstrate integrity, the utmost professional behaviors, excellence in the practice of medicine, and significant impact on the profession. MACPs represent a very small percentage of college membership. ________________________________ [Rajnish Mehrotra]Dr. Rajnish Mehrotra, professor and head (Nephrology) started his two-year term as President of the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis (ISPD) this month. The goal of the ISPD is to advance knowledge of peritoneal dialysis and to promote advancement of such knowledge through international scientific meetings and scientific publications. Clinical news Advancing Equity in Diagnostic Excellence to Reduce Health Disparities [Anita Chopra and Jason Deen]Two DOM faculty members were invited to give talks at the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine (NASEM) workshop, ?Advancing Equity in Diagnostic Excellence to Reduce Health Disparities.? Dr. Anita Chopra, clinical assistant professor (General Internal Medicine) presented ?Strengthening Community Collaboration to Reduce Health Disparities and Advance Equity? and Dr. Jason Deen, associate professor (Cardiology) presented ?Systemic Barriers to Optimal Health in Indigenous Communities.? ________________________________ [image011.jpg@01DAF575]Recognize a colleague with a Cares Award nomination UW Medicine Cares Awards formally recognize and celebrate the accomplishments of those who consistently exemplify UW Medicine?Service Culture Guidelines. Nominations are currently being accepted until Oct. 15. Recent publications Dr. Tara Babu, assistant professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is co-author of ?Neutralizing Antibody Immune Correlates for a Recombinant Protein Vaccine in the COVAIL Trial? in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dr. Rahul Banerjee, assistant professor (Hematology and Oncology) is lead author of ?Dexamethasone dose intensity does not impact outcomes in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma: a secondary SWOG analysis? in Blood. DOM co-author is Andrew Cowan. Dr. Sophia Hayes, fellow (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is lead author of ?A Syndemic Model: COPD, Multimorbidity, and Poverty? in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Diseases. DOM co-author is Ananya Bhatia-Lin. Dr. Michael Boeckh, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is co-author of ?The Impact of Pretransplant Respiratory Virus Detection on Posttransplant Outcomes in Children Undergoing Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation? in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dr. Jim Boonyaratanakornkit, assistant professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is co-author of ?Assessment of the Impact of RNase in Patients With Severe Fatigue Related to Post-Acute Sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 Infection: A Randomized Phase 2 Trial of RSLV-132? in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Dr. Alexandra Collis, clinical assistant professor (General Internal Medicine) is lead author of ?A Rapid Response Mobile Application Improves First-Year Resident Clinical Performance During Simulated Care Events: A Randomized Controlled Trial? in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. DOM co-authors are A. Vincent Raikhel and David Carlbom. Dr. Andrew Cowan, associate professor (Hematology and Oncology) is co-author of ?Daratumumab with lenalidomide as maintenance after transplant in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma: the AURIGA study? in Blood. Dr. George Ioannou, professor (Gastroenterology) is co-author of ?Identifying Veterans Who Benefit From Nirmatrelvir-Ritonavir: A Target Trial Emulation? in Clinical Infectious Diseases. Drs. Haiming Kerr, acting assistant professor, Lindsey Anderson, acting assistant professor, and Jose Garcia, professor (Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine) are co-authors of ?The LEAP2 response to cancer-related anorexia-cachexia syndrome in male mice and patients? in Endocrinology. Dr. Manoj Menon, associate professor (Hematology and Oncology) is co-author of ?Cancer Immunotherapy Trials Network 12: Pembrolizumab in HIV-Associated Kaposi Sarcoma? in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. Dr. A. Vincent Raikhel, assistant professor (General Internal Medicine) is lead author and Dr. David Carlbom, associate professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is senior author of ?Shock Simulation Day: Medical Decision-Making and Communication Skills for Managing a Hypotensive Adult in a Rapid Response? in MedEdPORTAL. DOM co-author is Alexandra Collis. Dr. Mazyar Shadman, associate professor (Hematology and Oncology) is lead author of ?Real-world outcomes following ibrutinib dose reduction in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma? in Leukemia & Lymphoma. Dr. Mohamed Sorror, associate professor (Hematology and Oncology) is senior author of ?Addressing financial hardship in malignant hematology and hematopoietic cell transplant: a team approach? in Blood Advances. Dr. Suzanne Watnick, professor (Nephrology) is senior author of ?Dialysis for Chronic Kidney Failure: A Review? in JAMA. In the news Dr. John Amory, professor (General Internal Medicine) is quoted in ?Pharma eyes male birth control pill for Gen Z? in Axios. Dr. Eugene Yang, clinical professor (Cardiology) is quoted in ?New Hypertension Approach Hits Multiple Targets at Low Dose? in Medscape. Weekly Calendar, October 7-11, 2024 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up DEI Lecture Series In our next DEI Lecture Series, ?A Conversation with the Equal Justice Initiative's Health Clinic Team,? members of the Equal Justice Initiative?s Health Clinic Team will share their experiences, challenges, and successes in providing healthcare services to underserved communities. Oct. 16, 2pm. Please register for this event. What?s in a Name? Authentic Connections in Medical Education Dr. Brad Sharpe (UCSF) will present ?What?s in a Name? Authentic Connections in Medical Education? at CLIME Grand Rounds on Oct. 24, 12-1pm, UW Health Sciences Library, Pacific Room T229. Please register for this event. ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor amyf@uw.edu [cid:image020.jpg@01DB1675.D1A1ACE0][cid:image021.jpg@01DB1675.D1A1ACE0][cid:image022.jpg@01DB1675.D1A1ACE0][cid:image023.jpg@01DB1675.D1A1ACE0][cid:image024.jpg@01DB1675.D1A1ACE0] 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: image024.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 1398 bytes Desc: image024.jpg URL: From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Oct 11 16:08:54 2024 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter via domweek) Date: Fri Oct 11 16:09:03 2024 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, October 14-18, 2024 Message-ID: [cid:image001.jpg@01DB1BF7.DA9791C0] DOM Week October 11, 2024 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (If you have items for DOM week, please email amyf@uw.edu) Awards Minority Mentoring Award [Jan Abkowitz]Congratulations to Dr. Janis Abkowitz, professor (Hematology and Oncology), the 2024 recipient of the Committee on Minority Faculty Advancement (CMFA) Minority Faculty Mentoring Award. She was honored for her work to advance the careers and personal development of those underrepresented in medicine and science. ________________________________ Call for nominations Distinguished Staff Awards Nominations are currently being accepted for the UW Distinguished Staff Awards, the University?s highest staff honor. Faculty, staff and students may nominate individual staff or teams primarily composed of staff members who exemplify excellence. Nominations due Dec. 13. Thorud Leadership Awards Please consider recognizing our leaders by nominating them for the David B. Thorud Leadership Award. Open to current UW faculty, academic appointees and staff. Nominations due Dec. 13. William J. Bremner Endowed Mentorship Awards Nominations are open for the William J. Bremner Endowed Mentorship Awards, honoring faculty for their contributions to the scientific, educational, and patient care missions of the Department of Medicine through exemplary sustained and high impact mentorship. Nominations due Nov. 8. DEI news UW Staff DEI Council [Sean Greenlee]A new, campus-wide UW Staff DEI Council has been co-convened by Assistant Vice President of Labor Relations Banks Evans, Assistant Vice President of Professional and Organizational Development Ujima Sands, and University Diversity Officer & Vice President for Minority Affairs & Diversity Rickey Hall. The new Staff DEI Council will provide dedicated meetings for valuable staff-focused feedback on DEI initiatives. Sean Greenlee, DEI program manager for the Department of Medicine, has been selected as the UW Medicine representative on this council. ________________________________ Nominate a colleague to be featured during Native American Heritage Month [cid:image007.png@01DB1BF7.DA9791C0]The Huddle is asking for nominations of employees to be featured during Native American Heritage Month (November). UW Medicine?s Cultural Observances and Implementation Subcommittee (COIS) partners with The Huddle to create content celebrating cultural observances, including feature articles that give employees from the culture being celebrated a chance to share their perspectives and experiences. Employees may self-nominate or nominate a colleague. Do you know someone they should feature? Please send their name and contact info (with their permission) to the Huddle Editorial team by Oct. 15. Education news [cid:image009.png@01DB1BF7.DA9791C0]Housestaff Quality and Safety Committee Ambassadors Program Congratulations to the DOM trainees who were accepted into the inaugural Housestaff Quality and Safety Committee (HQSC) Ambassadors program. This program is intended to provide opportunities for aspiring healthcare leaders to learn more about hospital systems, immerse themselves in executive decision-making and collaborate with a diverse set of stakeholders to implement meaningful change in our institution. As part of the program, trainees will attend monthly HQSC meetings and join an existing QI project at one of the hospitals in our system. * Pranusha Atuluru, R2 (Internal Medicine) * Brianna Balansay, fellow (Cardiology) * Lauren Mathews, fellow (Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine) * Andrew Pattock, fellow (Cardiology) * Matthew Stampfl, fellow (Critical Care Medicine) * Caleb Walters, R2 (Internal Medicine) Clinical news Latinx Diabetic Kidney Disease Clinic [Christine Limonte]Dr. Christine Limonte, assistant professor (Nephrology) is heading the new Latinx Diabetic Kidney Disease Clinic at Harborview Medical Center to serve patients of all stages of chronic kidney disease. The clinic seeks to improve equity in diabetic kidney disease care for the Seattle-area Latinx community. Diabetes affects over 16 million Americans and about 1 in 3 adults with diabetes has kidney disease. Latinx people are at higher risk for developing diabetes and prediabetes plus complications from the disease, such as kidney failure, limb amputations and vision loss. Many factors contribute to this disparity such as social determinates of health and barriers to access including transportation and language barriers. The Latinx DKD Clinic aims to break down these barriers through targeted outreach and culturally informed care practices. By providing services in Spanish and partnering with programs like the Latinx Diabetes Clinic, the clinic ensures that patients receive care that respects their cultural background and addresses their unique needs. Research news Alcohol withdrawal during hospitalizations [Tessa Steel]A new study published in JAMA Network Open found alcohol withdrawal hospitalizations are at least as common as hospitalizations for other chronic health conditions in younger and middle-aged adults. Approximately 2% of adult hospitalizations within the cohort involved alcohol withdrawal syndrome (AWS), with substantial variation by age, sex, race, and outpatient alcohol screening scores. For men and younger adults, incidence was higher: AWS accounted for 9-11% of hospitalizations in men ages 30-49 years. ?The study describes the impressive incidence of alcohol withdrawal during hospitalizations, which is especially common in men and younger adults,? said Dr. Tessa Steel, assistant professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) and lead author of the study. ?In patients younger than 60 years, alcohol withdrawal was as common or more common than complications of other chronic conditions (e.g., diabetes, hypertension) that receive greater medical attention,? she said. Learn more on our news site. ________________________________ Mpox vaccine highly protective among people with HIV [Rachel Bender Ignacio]After the mpox virus reemerged globally in 2022, people with HIV were identified as facing disproportionately higher risk and more severe consequences of infection. Doctors and public health specialists urged members of that population to pursue getting a smallpox vaccine thought to be effective against mpox, though little efficacy data existed for that use. That changed this week. Research published in Clinical Infectious Diseases indicates that vaccination against mpox is highly protective among people with HIV. ?In our cohort, we saw 84% protection overall after one or more vaccines, which means vaccination averted almost nine out of 10 cases that would have occurred,? said Dr. Rachel Bender Ignacio, associate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) and senior author. ?Although getting mpox after receiving both doses does occur rarely, we observed no such cases. That means that getting both recommended doses is highly protective.? Read the full story from UW Medicine Newsroom. ________________________________ [David Koelle]Dr. David Koelle, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) has been awarded a $5,571,430 contract from the NIH titled ?Protective T cell epitopes and immune receptors for sexually transmitted infections.? This contract will study T cell epitopes in sexually transmitted infection (STI) pathogens: herpes simplex virus types 1 and 2, Treponema pallidum (Tp, syphilis), and Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct). ________________________________ [cid:image019.jpg@01DB1BF7.DA9791C0]Dr. Jennifer Ross, assistant professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is leading a new five-year study titled, ?Integrating HIV prevention with household TB contact evaluation? funded by the National Institutes of Health. The award will support an implementation trial offering HIV self-testing and PrEP among households affected by TB in Uganda. Recent publications Dr. Christina Baik, associate professor (Hematology and Oncology) is co-author of ?A Multicenter Open-Label Randomized Phase II Study of Osimertinib With and Without Ramucirumab in Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor-Na?ve EGFR-Mutant Metastatic Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (RAMOSE trial)? in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. Drs. Chase Cannon, assistant professor, and Connie Celum, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) are co-authors of ?Impact of doxycycline post-exposure prophylaxis for sexually transmitted infections on the gut microbiome and antimicrobial resistome? in Nature Medicine. Dr. Carrie Ho, fellow, is lead author and Dr. Ajay Gopal, professor (Hematology and Oncology) is senior author of ?A phase 2 study of frontline pembrolizumab in follicular lymphoma? in eJHaem. DOM co-authors are Ryan Lynch, Christina Poh, Mazyar Shadman, and Stephen Smith. Dr. Andrew Luks, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is lead author of ?All That Is Gold Does Not Glitter? in Circulation. Dr. Shubhabrata Mukherjee, research associate professor (General Internal Medicine) is co-author of ?GWAS of multiple neuropathology endophenotypes identifies new risk loci and provides insights into the genetic risk of dementia? in Nature Genetics. Dr. Claire Quinlan, R1, is lead author of ?Differences in COVID-19 Outpatient Antiviral Treatment Among Adults Aged ?65 Years by Age Group ? National Patient-Centered Clinical Research Network, United States, April 2022?September 2023? in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. In the news Dr. Christopher Damman, clinical associate professor (Gastroenterology) is quoted in ?Are colon cleanses necessary? Experts weigh in on potential risks.? in USA Today. Dr. Mary (Nora) Disis, professor (Hematology and Oncology) is quoted in ?Can We Prevent Cancer With a Shot?? in the Wall Street Journal. Events of interest Indigenous People?s Day Seattle?s 10th Anniversary of Indigenous People?s Day is Oct. 14. For information on the citywide celebration, please visit the Duwamish Tribe website. DEI Lecture Series In our next DEI Lecture Series, ?A Conversation with the Equal Justice Initiative's Health Clinic Team,? members of the Equal Justice Initiative?s Health Clinic Team will share their experiences, challenges, and successes in providing healthcare services to underserved communities. Oct. 16, 2pm. Please register for this event. Medicine Grand Rounds Dr. G.R. Scott Budinger (Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine) will present the Butler Lecture, ?Age-related failure of lung repair after pneumonia drives persistent inflammation? at Medicine Grand Rounds on Friday, Oct. 18, 12-1pm, via zoom. Weekly Calendar, October 14-18, 2024 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up What?s in a Name? Authentic Connections in Medical Education Dr. Brad Sharpe (UCSF) will present ?What?s in a Name? Authentic Connections in Medical Education? at CLIME Grand Rounds on Oct. 24, 12-1pm, UW Health Sciences Library, Pacific Room T229. Please register for this event. ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor amyf@uw.edu [cid:image020.jpg@01DB1BF7.DA9791C0][cid:image021.jpg@01DB1BF7.DA9791C0][cid:image022.jpg@01DB1BF7.DA9791C0][cid:image023.jpg@01DB1BF7.DA9791C0][cid:image024.jpg@01DB1BF7.DA9791C0] 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: 4481 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 29915 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 1676 bytes Desc: image003.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Name: image022.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 991 bytes Desc: image022.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image023.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 1534 bytes Desc: image023.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image024.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 1398 bytes Desc: image024.jpg URL: From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Oct 18 15:58:02 2024 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter via domweek) Date: Fri Oct 18 15:58:10 2024 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, October 21-25, 2024 Message-ID: [cid:image019.jpg@01DB2176.80A5D210] DOM Week October 18, 2024 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (If you have items for DOM week, please email amyf@uw.edu) DEI news LGBTQ+ Council [Shiv Bhandari]We are pleased to share that Dr. Shiv Bhandari (he/him), acting instructor (General Internal Medicine) will chair the council this year. Bhandari completed his training at UW and is a hospitalist at UWMC-Montlake. He is also a proud member of the LGBTQ+ community. "My focus as chair of the LGBTQ+ Council is to promote visibility and foster community among LGBTQ+ faculty, staff, residents and trainees within the Department of Medicine across all clinical sites," he said. The council's next meeting in Nov. 5, 6-7pm. If you are interested in joining this important council, please complete this form. Learn more on our news site. ________________________________ Year Up intern spotlight: Tila Coleman [Tila Coleman]We are excited to introduce Tila Coleman, our new Year Up intern. Year Up is a job training program, tuition free, that helps students with skills based training and internships. Tila is in Year Up's project management track and will be working on initiatives within the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) Office. "I joined Year Up for the opportunity to access the education, career and work-based experience resources, allowing me to build valuable skills and expand my professional network," she said. Learn more about her on our news site. Staff news Celebrating outstanding staff [cid:image022.jpg@01DB2176.80A5D210] The 2024 recipients and nominees for the Outstanding Staff Awards were recognized and celebrated at a ceremony on Monday. The Outstanding Staff Award recognizes and celebrates exceptional staff members who are dedicated to supporting our missions of teaching, healing, discovery, and diversity, and upholding core values. Recent publications Dr. Maralyssa Bann, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) is lead author of "A Climate of Stigma, Uncertainty, and Distrust: Stakeholder Perception of Barriers to SNF Placement for Patients with Opioid Use Disorder Treated with Methadone" in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. Dr. Rachel Bender Ignacio, associate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is co-author of "Lessons learned from COVID-19 to overcome challenges in conducting outpatient clinical trials to find safe and effective therapeutics for the next infectious pandemic" in the Journal of Clinical and Translational Science. Dr. Shailender Bhatia, professor (Hematology and Oncology) is senior author of "Intratumoral STING agonist reverses immune evasion in PD-(L)1-refractory Merkel cell carcinoma: mechanistic insights from detailed biomarker analyses" in the Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer. DOM co-authors are Lisa Tachiki and David Koelle. Joshua Bis, research scientist, and Dr. Bruce Psaty, professor, (General Internal Medicine) are co-authors of "Rare variant contribution to the heritability of coronary artery disease" in Nature Communications. Dr. Scott Hagan, assistant professor, is lead author and Dr. Paul Cornia, professor (General Internal Medicine) is senior author of "Clinical features of suspected and unsuspected fatal pulmonary emboli in hospitalized patients" in the Journal of Hospital Medicine. DOM co-author is Tyler Albert. Drs. Noam Kopmar, assistant professor, and Ryan Cassaday, associate professor (Hematology and Oncology) are co-authors of "Outcomes After Brexucabtagene Autoleucel Administered as a Standard Therapy for Adults With Relapsed/Refractory B-Cell ALL" in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. Dr. Graham Nichol, professor (General Internal Medicine) is senior author of "Single-Sample Rule-Out of an Acute Coronary Occlusion With High-Sensitivity Cardiac Troponin-Got the Time?" in JAMA Network Open. Dr. Catherine Otto, professor (Cardiology) is lead author of "Optimizing AHA/ACC Guidelines for the Digital Age: Guidelines in Evolution" in Circulation. Dr. John Thompson, professor (Hematology and Oncology) is co-author of "Immune checkpoint inhibitor induced colitis" in Gastroenterology. Lingmei Zhou, research scientist, Dr. Christopher Chen, clinical assistant professor, and Dr. Judy Zerzan-Thul, clinical associate professor (General Internal Medicine) are co-authors of "Neighborhood Socioeconomic Disadvantage and Acute Care Utilization in Washington State Medicaid: A Retrospective Cohort Study" in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. In the news Drs. Helen Chu, professor, and John Lynch, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) are quoted in "WA could be better protected against RSV this winter. Here's why" in the Seattle Times. Dr. Eugene Yang, clinical professor (Cardiology) is quoted in "Certain Arm Positions During Blood Pressure Checks May Lead to Inaccurate Results" in Healthline. Events of interest What's in a Name? Authentic Connections in Medical Education Dr. Brad Sharpe (UCSF) will present "What's in a Name? Authentic Connections in Medical Education" at CLIME Grand Rounds on Oct. 24, 12-1pm, UW Health Sciences Library, Pacific Room T229. Please register for this event. Weekly Calendar, October 21-25, 2024 Our events calendar is posted on our website. ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor amyf@uw.edu [cid:image023.jpg@01DB2176.80A5D210][cid:image024.jpg@01DB2176.80A5D210][cid:image025.jpg@01DB2176.80A5D210][cid:image026.jpg@01DB2176.80A5D210][cid:image027.jpg@01DB2176.80A5D210] 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. 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Name: image026.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 1535 bytes Desc: image026.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image027.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 1398 bytes Desc: image027.jpg URL: From domweek at u.washington.edu Fri Oct 25 16:00:58 2024 From: domweek at u.washington.edu (Department of Medicine weekly newsletter via domweek) Date: Fri Oct 25 16:01:04 2024 Subject: [domweek] DOM Week, October 28-November 1, 2024 Message-ID: [cid:image001.jpg@01DB26F7.11DAEF60] DOM Week October 25, 2024 News, information, and events of interest from the Department of Medicine (If you have items for DOM week, please email amyf@uw.edu) Well-being grants [cid:image003.jpg@01DB26F7.11DAEF60]UW Medicine has announced a second year of funding for Well-Being Grants aimed at improving the workplace and learning environment for our community. The grants will support impactful activities, programming, projects and/ or applied research that aligns with the goals of our well-being work. All faculty, staff, and trainees from across UW Medicine (inclusive of administrative, clinical, education and research areas) are encouraged to apply for the grants. Applications are open Oct. 29-Dec. 10. For more information, please visit the UW Medicine OFA website. Awards Call for nominations: 2025 Distinguished Alumni Awards [cid:image005.jpg@01DB26F7.11DAEF60]Nominations for the 2025 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. Nominations are due Dec. 31. Staff news [Lori Joubert]EDI peer trainer Lori Joubert, program coordinator (Cardiology) has officially been recognized as an EDI Peer Trainer. She is now certified to deliver Bystander Training on behalf of the UW Medicine Office of Healthcare Equity (OHCE). Certified EDI peer trainers are indispensable members of OHCE's training team. Faculty news [Sarah Holton]Dr. Sarah Holton, acting instructor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) won the 3rd place basic science prize at the National Jewish Health Respiratory Disease Young Investigators' Forum. She presented: "Identification of pro-fibrotic mononuclear phagocyte subpopulations in cryobiopsies from patients with early Interstitial Lung Disease using spatial transcriptomics." The Young Investigators' Forum provides career development and research opportunities for fellows and early career faculty and has been a catalyst for groundbreaking discoveries. Clinical news The Bruce Protocol: A 75-year legacy of innovation [Dr. Robert Bruce and patient]When UW Medicine cardiologist Robert A. Bruce, MD, developed his technique for evaluating cardiac function and physical fitness, it revolutionized the way clinicians assessed patients for cardiovascular disease. His method, the Bruce Protocol, opened the door for valuable advancements in cardiovascular diagnostics. And 75 years after capturing the first treadmill results, it remains the foundation for exercise stress testing. "The brilliance of his protocol was putting together the concept of provoking physiologic stress without harming the patient in order to know when to intervene," said Dr. James Kirkpatrick, professor (Cardiology) and director of the Echocardiology Laboratory at UW Medicine's Heart Institute. "The subsequent work built on this method has allowed us to risk-stratify patients and develop new diagnostic technologies." The protocol did more than improve patient care. It also launched the Division of Cardiology down a decades-long path of innovation. Read more on our news site. Research news Global health 2050: the path to halving premature death by mid-century [David Watkins]A report published this month in The Lancet focuses on a global concern: premature death. It argues, optimistically, that countries can cut their populations' risk of premature death in half by 2050, if they choose. "Our main message is that countries can reduce their populations' risk of premature death by 50% by 2050, compared to 2019. We call this goal '50 by 50,' said Dr. David Watkins, associate professor (General Internal Medicine) and co-author of the study. "Our research concluded that this goal is feasible for countries both rich and poor." The researchers found that just 15 health conditions account for most of the avoidable death under 70. Focusing health spending on these conditions could help countries achieve the 50 by 50 goal. Watkins led the part of the report that discusses how health systems and financing must change to meet this goal. Learn more through a Q&A with Dr. Watkins and UW Medicine Newsroom. ________________________________ Infectious disease experts propose trials network dedicated to immunocompromised patients [Joshua Hill]The COVID-19 pandemic made plain what many patients, clinicians and researchers have known for decades: people with weakened immune systems are much more vulnerable to infectious diseases. But immunocompromised patients are usually left out of large clinical trials that assess new treatments and vaccines, leaving a data gap that hampers clinical care. Last month, experts across disciplines, from infectious disease clinicians to regulators to representatives from the pharmaceutical industry, convened at the inaugural ImmunOptimize workshop in Bethesda, MD, to brainstorm strategies to address the unmet needs of immunocompromised patients. "We need roots, not parachutes," said Fred Hutch Cancer Center infectious disease expert Dr. Joshua Hill, associate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) who headed the ImmunOptimize scientific committee. "We need a grassroots effort to address the unmet needs of immunocompromised patients. The time is right to bring the conversations to the forefront." Learn more from Hutch News. Recent publications Dr. Tara Babu, assistant professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is lead author of "Next-Generation SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine Formulations and Alternative Routes of Administration" in the Journal of Infectious Diseases. Joshua Bis, research scientist, and Dr. Bruce Psaty, professor (General Internal Medicine) are co-authors of "Genomic analysis of intracranial and subcortical brain volumes yields polygenic scores accounting for variation across ancestries" in Nature Genetics. Dr. Petter Bjornstad, professor (Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition) is senior author of "Attenuated kidney oxidative metabolism in young adults with type 1 diabetes" in JCI. DOM co-author is Ian de Boer. Dr. Bjornstad is also senior author of "Proteomic Analysis Uncovers Multi-Protein Signatures Associated with Early Diabetic Kidney Disease in Youth with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus" in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. DOM co-authors are Phoom Narongkiatikhum and Ian de Boer. Dr. Helen Chu, professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) wrote "A Perspective on Vaccinology" in the Journal of Infectious Diseases and is senior author of "Maternal immunization" in the Journal of Infectious Diseases. DOM co-author is Collrane Frivold. Dr. Ian de Boer, professor (Nephrology) is co-author of "Albuminuria and Rapid Kidney Function Decline as Selection Criteria for Kidney Clinical Trials in Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus" in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. Dr. Nicholas Johnson, associate professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is co-author of "Effectiveness of the original monovalent mRNA COVID-19 vaccination series against hospitalization for COVID-19-associated venous thromboembolism" in the Journal of Infectious Diseases. Dr. Masumi Ueda Oshima, associate professor, is lead author and Dr. Rainer Storb, professor (Hematology and Oncology) is senior author of "Characterization of clonal dynamics using duplex sequencing in donor-recipient pairs decades after hematopoietic cell transplantation" in Science Translational Medicine. DOM co-authors are Jesse Salk, Stephanie Lee, Mary Flowers, and Jerald Radich. Dr. Mayuree Rao, acting instructor (General Internal Medicine) is co-author of "Demographic, Social, Behavioral, and Clinical Characteristics Associated with Long-Term Opioid Therapy and Any Opioid Prescription in High-Risk VA Patients" in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. Drs. Thomas Rea, professor (General Internal Medicine) and Peter Kudenchuk, professor (Cardiology) are co-authors of "A Comparison of Ketamine to Midazolam for the Management of Acute Behavioral Disturbance in the Out-of-Hospital Setting" in the Annals of Emergency Medicine. Dr. Pradeep Singh, professor (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine) is senior author of "Elexacaftor/tezacaftor/ivacaftor's effects on cystic fibrosis infections are maintained, but not increased, after 3.5 years of treatment" in JCI. Dr. Susan Wong, associate professor (Nephrology) is lead author of "Providers' Experiences Discussing Care for Patients with Kidney Failure Who Forgo KRT: A National Qualitative Study" in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. DOM co-authors are Julie Chotivatanapong and Daniel Lam. In the news Dr. Christopher Damman, clinical associate professor (Gastroenterology) is quoted in "Keeping your gut healthy and happy: 'It's a daily practice'" in the Seattle Times. Dr. Ajay Gopal, professor (Hematology and Oncology) is quoted in "Is nivolumab superior to standard of care for classic Hodgkin lymphoma?: Phase III trial finds improved PFS, side effects with nivolumab+chemo" in The Cancer Letter. Dr. Joshua Hill, associate professor (Allergy and Infectious Diseases) is quoted in "What Does It Mean to Be Immunocompromised?" in the New York Times. Dr. Eric Larson, affiliate professor (General Internal Medicine) is quoted in "Trump's and Harris' vitriolic attacks on each other's mental health are shameful" in STAT. Dr. Suzanne Watnick, professor (Nephrology) is quoted in "How Hurricane Helene is threatening dialysis patients" in The Hill. Dr. Eugene Yang, clinical professor (Cardiology) is quoted in "How to Fix Health Data for People with Asian and Pacific Islander Heritage" in Scientific American. Weekly Calendar, October 28-November 1, 2024 Our events calendar is posted on our website. Coming up Current concepts in medication therapy In this course, speakers will highlight innovations in drug therapies, review new indications for old medications, and discuss medication side effects and drug interactions. The course designed for family physicians and other primary care providers including internists, pediatricians, osteopathic physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, pharmacists and others interested in medication management. Dec. 9-10 (webinar). For more information and to register, please visit the UW CME website. ________________________________ Amy Fields, Editor amyf@uw.edu [cid:image016.jpg@01DB26F7.11DAEF60][cid:image017.jpg@01DB26F7.11DAEF60][cid:image018.jpg@01DB26F7.11DAEF60][cid:image019.jpg@01DB26F7.11DAEF60][cid:image020.jpg@01DB26F7.11DAEF60] 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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