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Search Results for Development
Abstract Number: 0029
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Nocturnists often start their positions immediately after residency. It has been shown that early career hospitalists benefit from mentorship for scholarly productivity, academic promotion and personal career satisfaction (1,2). However, as nocturnists typically work at different hours than senior clinicians and service leaders, there are decreased opportunities for informal mentorship, modelling, and visibility. Purpose: [...]
Abstract Number: 0067
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Oral case presentations are a core learning opportunity for students, during which they synthesize data, develop assessments and plans, and communicate clinical reasoning. However, during focus groups at our institution, faculty and students described presentations as inefficient, redundant, and lacking standardized expectations. Faculty were overall dissatisfied with student presentations. Students described presentations as stressful [...]
Abstract Number: 0077
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) is a powerful bedside tool utilized by hospitalists to care for patients, with wide-ranging applications including aiding clinical diagnosis, monitoring response to therapy, and guiding performance of invasive procedures.1-4 Despite its published benefits, POCUS adoption by hospitalists has lagged behind other specialties, in part due to inconsistent training experiences across internal [...]
Abstract Number: 0103
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Hospitalists’ engagement in scholarship (e.g., research, education) mitigates burnout, yet academic advancement and productivity among hospitalists lags behind other specialties. Gender inequities are well-documented across academic medicine, as evidenced by delayed career progression, lower scholarly productivity, and pay gaps. We aimed to characterize hospitalist interest, barriers, and facilitators to engage in academic activities. Results [...]
Abstract Number: 0327
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Accurate, timely admission medication reconciliation (AMR) is a key patient-safety driver. Clinician-performed AMR has higher error rates compared to pharmacy-performed AMR. At our large, tertiary care institution, pharmacists capture only 75% of AMRs and require up to 48h for completion. Delays and errors in clinician-performed AMR on medicine floors have led to patient safety [...]
Abstract Number: 0329
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Point of Care Ultrasound (POCUS) is a growing field with an evidence-base across most clinical specialties. National surveys have shown student, resident, and fellowship training opportunities are increasing, but report lack of experience faculty as the primary barrier to POCUS use. The most effective faculty training programs include longitudinal training and mentorship. Unfortunately, few [...]
Abstract Number: 0335
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Feedback is critical in medical education, yet its effectiveness is often compromised by suboptimal utilization. Many trainees experience a disconnect between feedback they receive and their self-perceptions, which can inhibit their growth and performance. Common challenges include inconsistencies between evaluative feedback and trainees’ beliefs about their capabilities, concerns regarding the credibility of the feedback [...]
Abstract Number: 0337
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Many hospitalists at academic institutions are eager to grow as effective clinical educators but face barriers that limit their development opportunities. With limited time on teaching wards, hospitalists have fewer chances to engage in “learning by doing” in their roles as educators. Many who enter these positions straight after residency are expected to serve [...]
Abstract Number: 0340
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Faculty development (FD) programs increase faculty engagement, retention, work satisfaction, and collective success, but many hospitalist groups struggle with implementing FD programs due to limited time, lack of support for faculty participation, and curricula that often do not align with faculty priorities. A recent qualitative study exploring FD from 17 academic hospital medicine programs [...]
Abstract Number: 0357
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Hospital at Home (HaH) is an expanding clinical model that delivers inpatient-level care to patients in their homes, substituting a traditional hospital stay. It is becoming a standard of care at many institutions, yet there are still few formally established processes for integrating medical trainees despite clear benefits for both the program’s growth and [...]