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Search2020-05-20T12:01:36-05:00
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Oral Presentations
TEACHING TO TEST? A COMPARISON OF LAB TESTING IN TEACHING VERSUS NON-TEACHING HOSPITALS FOR TWO COMMON MEDICAL CONDITIONS
Hospital Medicine 2017, May 1-4, 2017; Las Vegas, Nev.
Background: It is often assumed resident physicians at academic medical centers order more tests for inpatients due to different aspects of the clinical learning environment.  Despite this prevailing notion, there is very little evidence to support this claim. We sought to quantify differences in ordering practices between teaching hospitals and non-teaching hospitals for two common [...]
Oral Presentations
WOULD HOSPITALIST USE OF POINT-OF-CARE ULTRASOUND PAY FOR ITSELF? A RETURN-ON-INVESTMENT PREDICTION MODEL USING UNINCENTIVIZED, ULTRASOUND-TRAINED RESIDENTS
Hospital Medicine 2017, May 1-4, 2017; Las Vegas, Nev.
Background: Although point-of-care ultrasound can improve patient care and reduce unnecessary downstream costs, few economic models exist on hospitalist use and whether remuneration for imaging could offset equipment costs.  As the heart and lungs are commonly examined during admission, we observed the frequency of use and projected fiscal outcomes of point-of-care cardiac ultrasound by an [...]
Oral Presentations
Abstract Number: 8
VIRTUAL RURAL-ALITY: CREATING A TELE-HOSPITALIST PROGRAM TO REDUCE RURAL OUTMIGRATION
SHM Converge 2023
Background: Since 2010, 130 rural hospitals have closed, leaving only 2,250 rural hospitals remaining in the United States. Of the remaining facilities, outmigration and/or the bypassing of the local hospitals to a larger facility remains problematic and impacts a community’s access to healthcare while affecting the long-term business viability of the city. In December of [...]
Oral Presentations
Abstract Number: 9
HOSPITAL FOLLOW-UP: DOES PROVIDER, CONTINUITY, TIMING MATTER IN REDUCING READMISSIONS?
SHM Converge 2024
Background: Hospital readmissions are frequent and can represent low-quality, high-cost care. Timely post-hospital follow-up has been described as an important element of high-quality transitions of care and readmissions prevention (1-3), yet exactly what type of follow-up is most successful is unclear. We sought to understand the relationship between timing, hospital follow-up visit provider specialty and [...]
Oral Presentations
Abstract Number: 11
RESEARCH PRIORITIES FOR ADULT HOSPITAL MEDICINE: A SURVEY OF US HOSPITAL MEDICINE LEADERS
SHM Converge 2024
Background: Hospital medicine (HM) is a well-established clinical specialty within Internal Medicine, yet its research footprint has lagged its clinical impact. Clarity of top HM research priorities may identify target areas for investment in HM research infrastructure and define areas of hospital medicine expertise. Methods: The Society of Hospital Medicine’s (SHM) Research Committee formed a [...]
Oral Presentations
Abstract Number: 15
EFFECTIVENESS OF A DELIRIUM REDUCTION WORKFLOW ON ADULT INPATIENT OUTCOMES
SHM Converge 2023
Background: Complex non-pharmacologic interventions containing multiple, or bundled, components can successfully prevent and treat hospital-acquired delirium in older adults. However consistent implementation, and the measurement of compliance, of these bundled interventions can be challenging to sustain in hospital settings especially in presence of COVID-19. Developing workflows with a smaller sub-set of components that are feasible [...]
Oral Presentations
Abstract Number: 0006
IMPACT OF CLINICIAN CARE TEAM MODEL ON RISK OF DIAGNOSTIC ERRORS AMONG ADULTS WHO TRANSFERRED TO INTENSIVE CARE OR DIED
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Diagnostic errors (DEs), or the failure to accurately identify or provide timely explanations of a patient’s health problem, are a significant source of patient harm. DEs occur in up to 23% of adult inpatients who transfer to intensive care units (ICU) or die. Few studies have examined how clinician team composition impacts DE risk. [...]
Oral Presentations
Abstract Number: 0007
PRIOR GLP-1 AGONIST USE IS NOT ASSOCIATED WITH ADVERSE INPATIENT QUALITY OUTCOMES: A PROPENSITY-MATCHED ANALYSIS
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) agonists are increasingly prescribed for obesity and type 2 diabetes, demonstrating efficacy in weight loss and glycemic control [1-3]. Beyond metabolic effects, these medications show protective effects against renal disease progression and reduce major adverse cardiovascular events [4]. GLP-1 agonists influence body composition through effects on both fat mass and fat-free [...]
Oral Presentations
Abstract Number: 0009
EFFECTS OF THE COMPREHENSIVE CARE PHYSICIAN PROGRAM ON HOSPITALIZATION RATES FOR AMBULATORY CARE-SENSITIVE CONDITIONS VS. NON-AMBULATORY CARE-SENSITIVE CONDITIONS: INSIGHTS FROM DUAL-ELIGIBLE AND NON-DUAL-ELIGIBLE MEDICARE BENEFICIARIES
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Poor coordination between hospital and outpatient care worsens health outcomes, and increases preventable hospitalization and health care expenditures, especially for socioeconomically disadvantaged populations. Evidence of the effects of current programs to improve care coordination is mixed, and there is little data on how their impact may differ for hospitalizations for ambulatory care-sensitive conditions (ACSCs) [...]
Oral Presentations
Abstract Number: 0011
NEXT DAY CLINIC TO PREVENT AVOIDABLE HOSPITALIZATIONS: 13 MONTHS OF A NOVEL HOSPITAL AVOIDANCE MODEL
SHM Converge 2025
Background: Ten to twenty percent of U.S. hospitalizations are avoidable, driven by clinical uncertainty, social factors, or lack of access to ambulatory care [1-3]. These unnecessary admissions result in significant human and financial costs, including in-hospital errors, wasteful spending, and medical debt [4-7]. With hospital occupancy reaching critical levels, we designed and launched the Olive [...]
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  • RECOGNIZING S1Q3T3 FOR WHAT IT IS: A NONSPECIFIC PATTERN OF RIGHT HEART STRAIN

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