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Amith Skandhan, MD, FHM, wants young hospitalists to realize the potential influence they hold

 

Editor’s note: Each month, the Society of Hospital Medicine puts the spotlight on some of our most active members who are making substantial contributions to hospital medicine. Visit www.hospitalmedicine.org for more information on how you can lend your expertise to help SHM improve the care of hospitalized patients.

This month, The Hospitalist spotlights Amith Skandhan, MD, FHM, a hospitalist, a director/physician liaison for clinical documentation improvement and core faculty member in the Internal Medicine Residency Program at Southeast Alabama Medical Center in Dothan, Ala., and clinical faculty member at the Alabama College of Osteopathic Medicine also in Dothan. Dr. Skandhan is the cofounder and current president of the SHM Wiregrass Chapter and is an active member of SHM’s Annual Conference and Performance Measurement Reporting committees.
 

When did you join SHM, and what prompted you to apply for your current committee roles?

Dr. Amith Skandhan
When I did my residency and chief residency at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Mercy, I was fascinated by my faculty hospitalists – they seemed to have mastered a balance of managing acute, high intensity care with a lifestyle that encouraged exploring personal hobbies. But as I started my new role as a hospitalist at Southeast Alabama Medical Center, I discovered nuances to the profession that I had not seen during my graduate medical education.

There were many things that were not sufficiently taught during clinical training that were required in my day-to-day practice, like clinical documentation improvement, practice management, billing, coding, and so forth. I also quickly understood how vast and dynamic hospital medicine really was. While looking for an outlet to voice my questions, concerns, and curiosity, I decided to join SHM, which has helped me find and apply the techniques I’d been looking for to further my career as a hospitalist.

I’m now fortunate to be a part of SHM’s national committees, which involve hospitalists of various backgrounds and experiences, who work together to improve the overall quality of inpatient medicine. I currently serve on the Performance Reporting Measurement Committee and the Annual Conference Committee. My interests in reviewing the ever-evolving policies of health care made me apply to be a part of the Performance Reporting Measurement Committee. We work very closely with the Public Policy Committee, analyzing written policies and subsequently offering our recommendations. It’s been fulfilling to be a part of a committee that works towards developing policies that support a good quality of care on such a large scale.

My penchant for organizing events and bringing people together based on common ground led me to apply for the Annual Conference Committee. We meet every week to discuss various topics, choose and invite speakers, and help organize the entire event, which will host close to 5,000 hospitalists later this year. It has made me appreciate being a member of an organization that provides hospitalists with opportunities for education and growth. I’m hopeful that the attendees next year will find the conference to be a worthwhile experience!
 

As the president of SHM’s Wiregrass Chapter, how has the chapter grown since its establishment in May 2015?

Our chapter is based in Dothan, a small, rural Alabama town where Southeast Alabama Medical Center is located. The chapter covers the counties of lower Alabama and the panhandle of Florida. We named the chapter after a special species of grass that grows in this region.

When we started the chapter, our goal was to bring the best and brightest of hospital medicine to our region to give talks on hot topics in the field and also to use their expertise to guide inpatient care in our hospital system. We aggressively marketed the events to bring in large crowds of medical professionals, and we consistently average around 70-80 attendees in our meetings. Bringing in leaders from the field helped create an atmosphere of learning and inspired us to grow and develop our hospitalist program. We now closely work with hospital medicine groups in surrounding rural areas toward improving inpatient hospital care.

During these past years, we also realized that, for the further growth of our chapter, we would need to nurture an interest in hospital medicine among future generations of doctors, and this realization led to the creation of our medical student and resident wing. So far, the students have been very enthusiastic about participating in SHM-related events, and I hope that continues. We also developed a mentor-mentee program, in which we paired selected medical students with hospitalists to help guide future careers in acute care medicine. This year, we have also been helping the hospital medicine division at Southeast Alabama Medical Center create a clinical research track for medical students. To that end, we have just completed our second annual poster competition where we presented around 50 posters in the areas of clinical vignettes, quality improvement, and original research.

In addition, the chapter is very active with community activities. We took notice of the fact that many of our patients and community members were unaware of what hospitalists did because they could not understand how our work was different from that of primary care physicians. Our members have therefore participated in TV, radio, and newspaper interviews to help elucidate the role of hospitalists in patient care. We have also periodically visited primary care physician offices, nursing homes, senior citizen groups, and cancer support groups to educate these patients on various facets of health care and how hospitalists influence these areas.

In 2014, we organized a “walk with a hospitalist” event, for which we set up a half-mile “admission to discharge” scenario explaining the role of hospitalists and other departments involved in patient care. This year, in hopes of improving patient literacy in our region, we held a “shop with a doc” event, where the Southeast Alabama Medical Center hospitalists teamed up with dietitians and taught patients how food and lifestyle influenced their chronic medical illnesses. This was followed by physicians and dietitians shopping with patients in the grocery store, educating them on healthy choices and label reading.

We’re incredibly grateful for the support that we’ve received from our medical and patient communities; they’ve been critical in helping our chapter grow as much as it has, and they motivate us to work harder and do more with the chapter. We were honored to receive the SHM’s Rising Star Award at the Hospital Medicine 2017 conference in Las Vegas. We never thought that our little chapter in the American countryside would be chosen, but we’re very thankful to have our efforts recognized on the national stage!
 

 

 

Which SHM conferences have you attended? Tell TH about your most memorable highlights or takeaways.

When I started out as a hospitalist in 2014, I decided to attend the annual conference in Las Vegas, and I can honestly say that conference changed the course of my career. I can still remember listening to the opening speech and realizing that I was surrounded by more than 3,000 hospitalists who understood the power we had to influence inpatient care. I’ve attended all the national conferences since then and am grateful that I now get to help organize the Hospital Medicine 2018 annual conference, also known as HM18.

I had been working to find a way to improve documentation within my group, as well as change the culture and perception towards billing and coding practices, which prompted me to attend the Quality and Safety Educators Academy. During one of the problem-solving sessions, I explained the challenges that I faced to my conference group. The exercise required me to explain the problem at hand, and the players of my group then discussed their thoughts while I took notes. It was a fantastic experience, as the participants at my table offered strong solutions to my problems within a matter of minutes. Their advice led to meaningful changes in our group’s hospital documentation practices, and in turn, I’ve been promoted to physician advisor in Southeast Alabama Medical Center.

After such a great experience at Quality and Safety Educators Academy, I went on to attend SHM’s Leadership Academy, where I had the opportunity to meet some of the top leaders and pioneers in the field of hospital medicine. It’s empowering to be mentored by the very people you look up to and aspire to be like. Not only was I able to bring ideas home to my institution, but I was able to reflect and improve my own professional and personal growth. I’m happy to say that I’ve completed all three levels of Leadership Academy.

As I’ve become involved with the medical student and residency programs at my medical center, I recently attended the Academic Hospitalist Academy to help my transition into academic hospital medicine. Meeting and spending time with the faculty at Academic Hospitalist Academy made me further realize the roles that academic hospitalists play in the education of future physicians, emphasizing the idea that we can all be champions in quality and patient safety.

If you’re looking to advance your career as a hospitalist, take advantage of the conferences that SHM offers. I’ve gained so much from each experience, and I’m looking forward to returning to these conferences as a potential facilitator, in hopes of offering what I’ve learned to hospitalists looking to bring about change in their fields and careers.
 

What can attendees at HM18 expect to see in the area of career development, and how is this different than previous years?

Hospital medicine is only about 2 decades old, making it one of the youngest branches in medicine today. Given this fact, the Annual Conference Committee feels that it is paramount to focus on career development for both new and midcareer hospitalists alike.

One question that we wish to explore and answer this year is: “How do you make hospital medicine a life-long, enjoyable, and engaging career?” In turn, our committee has created several new additions to HM18. This includes a “Seasoning Your Career” track, which will provide ideas on how to advance in leadership, use emotional intelligence to achieve success, change your roles midcareer, and change hospitalist schedules. Another unique addition this year are career development workshops, which will aim to developing various aspects of a hospitalist’s career, such as working on leadership skills, refining presentation and communication skills, providing constructive feedback, promoting women in hospital medicine, preventing burnout, and turning ideas into clinical research. We also plan to incorporate an education track, which will focus on how hospitalists can expand their careers towards educational leadership.
 

Given your involvement in SHM at both the local and national levels, do you have any advice for young hospital medicine professionals looking to build their professional profiles?

I’ve frequently noticed that young hospitalists don’t realize the potential influence they hold within their own institutions or the power they have to elicit change in health care at the national level.

Though we don’t often admit it, some hospitalists feel like they are glorified residents, which definitely is not the case. As a provider on the front lines, you have the unique opportunity to implement changes pertaining to issues of cost, utilization of resources, process management, quality and patient safety, and bottlenecks in care, to name a few. These are issues that keep the administrators of your organization and leaders of hospital medicine up at night. Don’t sit around and complain about how things could be or should be; look toward creating change. Bring up possible solutions to these problems with your leaders. They will appreciate the effort, and hopefully together you can find ways to tackle these problems.

I will conclude by saying this: Hospital medicine is such a unique specialty in that it’s constantly evolving, and the pioneers of this field are still alive and practicing medicine. You can meet and interact with them during the SHM conferences and look to them as sources of inspiration or guidance. Meeting people you look up to and having them as your mentors can take you places.

 

 

Ms. Steele is the marketing communications specialist at the Society of Hospital Medicine.

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Amith Skandhan, MD, FHM, wants young hospitalists to realize the potential influence they hold
Amith Skandhan, MD, FHM, wants young hospitalists to realize the potential influence they hold

 

Editor’s note: Each month, the Society of Hospital Medicine puts the spotlight on some of our most active members who are making substantial contributions to hospital medicine. Visit www.hospitalmedicine.org for more information on how you can lend your expertise to help SHM improve the care of hospitalized patients.

This month, The Hospitalist spotlights Amith Skandhan, MD, FHM, a hospitalist, a director/physician liaison for clinical documentation improvement and core faculty member in the Internal Medicine Residency Program at Southeast Alabama Medical Center in Dothan, Ala., and clinical faculty member at the Alabama College of Osteopathic Medicine also in Dothan. Dr. Skandhan is the cofounder and current president of the SHM Wiregrass Chapter and is an active member of SHM’s Annual Conference and Performance Measurement Reporting committees.
 

When did you join SHM, and what prompted you to apply for your current committee roles?

Dr. Amith Skandhan
When I did my residency and chief residency at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Mercy, I was fascinated by my faculty hospitalists – they seemed to have mastered a balance of managing acute, high intensity care with a lifestyle that encouraged exploring personal hobbies. But as I started my new role as a hospitalist at Southeast Alabama Medical Center, I discovered nuances to the profession that I had not seen during my graduate medical education.

There were many things that were not sufficiently taught during clinical training that were required in my day-to-day practice, like clinical documentation improvement, practice management, billing, coding, and so forth. I also quickly understood how vast and dynamic hospital medicine really was. While looking for an outlet to voice my questions, concerns, and curiosity, I decided to join SHM, which has helped me find and apply the techniques I’d been looking for to further my career as a hospitalist.

I’m now fortunate to be a part of SHM’s national committees, which involve hospitalists of various backgrounds and experiences, who work together to improve the overall quality of inpatient medicine. I currently serve on the Performance Reporting Measurement Committee and the Annual Conference Committee. My interests in reviewing the ever-evolving policies of health care made me apply to be a part of the Performance Reporting Measurement Committee. We work very closely with the Public Policy Committee, analyzing written policies and subsequently offering our recommendations. It’s been fulfilling to be a part of a committee that works towards developing policies that support a good quality of care on such a large scale.

My penchant for organizing events and bringing people together based on common ground led me to apply for the Annual Conference Committee. We meet every week to discuss various topics, choose and invite speakers, and help organize the entire event, which will host close to 5,000 hospitalists later this year. It has made me appreciate being a member of an organization that provides hospitalists with opportunities for education and growth. I’m hopeful that the attendees next year will find the conference to be a worthwhile experience!
 

As the president of SHM’s Wiregrass Chapter, how has the chapter grown since its establishment in May 2015?

Our chapter is based in Dothan, a small, rural Alabama town where Southeast Alabama Medical Center is located. The chapter covers the counties of lower Alabama and the panhandle of Florida. We named the chapter after a special species of grass that grows in this region.

When we started the chapter, our goal was to bring the best and brightest of hospital medicine to our region to give talks on hot topics in the field and also to use their expertise to guide inpatient care in our hospital system. We aggressively marketed the events to bring in large crowds of medical professionals, and we consistently average around 70-80 attendees in our meetings. Bringing in leaders from the field helped create an atmosphere of learning and inspired us to grow and develop our hospitalist program. We now closely work with hospital medicine groups in surrounding rural areas toward improving inpatient hospital care.

During these past years, we also realized that, for the further growth of our chapter, we would need to nurture an interest in hospital medicine among future generations of doctors, and this realization led to the creation of our medical student and resident wing. So far, the students have been very enthusiastic about participating in SHM-related events, and I hope that continues. We also developed a mentor-mentee program, in which we paired selected medical students with hospitalists to help guide future careers in acute care medicine. This year, we have also been helping the hospital medicine division at Southeast Alabama Medical Center create a clinical research track for medical students. To that end, we have just completed our second annual poster competition where we presented around 50 posters in the areas of clinical vignettes, quality improvement, and original research.

In addition, the chapter is very active with community activities. We took notice of the fact that many of our patients and community members were unaware of what hospitalists did because they could not understand how our work was different from that of primary care physicians. Our members have therefore participated in TV, radio, and newspaper interviews to help elucidate the role of hospitalists in patient care. We have also periodically visited primary care physician offices, nursing homes, senior citizen groups, and cancer support groups to educate these patients on various facets of health care and how hospitalists influence these areas.

In 2014, we organized a “walk with a hospitalist” event, for which we set up a half-mile “admission to discharge” scenario explaining the role of hospitalists and other departments involved in patient care. This year, in hopes of improving patient literacy in our region, we held a “shop with a doc” event, where the Southeast Alabama Medical Center hospitalists teamed up with dietitians and taught patients how food and lifestyle influenced their chronic medical illnesses. This was followed by physicians and dietitians shopping with patients in the grocery store, educating them on healthy choices and label reading.

We’re incredibly grateful for the support that we’ve received from our medical and patient communities; they’ve been critical in helping our chapter grow as much as it has, and they motivate us to work harder and do more with the chapter. We were honored to receive the SHM’s Rising Star Award at the Hospital Medicine 2017 conference in Las Vegas. We never thought that our little chapter in the American countryside would be chosen, but we’re very thankful to have our efforts recognized on the national stage!
 

 

 

Which SHM conferences have you attended? Tell TH about your most memorable highlights or takeaways.

When I started out as a hospitalist in 2014, I decided to attend the annual conference in Las Vegas, and I can honestly say that conference changed the course of my career. I can still remember listening to the opening speech and realizing that I was surrounded by more than 3,000 hospitalists who understood the power we had to influence inpatient care. I’ve attended all the national conferences since then and am grateful that I now get to help organize the Hospital Medicine 2018 annual conference, also known as HM18.

I had been working to find a way to improve documentation within my group, as well as change the culture and perception towards billing and coding practices, which prompted me to attend the Quality and Safety Educators Academy. During one of the problem-solving sessions, I explained the challenges that I faced to my conference group. The exercise required me to explain the problem at hand, and the players of my group then discussed their thoughts while I took notes. It was a fantastic experience, as the participants at my table offered strong solutions to my problems within a matter of minutes. Their advice led to meaningful changes in our group’s hospital documentation practices, and in turn, I’ve been promoted to physician advisor in Southeast Alabama Medical Center.

After such a great experience at Quality and Safety Educators Academy, I went on to attend SHM’s Leadership Academy, where I had the opportunity to meet some of the top leaders and pioneers in the field of hospital medicine. It’s empowering to be mentored by the very people you look up to and aspire to be like. Not only was I able to bring ideas home to my institution, but I was able to reflect and improve my own professional and personal growth. I’m happy to say that I’ve completed all three levels of Leadership Academy.

As I’ve become involved with the medical student and residency programs at my medical center, I recently attended the Academic Hospitalist Academy to help my transition into academic hospital medicine. Meeting and spending time with the faculty at Academic Hospitalist Academy made me further realize the roles that academic hospitalists play in the education of future physicians, emphasizing the idea that we can all be champions in quality and patient safety.

If you’re looking to advance your career as a hospitalist, take advantage of the conferences that SHM offers. I’ve gained so much from each experience, and I’m looking forward to returning to these conferences as a potential facilitator, in hopes of offering what I’ve learned to hospitalists looking to bring about change in their fields and careers.
 

What can attendees at HM18 expect to see in the area of career development, and how is this different than previous years?

Hospital medicine is only about 2 decades old, making it one of the youngest branches in medicine today. Given this fact, the Annual Conference Committee feels that it is paramount to focus on career development for both new and midcareer hospitalists alike.

One question that we wish to explore and answer this year is: “How do you make hospital medicine a life-long, enjoyable, and engaging career?” In turn, our committee has created several new additions to HM18. This includes a “Seasoning Your Career” track, which will provide ideas on how to advance in leadership, use emotional intelligence to achieve success, change your roles midcareer, and change hospitalist schedules. Another unique addition this year are career development workshops, which will aim to developing various aspects of a hospitalist’s career, such as working on leadership skills, refining presentation and communication skills, providing constructive feedback, promoting women in hospital medicine, preventing burnout, and turning ideas into clinical research. We also plan to incorporate an education track, which will focus on how hospitalists can expand their careers towards educational leadership.
 

Given your involvement in SHM at both the local and national levels, do you have any advice for young hospital medicine professionals looking to build their professional profiles?

I’ve frequently noticed that young hospitalists don’t realize the potential influence they hold within their own institutions or the power they have to elicit change in health care at the national level.

Though we don’t often admit it, some hospitalists feel like they are glorified residents, which definitely is not the case. As a provider on the front lines, you have the unique opportunity to implement changes pertaining to issues of cost, utilization of resources, process management, quality and patient safety, and bottlenecks in care, to name a few. These are issues that keep the administrators of your organization and leaders of hospital medicine up at night. Don’t sit around and complain about how things could be or should be; look toward creating change. Bring up possible solutions to these problems with your leaders. They will appreciate the effort, and hopefully together you can find ways to tackle these problems.

I will conclude by saying this: Hospital medicine is such a unique specialty in that it’s constantly evolving, and the pioneers of this field are still alive and practicing medicine. You can meet and interact with them during the SHM conferences and look to them as sources of inspiration or guidance. Meeting people you look up to and having them as your mentors can take you places.

 

 

Ms. Steele is the marketing communications specialist at the Society of Hospital Medicine.

 

Editor’s note: Each month, the Society of Hospital Medicine puts the spotlight on some of our most active members who are making substantial contributions to hospital medicine. Visit www.hospitalmedicine.org for more information on how you can lend your expertise to help SHM improve the care of hospitalized patients.

This month, The Hospitalist spotlights Amith Skandhan, MD, FHM, a hospitalist, a director/physician liaison for clinical documentation improvement and core faculty member in the Internal Medicine Residency Program at Southeast Alabama Medical Center in Dothan, Ala., and clinical faculty member at the Alabama College of Osteopathic Medicine also in Dothan. Dr. Skandhan is the cofounder and current president of the SHM Wiregrass Chapter and is an active member of SHM’s Annual Conference and Performance Measurement Reporting committees.
 

When did you join SHM, and what prompted you to apply for your current committee roles?

Dr. Amith Skandhan
When I did my residency and chief residency at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Mercy, I was fascinated by my faculty hospitalists – they seemed to have mastered a balance of managing acute, high intensity care with a lifestyle that encouraged exploring personal hobbies. But as I started my new role as a hospitalist at Southeast Alabama Medical Center, I discovered nuances to the profession that I had not seen during my graduate medical education.

There were many things that were not sufficiently taught during clinical training that were required in my day-to-day practice, like clinical documentation improvement, practice management, billing, coding, and so forth. I also quickly understood how vast and dynamic hospital medicine really was. While looking for an outlet to voice my questions, concerns, and curiosity, I decided to join SHM, which has helped me find and apply the techniques I’d been looking for to further my career as a hospitalist.

I’m now fortunate to be a part of SHM’s national committees, which involve hospitalists of various backgrounds and experiences, who work together to improve the overall quality of inpatient medicine. I currently serve on the Performance Reporting Measurement Committee and the Annual Conference Committee. My interests in reviewing the ever-evolving policies of health care made me apply to be a part of the Performance Reporting Measurement Committee. We work very closely with the Public Policy Committee, analyzing written policies and subsequently offering our recommendations. It’s been fulfilling to be a part of a committee that works towards developing policies that support a good quality of care on such a large scale.

My penchant for organizing events and bringing people together based on common ground led me to apply for the Annual Conference Committee. We meet every week to discuss various topics, choose and invite speakers, and help organize the entire event, which will host close to 5,000 hospitalists later this year. It has made me appreciate being a member of an organization that provides hospitalists with opportunities for education and growth. I’m hopeful that the attendees next year will find the conference to be a worthwhile experience!
 

As the president of SHM’s Wiregrass Chapter, how has the chapter grown since its establishment in May 2015?

Our chapter is based in Dothan, a small, rural Alabama town where Southeast Alabama Medical Center is located. The chapter covers the counties of lower Alabama and the panhandle of Florida. We named the chapter after a special species of grass that grows in this region.

When we started the chapter, our goal was to bring the best and brightest of hospital medicine to our region to give talks on hot topics in the field and also to use their expertise to guide inpatient care in our hospital system. We aggressively marketed the events to bring in large crowds of medical professionals, and we consistently average around 70-80 attendees in our meetings. Bringing in leaders from the field helped create an atmosphere of learning and inspired us to grow and develop our hospitalist program. We now closely work with hospital medicine groups in surrounding rural areas toward improving inpatient hospital care.

During these past years, we also realized that, for the further growth of our chapter, we would need to nurture an interest in hospital medicine among future generations of doctors, and this realization led to the creation of our medical student and resident wing. So far, the students have been very enthusiastic about participating in SHM-related events, and I hope that continues. We also developed a mentor-mentee program, in which we paired selected medical students with hospitalists to help guide future careers in acute care medicine. This year, we have also been helping the hospital medicine division at Southeast Alabama Medical Center create a clinical research track for medical students. To that end, we have just completed our second annual poster competition where we presented around 50 posters in the areas of clinical vignettes, quality improvement, and original research.

In addition, the chapter is very active with community activities. We took notice of the fact that many of our patients and community members were unaware of what hospitalists did because they could not understand how our work was different from that of primary care physicians. Our members have therefore participated in TV, radio, and newspaper interviews to help elucidate the role of hospitalists in patient care. We have also periodically visited primary care physician offices, nursing homes, senior citizen groups, and cancer support groups to educate these patients on various facets of health care and how hospitalists influence these areas.

In 2014, we organized a “walk with a hospitalist” event, for which we set up a half-mile “admission to discharge” scenario explaining the role of hospitalists and other departments involved in patient care. This year, in hopes of improving patient literacy in our region, we held a “shop with a doc” event, where the Southeast Alabama Medical Center hospitalists teamed up with dietitians and taught patients how food and lifestyle influenced their chronic medical illnesses. This was followed by physicians and dietitians shopping with patients in the grocery store, educating them on healthy choices and label reading.

We’re incredibly grateful for the support that we’ve received from our medical and patient communities; they’ve been critical in helping our chapter grow as much as it has, and they motivate us to work harder and do more with the chapter. We were honored to receive the SHM’s Rising Star Award at the Hospital Medicine 2017 conference in Las Vegas. We never thought that our little chapter in the American countryside would be chosen, but we’re very thankful to have our efforts recognized on the national stage!
 

 

 

Which SHM conferences have you attended? Tell TH about your most memorable highlights or takeaways.

When I started out as a hospitalist in 2014, I decided to attend the annual conference in Las Vegas, and I can honestly say that conference changed the course of my career. I can still remember listening to the opening speech and realizing that I was surrounded by more than 3,000 hospitalists who understood the power we had to influence inpatient care. I’ve attended all the national conferences since then and am grateful that I now get to help organize the Hospital Medicine 2018 annual conference, also known as HM18.

I had been working to find a way to improve documentation within my group, as well as change the culture and perception towards billing and coding practices, which prompted me to attend the Quality and Safety Educators Academy. During one of the problem-solving sessions, I explained the challenges that I faced to my conference group. The exercise required me to explain the problem at hand, and the players of my group then discussed their thoughts while I took notes. It was a fantastic experience, as the participants at my table offered strong solutions to my problems within a matter of minutes. Their advice led to meaningful changes in our group’s hospital documentation practices, and in turn, I’ve been promoted to physician advisor in Southeast Alabama Medical Center.

After such a great experience at Quality and Safety Educators Academy, I went on to attend SHM’s Leadership Academy, where I had the opportunity to meet some of the top leaders and pioneers in the field of hospital medicine. It’s empowering to be mentored by the very people you look up to and aspire to be like. Not only was I able to bring ideas home to my institution, but I was able to reflect and improve my own professional and personal growth. I’m happy to say that I’ve completed all three levels of Leadership Academy.

As I’ve become involved with the medical student and residency programs at my medical center, I recently attended the Academic Hospitalist Academy to help my transition into academic hospital medicine. Meeting and spending time with the faculty at Academic Hospitalist Academy made me further realize the roles that academic hospitalists play in the education of future physicians, emphasizing the idea that we can all be champions in quality and patient safety.

If you’re looking to advance your career as a hospitalist, take advantage of the conferences that SHM offers. I’ve gained so much from each experience, and I’m looking forward to returning to these conferences as a potential facilitator, in hopes of offering what I’ve learned to hospitalists looking to bring about change in their fields and careers.
 

What can attendees at HM18 expect to see in the area of career development, and how is this different than previous years?

Hospital medicine is only about 2 decades old, making it one of the youngest branches in medicine today. Given this fact, the Annual Conference Committee feels that it is paramount to focus on career development for both new and midcareer hospitalists alike.

One question that we wish to explore and answer this year is: “How do you make hospital medicine a life-long, enjoyable, and engaging career?” In turn, our committee has created several new additions to HM18. This includes a “Seasoning Your Career” track, which will provide ideas on how to advance in leadership, use emotional intelligence to achieve success, change your roles midcareer, and change hospitalist schedules. Another unique addition this year are career development workshops, which will aim to developing various aspects of a hospitalist’s career, such as working on leadership skills, refining presentation and communication skills, providing constructive feedback, promoting women in hospital medicine, preventing burnout, and turning ideas into clinical research. We also plan to incorporate an education track, which will focus on how hospitalists can expand their careers towards educational leadership.
 

Given your involvement in SHM at both the local and national levels, do you have any advice for young hospital medicine professionals looking to build their professional profiles?

I’ve frequently noticed that young hospitalists don’t realize the potential influence they hold within their own institutions or the power they have to elicit change in health care at the national level.

Though we don’t often admit it, some hospitalists feel like they are glorified residents, which definitely is not the case. As a provider on the front lines, you have the unique opportunity to implement changes pertaining to issues of cost, utilization of resources, process management, quality and patient safety, and bottlenecks in care, to name a few. These are issues that keep the administrators of your organization and leaders of hospital medicine up at night. Don’t sit around and complain about how things could be or should be; look toward creating change. Bring up possible solutions to these problems with your leaders. They will appreciate the effort, and hopefully together you can find ways to tackle these problems.

I will conclude by saying this: Hospital medicine is such a unique specialty in that it’s constantly evolving, and the pioneers of this field are still alive and practicing medicine. You can meet and interact with them during the SHM conferences and look to them as sources of inspiration or guidance. Meeting people you look up to and having them as your mentors can take you places.

 

 

Ms. Steele is the marketing communications specialist at the Society of Hospital Medicine.

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