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More visible, systemic pediatric presence within SHM
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 improve the care of hospitalized patients.
This month, The Hospitalist is spotlighting Jeffrey Grill, MD, a professor in department of pediatrics, the chief of the division of pediatric hospital medicine at the University of Louisville (Ky.), and the director of Just for Kids Hospitalist Service at Norton Children’s Hospital in Louisville. Dr. Grill has been a member of the Pediatrics Committee since 2012, has been instrumental in leading the transition from committee to special interest group (SIG), and is on the Pediatric Hospital Medicine 2018 Planning Committee.
Why did you become a member of SHM?
After being in a general pediatrics practice for a few years, I saw a lot of value in and got a lot of support from working with other outpatient pediatricians and the American Academy of Pediatrics. When I left that outpatient practice to focus on hospital pediatrics 13 years ago, I needed to find people who knew a lot more than I did about inpatient work and an organization that could support my growth and development in this new role. Of course, SHM was the answer.
I knew there was a ton I could learn from the internists who had been doing this work a lot longer and senior pediatric hospitalists who could share their experiences. I found all of that, and more, and was honored to join the Pediatrics Committee in 2012 to help serve the community that’s helped me so much.
During your time on the Pediatrics Committee, what goals were accomplished?
Over the years, this great committee has been very active at the direction of some fantastic leaders. We have had the privilege and responsibility to advise the SHM Board on pediatric issues and concerns, and we’ve developed some interesting pediatric-specific educational content in areas such as quality and safe handoffs. We’ve worked on the Choosing Wisely campaign and are now in the process of updating the Pediatric Hospital Medicine Core Competencies.
Each year we develop the content for the Pediatric Track of the SHM annual conference, and for several years, I was also on the Annual Conference Committee, which was a fantastic opportunity to bring the pediatric world to the broader work of SHM.
The Pediatrics Committee is transitioning from a committee to a Pediatric Special Interest Group. What can members look forward to in this transition?
I was asked to lead the subcommittee that is working on the SIG transition, and I must say, I am excited! You know, as great as the Pediatrics Committee is, it’s still only 15-20 people. And there are opportunities for pediatric hospitalists to join other SHM committees, but even at that, the footprint of active, engaged pediatric hospitalists within SHM is fairly small. The transition to a much more open-ended pediatric hospitalist SIG will allow many more hospitalists who take care of children to become involved. That’s more people, from more places, with more perspectives and ideas. It’s more energy, more collaboration, and hopefully, in the long run, a more visible and systemic pediatric presence within SHM.
Sure, there are questions and a few concerns, and I’m not sure all the details have been quite worked out, but in the big picture, I think it’s good for pediatric hospital medicine and good for SHM. Stay tuned as the process develops, but I think SHM members are going to see the new opportunity to get involved directly in SIG projects and goals, collaborate with more pediatric hospitalists, and see some real dynamic and forward-thinking leadership in the SIG executive council ... and opportunities to be on that Executive Council in a transparent, collegial way.
What were your main takeaways from Pediatric Hospital Medicine 2017? What can attendees expect at PHM 2018?
The annual Pediatric Hospital Medicine (PHM) meeting is always a bit of a whirlwind and our meeting in Nashville in 2017, hosted by SHM and our very own board member, Kris Rehm, MD, SFHM, was no different. There is always so much to experience and a diversity of offerings, which is really representative of how broad and rapidly growing our field is.
Of course, the “Top Articles in PHM” review is always popular and well received, and the poster and platform research sessions really show how far PHM has come and how much incredibly detailed and diligent work is being done to advance it further. There were some particularly thought-provoking plenary sessions last year on evidence-based health policy challenges and how some things we take as PHM dogma might not even be true! Left us all scratching our heads a bit. The final plenary on magic and pediatrics was inspiring and hilarious.
As far as PHM 2018, I suppose for full disclosure I should mention that I’m on the planning committee, so of course it’s going to be awesome! We really are putting together a fantastic experience. We had so many high-quality submissions for workshops, clinical sessions, research – truly spanning the whole range of PHM work. Whatever you’re coming to learn about, you’ll find it. We have some tremendously gifted plenary speakers lined up; some are sure to inspire, some will make you smile with pride about being a hospitalist, and at least one will almost certainly crack you up. We’ve shortened the length of many of the workshops to allow attendees to have more experiences while making sure the content is still meaningful. There will be several opportunities to mentor and be mentored in a comfortable, casual setting. I could go on and on, but if you take care of kids, come to Atlanta and see for yourself in July!
Do you have any advice for early-stage pediatric hospitalists looking to advance their careers?
This is an exciting time to be a pediatric hospitalist. Like it or hate it, subspecialty designation in PHM is around the corner, the new SHM pediatric SIG is going to open up a new era of opportunities, research in the field is gathering tremendous momentum, and fellowship training is only going to fuel that.
But PHM is still so far from becoming a single, one-size-fits-all path. There is still a huge range of practice locations, settings, responsibilities, and challenges. I tell my junior folks: “Put yourself out there. Try some things. Try a lot of things. If you have opportunities to practice in a few different settings, try it. If there are learners, teach. Join a research or quality improvement group. Go to some big meetings; talk to 50 new people. If you hear someone give a great talk that gets you fired up about something you have a passion for, stick around, go talk with them; they get it, they were you once, and probably not even that long ago. Throw your hat in a ring and help out with a project. It might turn out to not be your ‘thing,’ but it might lead you to your ‘thing.’ Or not, but you’ll come away with some experience and two new friends.”
That’s what makes this journey fun. There is no goal, no endgame. It’s all about the journey and the joy you find in the ride.
Ms. Steele is a marketing communications specialist at the Society of Hospital Medicine.
More visible, systemic pediatric presence within SHM
More visible, systemic pediatric presence within SHM
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 improve the care of hospitalized patients.
This month, The Hospitalist is spotlighting Jeffrey Grill, MD, a professor in department of pediatrics, the chief of the division of pediatric hospital medicine at the University of Louisville (Ky.), and the director of Just for Kids Hospitalist Service at Norton Children’s Hospital in Louisville. Dr. Grill has been a member of the Pediatrics Committee since 2012, has been instrumental in leading the transition from committee to special interest group (SIG), and is on the Pediatric Hospital Medicine 2018 Planning Committee.
Why did you become a member of SHM?
After being in a general pediatrics practice for a few years, I saw a lot of value in and got a lot of support from working with other outpatient pediatricians and the American Academy of Pediatrics. When I left that outpatient practice to focus on hospital pediatrics 13 years ago, I needed to find people who knew a lot more than I did about inpatient work and an organization that could support my growth and development in this new role. Of course, SHM was the answer.
I knew there was a ton I could learn from the internists who had been doing this work a lot longer and senior pediatric hospitalists who could share their experiences. I found all of that, and more, and was honored to join the Pediatrics Committee in 2012 to help serve the community that’s helped me so much.
During your time on the Pediatrics Committee, what goals were accomplished?
Over the years, this great committee has been very active at the direction of some fantastic leaders. We have had the privilege and responsibility to advise the SHM Board on pediatric issues and concerns, and we’ve developed some interesting pediatric-specific educational content in areas such as quality and safe handoffs. We’ve worked on the Choosing Wisely campaign and are now in the process of updating the Pediatric Hospital Medicine Core Competencies.
Each year we develop the content for the Pediatric Track of the SHM annual conference, and for several years, I was also on the Annual Conference Committee, which was a fantastic opportunity to bring the pediatric world to the broader work of SHM.
The Pediatrics Committee is transitioning from a committee to a Pediatric Special Interest Group. What can members look forward to in this transition?
I was asked to lead the subcommittee that is working on the SIG transition, and I must say, I am excited! You know, as great as the Pediatrics Committee is, it’s still only 15-20 people. And there are opportunities for pediatric hospitalists to join other SHM committees, but even at that, the footprint of active, engaged pediatric hospitalists within SHM is fairly small. The transition to a much more open-ended pediatric hospitalist SIG will allow many more hospitalists who take care of children to become involved. That’s more people, from more places, with more perspectives and ideas. It’s more energy, more collaboration, and hopefully, in the long run, a more visible and systemic pediatric presence within SHM.
Sure, there are questions and a few concerns, and I’m not sure all the details have been quite worked out, but in the big picture, I think it’s good for pediatric hospital medicine and good for SHM. Stay tuned as the process develops, but I think SHM members are going to see the new opportunity to get involved directly in SIG projects and goals, collaborate with more pediatric hospitalists, and see some real dynamic and forward-thinking leadership in the SIG executive council ... and opportunities to be on that Executive Council in a transparent, collegial way.
What were your main takeaways from Pediatric Hospital Medicine 2017? What can attendees expect at PHM 2018?
The annual Pediatric Hospital Medicine (PHM) meeting is always a bit of a whirlwind and our meeting in Nashville in 2017, hosted by SHM and our very own board member, Kris Rehm, MD, SFHM, was no different. There is always so much to experience and a diversity of offerings, which is really representative of how broad and rapidly growing our field is.
Of course, the “Top Articles in PHM” review is always popular and well received, and the poster and platform research sessions really show how far PHM has come and how much incredibly detailed and diligent work is being done to advance it further. There were some particularly thought-provoking plenary sessions last year on evidence-based health policy challenges and how some things we take as PHM dogma might not even be true! Left us all scratching our heads a bit. The final plenary on magic and pediatrics was inspiring and hilarious.
As far as PHM 2018, I suppose for full disclosure I should mention that I’m on the planning committee, so of course it’s going to be awesome! We really are putting together a fantastic experience. We had so many high-quality submissions for workshops, clinical sessions, research – truly spanning the whole range of PHM work. Whatever you’re coming to learn about, you’ll find it. We have some tremendously gifted plenary speakers lined up; some are sure to inspire, some will make you smile with pride about being a hospitalist, and at least one will almost certainly crack you up. We’ve shortened the length of many of the workshops to allow attendees to have more experiences while making sure the content is still meaningful. There will be several opportunities to mentor and be mentored in a comfortable, casual setting. I could go on and on, but if you take care of kids, come to Atlanta and see for yourself in July!
Do you have any advice for early-stage pediatric hospitalists looking to advance their careers?
This is an exciting time to be a pediatric hospitalist. Like it or hate it, subspecialty designation in PHM is around the corner, the new SHM pediatric SIG is going to open up a new era of opportunities, research in the field is gathering tremendous momentum, and fellowship training is only going to fuel that.
But PHM is still so far from becoming a single, one-size-fits-all path. There is still a huge range of practice locations, settings, responsibilities, and challenges. I tell my junior folks: “Put yourself out there. Try some things. Try a lot of things. If you have opportunities to practice in a few different settings, try it. If there are learners, teach. Join a research or quality improvement group. Go to some big meetings; talk to 50 new people. If you hear someone give a great talk that gets you fired up about something you have a passion for, stick around, go talk with them; they get it, they were you once, and probably not even that long ago. Throw your hat in a ring and help out with a project. It might turn out to not be your ‘thing,’ but it might lead you to your ‘thing.’ Or not, but you’ll come away with some experience and two new friends.”
That’s what makes this journey fun. There is no goal, no endgame. It’s all about the journey and the joy you find in the ride.
Ms. Steele is a 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 improve the care of hospitalized patients.
This month, The Hospitalist is spotlighting Jeffrey Grill, MD, a professor in department of pediatrics, the chief of the division of pediatric hospital medicine at the University of Louisville (Ky.), and the director of Just for Kids Hospitalist Service at Norton Children’s Hospital in Louisville. Dr. Grill has been a member of the Pediatrics Committee since 2012, has been instrumental in leading the transition from committee to special interest group (SIG), and is on the Pediatric Hospital Medicine 2018 Planning Committee.
Why did you become a member of SHM?
After being in a general pediatrics practice for a few years, I saw a lot of value in and got a lot of support from working with other outpatient pediatricians and the American Academy of Pediatrics. When I left that outpatient practice to focus on hospital pediatrics 13 years ago, I needed to find people who knew a lot more than I did about inpatient work and an organization that could support my growth and development in this new role. Of course, SHM was the answer.
I knew there was a ton I could learn from the internists who had been doing this work a lot longer and senior pediatric hospitalists who could share their experiences. I found all of that, and more, and was honored to join the Pediatrics Committee in 2012 to help serve the community that’s helped me so much.
During your time on the Pediatrics Committee, what goals were accomplished?
Over the years, this great committee has been very active at the direction of some fantastic leaders. We have had the privilege and responsibility to advise the SHM Board on pediatric issues and concerns, and we’ve developed some interesting pediatric-specific educational content in areas such as quality and safe handoffs. We’ve worked on the Choosing Wisely campaign and are now in the process of updating the Pediatric Hospital Medicine Core Competencies.
Each year we develop the content for the Pediatric Track of the SHM annual conference, and for several years, I was also on the Annual Conference Committee, which was a fantastic opportunity to bring the pediatric world to the broader work of SHM.
The Pediatrics Committee is transitioning from a committee to a Pediatric Special Interest Group. What can members look forward to in this transition?
I was asked to lead the subcommittee that is working on the SIG transition, and I must say, I am excited! You know, as great as the Pediatrics Committee is, it’s still only 15-20 people. And there are opportunities for pediatric hospitalists to join other SHM committees, but even at that, the footprint of active, engaged pediatric hospitalists within SHM is fairly small. The transition to a much more open-ended pediatric hospitalist SIG will allow many more hospitalists who take care of children to become involved. That’s more people, from more places, with more perspectives and ideas. It’s more energy, more collaboration, and hopefully, in the long run, a more visible and systemic pediatric presence within SHM.
Sure, there are questions and a few concerns, and I’m not sure all the details have been quite worked out, but in the big picture, I think it’s good for pediatric hospital medicine and good for SHM. Stay tuned as the process develops, but I think SHM members are going to see the new opportunity to get involved directly in SIG projects and goals, collaborate with more pediatric hospitalists, and see some real dynamic and forward-thinking leadership in the SIG executive council ... and opportunities to be on that Executive Council in a transparent, collegial way.
What were your main takeaways from Pediatric Hospital Medicine 2017? What can attendees expect at PHM 2018?
The annual Pediatric Hospital Medicine (PHM) meeting is always a bit of a whirlwind and our meeting in Nashville in 2017, hosted by SHM and our very own board member, Kris Rehm, MD, SFHM, was no different. There is always so much to experience and a diversity of offerings, which is really representative of how broad and rapidly growing our field is.
Of course, the “Top Articles in PHM” review is always popular and well received, and the poster and platform research sessions really show how far PHM has come and how much incredibly detailed and diligent work is being done to advance it further. There were some particularly thought-provoking plenary sessions last year on evidence-based health policy challenges and how some things we take as PHM dogma might not even be true! Left us all scratching our heads a bit. The final plenary on magic and pediatrics was inspiring and hilarious.
As far as PHM 2018, I suppose for full disclosure I should mention that I’m on the planning committee, so of course it’s going to be awesome! We really are putting together a fantastic experience. We had so many high-quality submissions for workshops, clinical sessions, research – truly spanning the whole range of PHM work. Whatever you’re coming to learn about, you’ll find it. We have some tremendously gifted plenary speakers lined up; some are sure to inspire, some will make you smile with pride about being a hospitalist, and at least one will almost certainly crack you up. We’ve shortened the length of many of the workshops to allow attendees to have more experiences while making sure the content is still meaningful. There will be several opportunities to mentor and be mentored in a comfortable, casual setting. I could go on and on, but if you take care of kids, come to Atlanta and see for yourself in July!
Do you have any advice for early-stage pediatric hospitalists looking to advance their careers?
This is an exciting time to be a pediatric hospitalist. Like it or hate it, subspecialty designation in PHM is around the corner, the new SHM pediatric SIG is going to open up a new era of opportunities, research in the field is gathering tremendous momentum, and fellowship training is only going to fuel that.
But PHM is still so far from becoming a single, one-size-fits-all path. There is still a huge range of practice locations, settings, responsibilities, and challenges. I tell my junior folks: “Put yourself out there. Try some things. Try a lot of things. If you have opportunities to practice in a few different settings, try it. If there are learners, teach. Join a research or quality improvement group. Go to some big meetings; talk to 50 new people. If you hear someone give a great talk that gets you fired up about something you have a passion for, stick around, go talk with them; they get it, they were you once, and probably not even that long ago. Throw your hat in a ring and help out with a project. It might turn out to not be your ‘thing,’ but it might lead you to your ‘thing.’ Or not, but you’ll come away with some experience and two new friends.”
That’s what makes this journey fun. There is no goal, no endgame. It’s all about the journey and the joy you find in the ride.
Ms. Steele is a marketing communications specialist at the Society of Hospital Medicine.