2020 Annual Report

Page 80

HOSPITAL MEDICINE The Division of Pediatric Hospital Medicine (PHM) provides top quality, family centered care for the hospitalized children of our region. Now spanning four inpatient sites, we emphasize an evidence-based approach, driven by best practice. We lead in educational excellence, as the primary teachers for medical students and residents in the inpatient pediatric setting, serving two medical schools, our own pediatric residency program, and three family medicine residency programs. As our young field evolved in 2019 into a formal subspecialty, we enjoyed our first year in 2020 as boardcertified pediatric hospitalists, with a 100 percent pass rate for our 12 faculty who sat for the first-ever PHM board exam. The field of PHM continues to grow and thrive, and at Connecticut Children’s, we help to shape that growth through our own academic scholarship. The year 2020 was unlike any other – for our division, for Connecticut Children’s, and for the world. As pediatric hospitalists, we led the front line charge against Covid-19 and the related diagnosis of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C). A second effect of the Covid-19 pandemic has been the explosion in behavioral health challenges for our society’s young people. Our division, in collaboration with our psychiatry and psychology colleagues, has been on the front lines of caring for these children when they require medical hospitalization. Amidst these new challenges, we continue to focus on our key areas of impact – clinical work, medical education, quality improvement, scholarly activity, and hospital leadership. On the clinical front, we again had our busiest year ever, despite the massive changes caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. Patient volume increased over the prior year, and has nearly doubled within the past five years. We continue to provide inpatient care in four locations — at our main campus in Hartford, in our 12-bed satellite unit in Waterbury, as well as within the inpatient units and newborn nurseries of Danbury and Norwalk hospitals. We have brought to these practice sites our own brand of care, with an emphasis on family centered rounds, clinical pathways, and coverage models that promote 80

ANNUAL ACADEMIC REPORT 2020

strong communication with our community partners. Our hospitalists now cover 100 percent of general pediatric inpatients in all of these locations. As a division, we are particularly proud of our clinical partnership with our advanced practice provider (APP) colleagues. The lead APP, Basia Adams, with a new doctor of nursing practice (DNP) degree in hand, was appointed in 2020 as co-director of the Advanced Practice Providers for all of Connecticut Children’s. This group has increased to over 180 members and remains an essential and valued part of our clinical work force. Christina Giudice, APRN, joined Cathy Sullivan, MD, to present nationally and in a regional grand rounds on the topic of somatic symptom disorders. Ms. Giudice joined Ilana Waynik, MD, in a national presentation on viral croup, and was also honored to receive the American Academy of Pediatrics PHM Travel Grant Award, one of just a few recipients nationally. We realize that fostering the talents of our APPs will help their growth while also benefiting Connecticut Children’s and the patients we serve.

Marta Neubauer, MD, assists that role, spearheading the highly regarded Netter medical student experience at the St. Mary’s unit in Waterbury. Our APP group has taken on a role to help educate the Netter students, and that experience has been a model of collaborative interdisciplinary education. Christine Skurkis, MD, continues in her prominent role as associate director of the pediatric residency program. She also has a new national role as chair of the curriculum learning group for the Association of Pediatric Program Directors. As a division, we continue to pursue a goal of establishing our first Pediatric Hospitalist Medicine Fellowship program, which Dr. McDermott would lead. She already leads in this area as a member of the National Council of Pediatric Hospital Medicine fellowship directors.

In the realm of medical education, we led the institution on many levels. The pediatric residents awarded Patricia Garcia, MD, the 2020 Milton Markowitz/Edwin Zalneraitis Award for Outstanding Contribution to House Staff Education and Career Development. PHM again enjoyed the greatest number of nominations for the 2020 Faculty Award for Excellence in Teaching. Drs. Joanne Crowley, Patricia Garcia and Allyson McDermott were all given that honor. Melanie Rudnick, MD, was runner-up for the Timothy N. Kelly Award for Excellence in Teaching Acute Care. PHM division members won the monthly McNeil Teaching Award from the pediatric residents more often than members of any other division. The honor went to Drs. McDermott, Rudnick, Garcia, Hayley Wolfgruber, and Hareem Park.

On the quality improvement front, the year was dominated by Covid-19, and we are proud that one of our own, Dr. Ilana Waynik, leveraged the strengths of our Clinical Pathways Program to help lead us all. She oversaw the rapid development of over 14 new Covid-19-related clinical pathways at Connecticut Children’s. These were invaluable in guiding us in daily patient, staff and family care. Ever-evolving policies and changing clinical approaches mandated the use of these standardized pathways to provide the highest level of care for our Covid-19 and MIS-C patients. For this incredible accomplishment, she shared with Grace Hong, APRN, the Physician’s Quality Cup Safety Award. Dr. Waynik is the first recipient of this award from our division. The Clinical Pathways Program continued to evolve in non-Covid-19 ways as well. We achieved a major milestone as the program moved to an Internet site. It has since received over 31,000 hits, as providers from all over the country and the world benefit from the 45 to 50 evidence-based clinical pathways. This development extends the impact of Connecticut Children’s far beyond our doors.

Members of the division led in numerous educational positions. Dr. Crowley continues as director of Undergraduate Pediatric Education for the University of Connecticut, assisted by Dr. McDermott in her new role as assistant inpatient clerkship director. Dr. Rudnick leads the Quinnipiac University Netter School of Medicine pediatric clerkship at Connecticut Children’s.

There were great academic strides in the past year, despite the inability to travel for our numerous national presentations. Multiple faculty members were able to deliver talks or lead workshops virtually at the national level for a number of organizations: Pediatric Academic Society, Pediatric Hospital Medicine, the Association of Pediatric Program Directors, the Council on Medical


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Office for Community Child Health

18min
pages 178-184

Office for Sponsored Programs

1min
pages 175-177

Undergraduate Medical Education

4min
page 169

Graduate Medical Education

32min
pages 158-168

Continuing Medical Education

4min
pages 156-157

Clinical Research

11min
pages 170-174

Academic Administration

2min
page 155

Radiology

8min
pages 149-154

Pathology & Laboratory Medicine

7min
pages 146-148

Obesity

4min
pages 142-145

Center for Global Health

10min
pages 138-141

Center for Airway, Voice & Swallowing

4min
pages 136-137

Asthma Center

3min
page 135

Plastic Surgery

5min
pages 130-134

Pediatric Urology

3min
pages 128-129

Pediatric Surgery

13min
pages 124-127

Pediatric Cardiovascular Surgery

3min
pages 122-123

Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery

6min
pages 119-121

Ophthalmology

5min
pages 114-115

Neurosurgery

7min
pages 111-113

Orthopaedic Surgery

7min
pages 116-118

Anesthesiology

3min
page 110

Pediatric Sedation

4min
pages 107-109

Psychology

8min
pages 102-104

Rheumatology

5min
pages 105-106

Pulmonology & Sleep Medicine

2min
page 101

Pediatric & Adolescent Gynecology

2min
page 100

Pain & Palliative Medicine

2min
pages 98-99

Neurology

5min
pages 96-97

Nephrology

3min
page 95

Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine

10min
pages 89-94

Infectious Diseases & Immunology

10min
pages 84-86

Medical Genetics

5min
pages 87-88

Hospital Medicine

8min
pages 80-83

Hematology–Oncology

11min
pages 76-79

General Pediatrics

5min
pages 74-75

Developmental & Rehabilitation Medicine

6min
pages 54-55

Endocrinology & Diabetes

20min
pages 66-73

Emergency Medicine

12min
pages 61-65

Digestive Diseases, Hepatology & Nutrition

9min
pages 56-58

Division of Excellence in Patient Safety & Clinical Quality

7min
pages 59-60

Critical Care

13min
pages 50-53

Community Pediatrics

6min
pages 47-49

Child Abuse Pediatrics

2min
page 46

Cardiology

12min
pages 39-42

Adolescent Medicine

2min
page 36

Child & Adolescent Psychiatry

7min
pages 43-45

Biomedical Informatics

3min
pages 37-38

Grants, Gifts & Awards

2min
pages 32-35

Christine Finck, MD, FACS

3min
pages 4-5

Faculty Achievements

10min
pages 27-31

Clinical Achievements

7min
pages 23-26
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