Congratulations to Michael LaMantia, MD, Assistant Professor of Medicine, who was named Junior Investigator of the Year by the UVM Medical Group (in a tie with Alissa Thomas, MD Assistant Professor of Neurological Science). The prize comes with a cash award to support Mike's research!
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
van Eeghen accepted to UVM Teaching Academy
Congratulations to Connie van Eeghen, DrPH, Assistant Professor of Medicine on her designation as a Member of the Teaching Academy at the Robert Larner, M.D. College of Medicine at the University of Vermont.
From their website:
The Teaching Academy sustains and supports an interdisciplinary community of educators who value the scholarship of teaching and learning while facilitating educator development; improve the efficiency and quality of medical education through collaboration and scholarship; and promote an academic environment that increases the value and impact of educators locally, regionally, and nationally.
- Ben Littenberg
From their website:
The Teaching Academy sustains and supports an interdisciplinary community of educators who value the scholarship of teaching and learning while facilitating educator development; improve the efficiency and quality of medical education through collaboration and scholarship; and promote an academic environment that increases the value and impact of educators locally, regionally, and nationally.
- Ben Littenberg
Friday, December 9, 2016
Clinical Research Oriented Workshop (CROW) Meeting: Dec 9, 2016
Present: Marianne Burke, Nancy Gell, Juvena Hitt, Kairn Kelley (phone), Ayodelle
LeBruin, Mike LaMantia, Liliane Savard, Adam Sprouse-Blum, Connie van Eeghen
Start Up: Little Kaia Oshita
Sprouse-Blum is a QT! Also, check out this Gawande commencement speech on
identifying and responding to pseudo-science: http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/the-mistrust-of-science
1.
Marianne Burke:
Update
a. Completed data
collection on study testing whether clinical evidence technology improves patient
skin problem outcomes in primary care. Marianne would like feedback on presentation
of results.
b. Design of the
study was discussed passionately: the inclusion of diagnoses that might not be
amenable to treatment may mask the actual effectiveness of the tool.
c. Possible follow
up study based on provider characteristics: baseline use of technology, use of
Visual Dx by the intervention arm, use of other technology by the control arm
d. What is the
story: in an information-rich environment, one resource is unlikely to make a
difference
i.
The story may be in the provider’s feedback re: technology
assessment, not in the PROs
e. Next step:
i.
Identify the questions that need to be answered next: establishing
a methodology for studying the value of health information resources
2.
Spring Semester
schedule:
No change; keep to Fridays, 2p – 3:15p.
Let Kairn, Marianne, or Connie know if this presents a problem for you.
3.
Next Workshop Meeting(s): Fridays, 2:00 p.m.
– 3:15 p.m., at Given
Courtyard South Level 4 until end of Dec.
a.
Dec 16: TBA
b.
Jan 6: Kairn
(no Connie, Marianne)
c.
Jan 13: CvE
manuscript review
d.
Future
topics:
a.
Juvena:
protocol development
b.
LaMantia:
predictors of successful R01 applications: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0155060
Atul Gawande's checklist for recognizing and responding to pseudo-science
Referenced at today's "lunch and learn" sponsored by Dr. Irwin as a thoughtful response to the prevalence of pseudo-science...
http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/the-mistrust-of-science
Enjoy!
http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/the-mistrust-of-science
Enjoy!
Friday, December 2, 2016
Clinical Research Oriented Workshop (CROW) Meeting: Dec 2, 2016
Present: Marianne Burke, Juvena Hitt, Kairn Kelley, Mike LaMantia, Ben
Littenberg, Gail Rose, Liliane Savard, Connie van Eeghen
Start Up: (Not sure… wasn’t there in
time!)
1.
Book Club:
Weapons of Mass Destruction, Cathy O’Neil
a. Well-supported
criticisms; not so well-supported solutions
b. Prescient, with
respect to the use of big data models and the experience of the past election
season
c. How does this
relate to our work?
i.
Identifying a group of people (e.g. high volume consumers of
alcohol) can be used by health care providers to aid those in need… and by
insurers to restrict coverage
d. Mediating
alternatives
i.
Require individual oath-taking/personal responsibility
ii.
Develop methods of identifying bias
iii.
Establish consequences to “crossing the line,” such as civil court
or class-action remedy
iv.
Re-engineer algorithms so that they are:
1. Transparent:
the features of the algorithm are packaged in a message that is delivered to
each case (person) whenever the algorithm is run, including how that case came
to be included in the algorithm
2. Feedback of
success/failure: study false positives, build in feedback either through the
algorithm or the system in which it is used
3. Does not
increase harm or decrease benefit, thereby intensifying the categorization that
again increases harm/decreases benefit
4. Not scaled
until tested
2.
Spring Semester
schedule:
No change; keep to Fridays, 2p – 3:15p.
Let Kairn, Marianne, or Connie know if this presents a problem for you.
3.
Next Workshop Meeting(s): Fridays, 2:00 p.m.
– 3:15 p.m., at Given
Courtyard South Level 4 until end of Dec.
a.
Dec 9:
Marianne’s data
b.
Dec 16:
Nancy Gell’s manuscript
c.
Jan 6: Kairn
(no Connie, Marianne)
d.
Jan 13: CvE
manuscript review
e.
Future
topics:
a.
Juvena:
protocol development
b.
LaMantia:
predictors of successful R01 applications: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0155060
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