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Hopkins Ranks Among Top 10 Hospitals in Respiratory Care Departments
The Johns Hopkins Respiratory Care Services will be profiled in the American Association for Respiratory Care’s, “AARC Times” periodical in November, 2008. Honored with a nomination as one of the top 10 Hospitals Respiratory Care Departments, the Respiratory Care Services department is an important member of a patient's clinical team, providing services from basic oxygen and medical gas delivery systems to complex activities such as the application of Inhaled Nitric Oxide, advanced mechanical ventilation and cardiopulmonary techniques such as Extra Corporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO). Join us in celebrating National Respiratory Care Week from October 19, 2008 - October 25, 2008. Full Story >>
ASA Meets to Launch Lifeline Campaign
For over a century, the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) has been a cornerstone for the medical practice of anesthesiology and a leader in improving patient care. The Society's achievements have made it an important voice in American medicine and the foremost advocate for patients who require anesthesia or relief from pain. The ASA Annual Meeting will take place this year in Orlando, Florida, October 18-22 and will feature more than 600 sessions and 1,770 scientific abstracts and almost 300 exhibits. Also the Society will launch the “Lifeline Campaign,” taking anesthesiologists into the spotlight as key members of the patient care team, focusing on how they make modern medicine possible. Full Story >>
Marking the Milestones and Growing Together
Celebrating significant service milestones with faculty and staff is always an eagerly anticipated fall event on the Johns Hopkins campus, but perhaps nowhere is this more true than in the Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine. Hopkins Anesthesiology employees were recently feted at a special luncheon for employees celebrating special employment year milestones, held during the annual Employee Recognition week. Full Story >>
True Leaders in Pain Management
Paul Christo, M.D., M.B.A., Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, and Director, Multidisciplinary Pain Fellowship and Pain Treatment Center, has been named as one of six new fellows of the Mayday Fund, a New York City-based foundation dedicated to alleviating the incidence, degree, and consequence of human physical pain. Established in 1992, the Mayday Fund is dedicated to further Shirley Steinman Katzenbach’s commitment to social and medical causes. Her special interest in the treatment of pain forms the core of the Fund’s mission. Full Story >>
Inaugural Issue of The Monitor
The first issue of the Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine newsletter, The Monitor, begins a new channel for celebrating the accomplishments and successes of the faculty, residents, fellows, nurses, and support staff. The summer newstand issue, also available in electronic format, highlights the department's broad scope and its achievements in education, clinical care, and research, as well as the impact on Johns Hopkins Medicine. Full Story >>
Pass It On: The Next Generation of Anesthesia Technicians
One of the many important roles that Dr. Michael Phelps enjoys as an Anesthesiology faculty member is that of welcoming the newest generation of Anesthesia Technicians for their Hopkins rotation. In part, his interest in this mentoring project stems from the fact that before he became a Johns Hopkins faculty member in the Department of Anesthesiology, Phelps began his career in medicine as a critical care technician. Now, as an anesthesiologist at one of the most prestigious academic medical centers in the country, he takes time out of a packed climical schedule to extend a warm welcome to the Anesthesia Technician program students from the Community College of Baltimore County. Full Story >>
Chief Resident Continues Leadership Tradition in Pain Medicine Field
The Johns Hopkins Anesthesiology Residency Program has a long tradition of training future health care leaders, and the current crop of residents is right on track. Chief Resident Dr. Matthew Crooks’ work with anesthesia residents now extends far past the walls of Johns Hopkins. In addition to being named one of the Departments’s two new Chief Residents, Crooks was recently honored with an appointment as the Resident Chair Elect of the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine (ASRA). In this new role he will work with residents from across the country, and in May 2009 he will take over as the new ASRA Resident Chair. Full Story >>Double Kudos for Pain Division
The Pain Division of Anesthesiology recently scored a major pain research "double hit" with the publication of two papers and editorial reviews in the same issue of Anesthesiology. Dr's. Steven Cohen and Robert Hurley's paper, titled "Randomized Placebo-controlled Study Evaluating Lateral Branch Radiofrequency Denervation for Sacroiliac Joint Pain" appears in the August 2008 issue. It was also the subject of an editorial by James P. Rathmell, M.D. titled "The Promise of an Effective Treatment for Sacroiliac-related Low Back Pain." The Cohen/Hurley paper was followed by a second paper by another Johns Hopkins Anesthesiology pain specialist team, Christopher L. Wu, M.D and colleague Shefali Agarwal, M.B.B.S., M.P.H. Full Story >>Green... Not Just For Scrubs Anymore
Anesthesiologist Jerry Stonemetz is one clinician in the Johns Hopkins Operating Rooms who has discovered first hand that taking the "green" path in healthcare can be a win-win proposal. In the past year, Stonemetz led a project based in the operating rooms whose goal was to separate recyclable trash from medical waste. As a result of these efforts, Hopkins has less medical waste to dispose of cutting down on over a million pounds of waste each year. Full Story >> Practicing on Plastic in Anesthesiology
Well-equipped operating rooms and Molly the plastic "Sim Baby" are all part of the $5 million dollar state-of-the-art Johns Hopkins Simulation Center where Hopkins trainers test future doctors in lifelike scenarios. Elizabeth “Betsy” Hunt, director of the new Simulation Center and assistant professor in anesthesiology and critical care, knows the critical task for her in the new center is to challenge medical students and residents to take chances. She cites a study that found that elite figure skaters who fall down on the ice more often outperform others because they are more likely to take risks. “They got to be the best because they pushed themselves,” Hunt says. Full Story >>Anesthesiology Airway Workshops Slated For New Simulation Center
The new Simulation Center in the Outpatient Center building will be the site of the Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Airway workshops on Monday afternoons from 4-6 p.m. beginning December 8th. The workshop format for anesthesiology residents will consist of a short didactic session followed by stations for difficult airway simulation, and mannequin practice of a variety of airway devices. Full Story >> |












