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    The Hospitalist (Vol 18, Issue 4)

    en-usApril 11, 2014
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    About this Episode

    This month in our issue, we examine why hospitalists’ work experience and job skills make them naturals to join the executive ranks of hospital administration. Dr. Patrick Torcson, an internist and Chief Integration Officer at St. Tammany Parish Hospital in Covington, Louisiana, talks about why he joined the leadership track and his journey to the C-suite. Dr. Torcson says being able to think at a systems level, to put one’s ego aside, and to listen well are core qualities of good leadership, and that clinical credibility is the foundation of hospital medicine leadership. Also in this issue, we look at CMS’s again-delayed and controversial two-midnight rule, address the shortcomings of the designation “observation status” in our Policy Corner column, review the latest in clinical literature, and feature newly minted SHM President Burke Kealey’s first President’s Corner column on the social movement that is hospital medicine.

    Recent Episodes from The Hospitalist

    Is Medicare Fairly Penalizing Hospitals for 30-Day Readmissions?

    Is Medicare Fairly Penalizing Hospitals for 30-Day Readmissions?
    The social determinants of health are a root cause of readmissions in the most heavily readmitted patients, according to data analyzed in a recent study published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine. The lead author of that study, Marilyn Szekendi PhD, talks about the study, with Dr. Bradley Flansbaum weighing in on the difficulty of effecting a policy solution for a population without much political voice.

    Teaching Value-Based Care: A Med-Ed Perspective

    Teaching Value-Based Care: A Med-Ed Perspective
    Value-based healthcare has to start from the beginning of training to become foundational to medical practice. Dr. Wade Iams, Chief Resident at Vanderbilt UniversityDr. Christopher Moriates, Assistant Professor at UCSF, and Director of Implementation at Costs of Care, and Dr. Vineet Arora, associate professor of medicine at University of Chicago and Director of Education at Costs of Care, talk about getting value-based principles embedded in medical school curricula.
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