Here are this week’s Accolades, a roundup of some of the honors and accomplishments of College of Medicine and UAMS faculty, staff, residents, fellows and students I’ve heard about recently.
Breakthroughs in Medicine
UAMS and Arkansas Children’s Research Institute clinician scientists were integral in two of the seven “breakthroughs that changed medicine in 2024” highlighted in a retrospective article published by National Geographic in December.
One of the breakthroughs was the development of “partial heart transplants” to provide lifesaving replacement heart valves that will continue to grow with infants who are born with faulty heart valves. Dr. Taufiek Konrad Rajab, Assistant Professor of Surgery in the Division of Pediatric Cardiovascular Surgery, pioneered the procedure. His collaborative work with coauthors at Duke University was published in JAMA last January.
National Geographic also noted the FDA approval of the drug Omalizumab to reduce the risks posed by life-threatening allergies to peanuts and other foods. The approval stemmed from the work of Dr. Stacie Jones and Dr. Amy Scurlock, Professors in the Department of Pediatrics Section of Allergy and Immunology, and their peers in the NIH Consortium for Food Allergy Research. The Omalizumab trial was published in the New England Journal of Medicine in February.
Congratulations to these outstanding faculty members and their research teams!
Distinguished Service Award
Congratulations to Dr. Alan Diekman, Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and Urology, on being selected to receive the 2025 Distinguished Service Award from the American Society of Andrology (ASA). Dr. Diekman is nationally recognized for his research into the molecular mechanisms of reproductive biology and has been active in the ASA for over two decades. He has served in numerous leadership roles and as ASA Treasurer coauthored the organization’s five-year strategic plan in 2021. He will be recognized in a March 30 ceremony at the annual conference of the ASA and the International Society of Andrology (ISA).
National Family Medicine Programs
A shout-out to Family and Preventive Medicine Assistant Professors Dr. Lauren Gibson-Oliver and Dr. Rachael Goodwin, who have been selected to participate in faculty development programs sponsored by the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine (STFM) in 2025. Dr. Gibson-Oliver, Program Director of the UAMS Little Rock Family Medicine Residency, will participate in the STFM Emerging Leaders Fellowship. Dr. Goodwin, who practices and teaches at the UAMS North Central Campus in Batesville, has been chosen for the STFM New Faculty Scholars Program.
Clinical Documentation Stars
Kudos to Dr. Katy Marino, Associate Professor in the Division of Thoracic Surgery, and Dr. Stephen King, Assistant Professor in Family and Preventive Medicine, who were recently named Chart Champion Stars by the UAMS Medical Center Clinical Documentation Integrity (CDI) team. Dr. Marino was recognized for her detailed, well-explained query responses that “vastly improve the DRG assignments for her patients and accuracy in coding and billing.” The CDI team noted that Dr. King frequently contacts coding specialists to provide polite, personable feedback and rationale for codes he is dropping, and that he helps to “improve understanding of the standpoints between the physicians and the coders.” Both were highlighted in the November-December Chart Champions newsletter.
Mobile Vision Screening Hits the Road
A shout-out to the Department of Ophthalmology on the successful rollout of the new GoVision mobile vision screening unit. As Professor and Chair Dr. Paul Phillips notes in this UAMS news story, the initiative is poised to significantly improve vision care access for children and adults across Arkansas. UAMS received a grant from the Blue & You Foundation for a Healthier Arkansas to support the program. Special thanks to resident Dr. Zain Chauhan, who was the lead grant writer, along with resident Dr. Abdel Elhusseiny and Professor Dr. Ahmed Sallam, for their work on the initiative. Kudos also to Shelli Madison, Sajida Chauhan, Megan Brown and Angela Johnson, and to residents Dr. Alex Kwok and Dr. Joshua Shin, who joined Dr. Chauhan for the inaugural screening event at the Huda Academy in Little Rock.
National Behavioral Neurology Leadership
Dr. Anthony Davis, Associate Professor of Neurology, has been elected Vice Chair of the Behavioral Neurology Section of the American Academy of Neurology (AAN). His two-year term will start in April. The election is a wonderful recognition of Dr. Davis’ national stature in the field. Kudos to Dr. Davis as well for his ongoing work to expand behavioral neurology and neuropsychiatry services at UAMS.
CMS Expert Panel Appointment
Dr. Stephen Foster, Assistant Professor in the Department of Family and Preventive Medicine (DFPM) at the UAMS Northeast Regional Campus in Jonesboro, has been selected to serve on the Technical Expert Panel (TEP) for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Electronic Clinical Quality Measure (eCQM) Development and Maintenance for Eligible Clinicians project. At UAMS, Dr. Foster also serves as Director of the DFPM Office of Digital Health and as Medical Director of Population Health for the Primary Care and Population Health Service Line. As a member of the TEP, he will join with other experts and stakeholders to provide input on the prioritization and development of eCQMs that support CMS’ quality program goals.
Editorial Board Appointment
Dr. Josh Kennedy, Associate Professor of Pediatrics in the Allergy and Immunology Section, will lend his expertise as a member of the Editorial Board of the Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology, the journal of the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology, for the next two years. Dr. Kennedy’s research has focused extensively on the intersection of asthma and the effects of the common cold virus, as well as SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. Last year, he received a $3.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to lead a five-year study to help clarify the viral and host factors that lead to severe disease in children infected with SARS-CoV-2.
Prestigious Echocardiography Accreditation
The UAMS Cardiac Noninvasive Laboratory has received accreditation for adult transesophageal, stress and transthoracic echocardiography from the Intersocietal Accreditation Commission (IAC). As Dr. Paul Mounsey, Professor and Director of the Cardiology Division in the Department of Internal Medicine, notes in this UAMS news story, the prestigious accreditation is a testament to the hard work, dedication and excellence of the entire cardiac noninvasive team. Special thanks to Dr. Srikanth Vallurupalli, Associate Professor and Medical Director, and Randi Booker, MHA, Manager and Technical Director of the lab.
Student Travel Award, Research Honor
Congratulations to second-year medical student Grace Turbyfill on her recent research honors, including a prestigious travel award from the Medical Toxicology Foundation to attend the American College of Medical Toxicology annual meeting in Vancouver, B.C., in April. She also has been invited to do an oral presentation at the Southern Society for Pediatric Research/Southern Regional Meeting in New Orleans in February. Her research, completed as part of our Pediatric Honors Program, focused on evaluating the impact of a simplified treatment regimen for acetaminophen toxicity. Dr. Erica Liebelt, Professor and Medical and Research Director for Pharmacology and Toxicology in the Section of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Pharmacology and Toxicology, is Grace’s program mentor.
Graduate School Celebrates Students and Mentors
The scientific achievements of students and contributions of their faculty mentors were in the spotlight at the recent UAMS Graduate School Winter Awards Reception. Outstanding Achievement Awards were presented to M.D./Ph.D. student Amie Brint and graduate students Katherine Deck, Christian Mitchell and Dakota Redling. Excellence in Mentoring Awards went to their mentors, respectively: Dr. Robert Griffin, Professor of Radiation Oncology; Dr. Shengyu Mu, Associate Professor of Pharmacology and Toxicology; Dr. Abdel Fouda, Assistant Professor of Pharmacology and Toxicology; and Dr. Kimberly Stephens, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics. Many other students received Achievement Awards or were recognized for other accomplishments, and several additional faculty members received Mentor Awards. Read more in the UAMS Newsroom.