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  1. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
  2. College of Medicine
  3. Accolades
  4. Page 12

Accolades

Accolades – May 18, 2022

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!

Jones Eye Investitures
Congratulations to three exemplary faculty colleagues in the Department of Ophthalmology and Harvey & Bernice Jones Eye Institute – Dr. Ahmed Sallam, Dr. John Pemberton, and Dr. Paul Phillips – on their investitures in endowed chairs at UAMS yesterday.

Dr. Sallam, Professor, Director of Uveitis Services and Director of the Ophthalmology Residency Program, was invested in the John W. Nutt Chair in Ophthalmology. A faculty member since 2016, Dr. Sallam specializes in the management of uveitis and retinal care.

Dr. Pemberton, Professor, was invested in the Stella Boyle Smith/Gissur J. Petursson, M.D., Chair in Ophthalmology. A faculty member since 2011, Dr. Pemberton specializes in plastic surgery of the eyelids, orbital masses, orbital reconstruction, tear drainage repair and other surgeries of the structures around the eye.

Dr. Phillips, Professor, Chair of Ophthalmology and Director of the Jones Eye Institute, was invested in the Pat Walker Chair in Ophthalmology. A faculty member since 1997, Dr. Phillips has led UAMS’ outstanding programs in Ophthalmology since January 2020. He directed Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus services prior to assuming his current leadership roles. Dr. Phillips previously held the Smith/Petursson Endowed Chair.

Click here for the investiture program or here to watch the video recording of the event.

Disparities in Patients Over 80
A shout-out to graduating senior Anna Blach along with Department of Geriatrics Research Associate Amanda Pangle, Professor Dr. Gohar Azhar and Professor and Chair Dr. Jeanne Wei on their new article in Gerontology & Geriatric Medicine. The team identified disparities in the prevalence and distribution of common co-morbid conditions including hypertension, dyslipidemia, dementia and diabetes mellitus in heart failure patients over the age of 80 who live in rural settings. The study highlighted the importance of making extra efforts to engage older African American patients in seeking health care, and to reduce barriers that impede access to resources and clinical care in underserved areas.  

Drug Take Back Day Success
Here’s more great work from the Department of Geriatrics and Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging Team, which partnered with the UAMS Police Department on the recent Drug Take Back Day. UAMS came in sixth among law enforcement agencies across the state, topping some sizable cities in the amount of unused and expired medications that were collected. In the Institute on Aging, the state- and federally supported Opioid Prevention for Aging and Longevity (OPAL) group led the effort. I join with Dr. Jeanne Wei in thanking Patricia Savary, Amanda Pangle, Naomi Armstrong, Dr. Regina Gibson and Dr. Gohar Azhar for their work on the initiative. 

Dominant Force at Conference
Department of Ophthalmology and Harvey & Bernice Jones Eye Institute trainees were a dominant force at the recent American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., with nine residents and others presenting 10 projects. Congratulations to the residents: Drs. Muhammad Shamim, Michalis Georgiou, Aric Clegg, Ahmed Shakarchi, Abdelrahman Elhusseiny, Zia Siddiqui, Heather Broyles, Sayena Jabbehdari and Philip Dockery; along with medical student Zain Chauhan; ­­­­­­Reem ElSheikh; and Dr. Ahmed Sallam, Professor and Residency Program Director. Read more about the presentations here.

Well Represented
UAMS and Arkansas Children’s were well represented at national and international conferences this month, with the Division of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology presenting at the American Society for Pediatric Hematology/Oncology (ASPHO) meeting in Pittsburgh, and the Vascular Anomalies team presenting at the International Society for the Study of Vascular Anomalies (ISSVA) in Vancouver, British Columbia. Also at the ASPHO conference, Professor Dr. Shelley Crary was elected Chair of the Research Working Group for Vascular Anomalies. She also sits on the Conference Planning Committee. Assistant Professor Dr. Joana Mack was appointed to the Training Committee and was voted Vice-Chair of the Education Working Group for Vascular Anomalies. Click here to learn more about the many presentations and UAMS contributors.

Caring for the Underserved
Kudos to graduating senior Taylor Winn and junior Manasa Veluvolu for their leadership and hard work this past semester on four pop-up clinics for underserved residents in Southwest Little Rock. Taylor and Manasa received a grant from the Pulaski County Medical Society (PCMS) for the clinics that were held at St. Andrew’s United Methodist Church on Baseline Road. UAMS 12th Street Health and Wellness Center student volunteers, along with UAMS vaccination team members, provided health screenings, COVID vaccinations and medical care. This important work will continue next year thanks to a follow-up grant awarded by PCMS to Manasa. I join with Dr. Elizabeth Gath, 12th Street Medical Director, in thanking Manasa, Taylor and all of the volunteers for this initiative. Well done!

Transfusion & Trauma Teamwork
After a year of interdisciplinary planning, last week the UAMS Trauma Team began administering whole blood for patients with massive bleeding from severe trauma, rather than utilizing component blood products. The switch is driven by experience gained by the U.S. military. The Trauma Program has partnered with the UAMS Transfusion Services and the Oklahoma Blood Institute to bring this life-saving initiative to our trauma patients in Arkansas. Kudos to all. 

Lung Cancer Milestone
In yet another example of interdisciplinary teamwork and clinical and technological advancement at UAMS, a patient was successfully diagnosed and received a robotically performed lung lobectomy while undergoing anesthesia a single time last week. The case highlights excellent work on part of our teams in Primary Care, Low-dose CT, Interventional Pulmonology and Thoracic Surgery. I join with Dr. Ron Robertson, Professor and Chair of Surgery, in thanking all who contributed to this success story. This type of case management, along with advancements in our robotic surgery programs and the Lung Cancer screening bus scheduled to roll out across Arkansas this fall, are transforming lung cancer treatment for our state!

Cardiovascular Insights
Dr. J.L. Mehta
, Distinguished Professor of Internal Medicine, Physiology and Cell Biology and Pharmacology and Toxicology, and colleagues have published two recent papers. Internal Medicine resident Dr. Vignesh Chidambaram is first author and Cardiovascular Diseases fellow Dr. Dinesh Voruganti is a coauthor with Dr. Mehta on “Association of Lipid Levels with COVID-19 Infection, Disease Severity and Mortality: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis,” published in Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine. Internal Medicine resident Dr. Tanya Sharma is first author with Dr. Mehta on “LOX-1: Implications in Atherosclerosis and Myocardial Ischemia,” published in EXCLI Journal.

Emergency Medicine Showcased at SAEM
The expertise and scholarly work of Emergency Medicine faculty and residents was showcased at the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine – the largest and most prestigious academic conference in the field – in New Orleans last week. Click here for an overview of the contributions of faculty members Drs. Meredith Von Dohlen, Lauren Evans, Meryll Bouldin, Jason Arthur and Carly Eastin; second-year resident Dr. Ryan Waters, and, on the lighter side, the best costumes honor in the SonoGames ultrasound competition for first-year residents Drs. Paige Dailey, Anjali Patel, Jordan Takasugi and Jessica Shenoi. (Check out “The Big Squeezy” homage to New Orleans and a staple of ultrasound transmission!)

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – May 11, 2022

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!

New Era for Heart Care
UAMS’ first recipient of a Left Ventricular Assist Device (LVAD) recently headed home to a far better quality of life thanks to the dedication of many team members in the new Heart Restoration Program. As Chancellor Dr. Cam Patterson said in a news story, this signals a new era for UAMS, including heart transplants in the near future. Dr. Paul Mounsey, Director of the UAMS Health Heart Center and the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine; Dr. Jay Bhama, Surgical Director of the Heart Center, Director of the Heart Restoration Program and Chief of the Division of Cardiovascular Surgery; along with Dr. Kalai Sivakumar, Medical Director of Advanced Heart Failure, have been instrumental in ushering in this new era. As for the first LVAD patient, Mr. Layman Roseby looks forward to the little things in life, like fishing with his two dogs in tow.  

National Mentoring Award
Congratulations to Dr. Alan Diekman, Professor in the departments of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and Urology, who will receive the Distinguished Mentor Award from the American Urological Association and Urology Care Foundation at the AUA annual meeting in New Orleans on Saturday. The award recognizes Dr. Diekman for his work with medical students in the area of urology research and his long track record of providing an excellent training environment for early-career investigators. As many of you know, Dr. Diekman is also highly regarded at UAMS for his teaching. At Honors Convocation this month, he will receive his ninth consecutive and 10th overall Golden Apple Award from freshmen. In 2020, he received the COM Master Teacher Award.

NHLBI Committee Appointment
Dr. Paula Roberson, Professor and Chair of the Department of Biostatistics, will share her expertise in the design, management and data analysis of clinical trials as a member of the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) Single-Site and Pilot Clinical Trials Study Section. Her three-year term on the NIH peer-review committee will start July 1. Congratulations!

International Contributions
Dr. Emmanouil Giorgakis
, Assistant Professor in the Division of Transplant Surgery, has been appointed by the International Liver Transplantation Society (ILTS) Executive Committee to a three-year term on the ILTS Equality, Diversity & Inclusion Committee. The appointment is just the latest example of Dr. Giorgakis’ contributions to scholarly work globally. He also currently serves as guest associate editor for Transplant International, the official journal of the European Society for Organ Transplantation, on the special issue “Organ Reconditioning and Machine Perfusion in Transplantation,” and as an invited editor for Frontiers in Public Health on the Health Economics topic “Assessing the Value and Cost of Organ Donation and Transplantation.”

Beyond End-of-Life Care
UAMS researchers led by Dr. Hanna Jensen, Assistant Professor in the departments of Surgery and Radiology, and with senior medical student John House as first author, have published an article, “the Impact of Palliative Medicine Consultation on Readmission Rates and Hospital Costs in Surgical Patients Requiring Prolonged Mechanical Ventilation,” in the Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety. Dr. Jensen and John, along with Dr. Kevin Sexton and Dr. Howard Corwin, also discussed the broader team’s findings in a blog post for the Joint Commission. While palliative care has traditionally been underutilized in surgery, the team identified significant benefits of palliative care for critically ill surgical patients, including lower hospital costs and readmission rates.

Dermatology Conference
Department of Dermatology faculty and residents and several medical students contributed extensively to the recent Arkansas Dermatological Society Annual meeting. Professor Dr. Jay Kincannon moderated case presentations by medical students Sophia Ly, Nikhil Nair, Zainab Atiq, Alyson McKinnon, Devea De and Delice Kayishunge, who were coached and mentored by residents Drs. Jon Rick, Josh Chang, Blake St. Clair, Patrick Phelan, Khiem Tran and Mavina Guram. Assistant Professor Dr. Megan Evans presented “Lumps and Bumps in Infancy and Early Childhood,” and Associate Professor Dr. Vivian Shi presented “Landscape of Immunomodulators for Atopic Dermatitis.”

Impactful Student Research
Haley Feezell
, a second-year medical student mentored by the Department of Radiology’s Dr. Teresita Angtuaco, recently presented her research at the annual meeting of the Association of University Radiologists. Her research, titled “Analysis of the efficacy of a clinical decision support system for radiological imaging at an academic hospital,” seeks to reduce imaging overutilization at our institution to benefit our patients and colleagues alike. Haley’s work revealed that the use of clinical decision support (CDS) at UAMS has significantly improved our ability to order images that are in accordance with American College of Radiology guidelines. Collaborators included senior medical student Rachel Graham, Radiology IT lead Scott King, Dr. Nick Kaukis (Biostatistics/College of Public Health), and Dr. Hanna Jensen (Surgery/Radiology). Haley is currently analyzing whether there were significant changes in imaging overuse at UAMS during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Well-Earned Retirement
Finally this week, kudos to soon-to-be retiree Dr. Hemendra Shah, Professor of Radiology, for his 40 years of service to UAMS. Dr. Shah has made his mark on many radiology residents through the years. One of them, Dr. Marwan Moussa, now at Harvard and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, has made a gift to UAMS to establish the Hemendra R. Shah, M.D. Endowed Fund for Excellence in Radiology, which will support resident education in body CT, Dr. Shah’s area of expertise. A numbers of other residents, faculty and friends have contributed to this fund, bringing the endowment to over $40,000. Our thanks to all of these donors for their generosity – and best wishes for your retirement, Dr. Shah!

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – May 4, 2022

Congratulations to our 2022 Honorees!
I want to take a moment to congratulate all of the staff and faculty who were honored at the Dean’s Honor Day ceremony yesterday afternoon – and to again thank all COM team members for your contributions across our mission areas. This was my first Dean’s Honor Day, and it was amazing to hear about many of the ways our team members are making a difference. Watch for stories about our honorees in the May COMmunication and on the COM website later this month. Meanwhile, here is the video of the ceremony.      

Shark Tank Success
First-year Ophthalmology resident Dr. Sayena Jabbehdari was one of three finalists in the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery’s international “Shark Tank” style Winning Pitch contest at the recent EYEcelerator in Washington, D.C. Selected from among 150 innovators, her idea for an optical transparent Extracellular Matrix for the treatment of the corneal epithelial defect ultimately took second place. Dr. Jabbehdari was the first resident and the first female to become a finalist in the history of the contest, competing against an established cornea surgeon who took first place and an established pediatric ophthalmologist and oculoplastic surgeon who came in third. Way to go Dr. Jabbehdari!

National Presentation
Senior medical student Katherine Wang will present her research along with Dr. Murat Gokden, neuropathologist and Professor in the Department of Pathology, at the upcoming American Association of Neuropathologists Annual meeting for the third consecutive year. Their work, “Primary Extra-axial Glioblastoma, IDH-wildtype, of the Spinal Nerve Root,” also will be published in the Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology. Dr. Gokden and Katherine collaborated with members of the Department of Neurosurgery on the paper. In July, Katherine will begin a combined residency/fellowship training program at the New York University Grossman School of Medicine. Well done!

Child Neurology Well Represented
UAMS and Arkansas Children’s were well represented at the recent American Academy of Neurology annual meeting in Seattle, with a study by Assistant Professor Dr. Aravindhan Veerapandiyan, Child Neurology resident Dr. Praveen Ramani and former resident Dr. Ezgi Saylam as one of the top 10 platform sessions accepted as “Hot Topics in Headache Medicine.” Their ongoing study is in collaboration with sleep medicine specialist Dr. Supriya Jambhekar and entitled “Assessing Sleep Quality in Children with Migraines by Implementation of Electronic Health Record Cue.” Six other abstracts from UAMS were presented, with Neurology and Child Neurology residents Drs. Rebecca Pratt, Praveen Ramani, Nayana Prabhu and Shubham Biyani as first authors and several other residents and attending physicians as co-authors.

Party of the Century
A shout-out to Dr. Jeanne Wei, Professor and Chair of the Department of Geriatrics, and her team, who partnered with Presbyterian Village recently to honor eight resident centenarians. These inspiring women ranged in age from 100 to 103, and UAMS helped to tell their stories as part of the event held simultaneously at the retirement community and the Donald D. Reynolds Institute on Aging. Joining Dr. Wei at the retirement community for the celebration were Drs. Onna Lau, Priya Mendiratta, Anil Anandam and Denise Compton with the Walker Memory Center. Learn more about the event and the honorees in this UAMS news story. It will make you smile!

Most Influential Researchers
I had the pleasure of talking with Dr. Shuk-Mei Ho, UAMS Vice Chancellor for Research and Innovation, for the latest video in our Spotlight on Excellence series. Dr. Ho and I discussed the study by Stanford University that lists nearly 60 current and retired UAMS faculty among the top 2% of the world’s most influential researchers. Dr. Ho explained how the study came together and what having so many of our researchers on the list says about UAMS’ research enterprise as we strive to make our mark nationally. If you haven’t had a chance to watch our interview yet, check it out here. You can also read about the study in this UAMS news story. Congratulations to everyone on the list, and kudos to all of you who contribute to our research mission.

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – April 27, 2022

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!

The Gift of Sight
Imagine being able to see clearly for the first time in years. Seeing your children and grandchildren. Being able to read the labels on your medications. That is the impact of the Harvey & Bernice Jones Eye Institute’s second “Gift of Sight” event in two years. The initiative provided cataract surgeries for six additional Marshallese patients from Northwest Arkansas. And it was a great success thanks to the contributions of many volunteers from UAMS and the community. Bravo to JEI Director and Department of Ophthalmology Chair Dr. Paul Phillips, lead organizers Shelli Madison, Terry Takamaru and Stacia Dean, and the entire team who made this possible:

  • Aubrey Adams
  • Pearl Atlan
  • Ashley Banks
  • Heather Broyles
  • Dr. Sheena CarlLee
  • Dr. Joseph Chacko
  • Shannon Coleman
  • Stewart Coleman
  • Pam Collier
  • Angi Covert
  • Stefanie Daniels
  • Stacia Dean
  • Lyndsay Dupree
  • Valerie Green
  • Dr. William Henry
  • Dr. Joe Jimmerson, RN
  • Dr. Tammy Jones, RN
  • Jeremy Lemmons
  • Shelli Madison
  • Alli Meyers
  • Alejandra Pelayo
  • Dr. Paul Phillips
  • Paul Pugh
  • Valarie Robinson
  • Dr. Ahmed Sallam
  • Dr. Carina Sanvicente
  • Dr. Alvin Stewart
  • Kara Stewart
  • Terry Takamaru
  • Marilee Taylor
  • Venus Wright

ECMO Milestone
The UAMS ECMO program reaches an important milestone on April 30, one year after the first patient was placed on the advanced, resource-intensive life-support device to allow their heart and lungs to rest and heal from the ravages of COVID-19. Since then, the ECMO team has placed 20 patients on ECMO (extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation), all but one of them for COVID pneumonia and acute respiratory distress syndrome. During the surge due to the delta variant last summer, the team cared for up to six patients on ECMO at one time, a heroic effort on the part of the H4 staff and others. For perspective, the original business plan for ECMO called for six patients in the first 12 months.

Because of our interdisciplinary ECMO team, several Arkansans are now home with their families. I want to add my thanks to these extraordinary nurses, perfusionists, therapists and physicians from multiple specialties including Trauma Surgery/Surgical Critical Care, Cardiac Surgery, Anesthesiology, Pulmonology/Medical Critical Care, and Emergency Medicine.

Planetary Health Report Card
For the third consecutive year, College of Medicine students have participated with medical students from the University of California, San Francisco and around the world to publish the Planetary Health Report Card. The initiative was developed to increase planetary health awareness and accountability among medical schools, and to engage future health professionals in addressing human-caused environmental changes that impact patients’ health. The involvement of UAMS students has resulted in increased campus advocacy toward climate and health-related goals.

“We are proud that our score has improved over the years and UAMS is now fourth among participating medical schools,” said MD/MPH student Morgan Gurel-Headley. (Read the full UAMS report here.) Kudos to Morgan and fellow contributing authors Zainab Atiq, Nickolas Alsup, Kristin Larsen, Madison Nichols and MaKenzie Presley, along with faculty advisor Dr. David Davies. Well done!  

Advanced Ultrasound Expertise
A shout-out to the Department of Emergency Medicine’s Drs. Greg Snead, Jason Arthur, Zachary Lewis and Brian Russ on achieving Focused Practice Designation (FPD) in Advanced Emergency Ultrasound. They were among the first cohort in the nation to take the standardized exam reflecting advanced understanding of clinical ultrasound and the skillset required to develop and maintain ultrasound clinical and teaching programs. The new designation is the current fellowship board equivalent for this advanced focus area administered by the American Board of Emergency Medicine. Dr. Snead was the only fellowship-trained emergency medicine physician in Arkansas when he joined the faculty in 2013. Drs. Arthur, Lewis and Russ were among the first physicians trained in the UAMS EM ultrasound fellowship under Dr. Snead’s leadership.

Editorial Appointment
Congratulations to Dr. Yuet-Kin “Ricky” Leung, Associate Professor of Pharmacology and Toxicology, on being appointed as an Associate Editor for the Pharmacology of Anti-Cancer Drugs section of Frontiers in Pharmacology. The special section encompasses studies relating to drugs that target tumor cells, along with the various components of the tumor microenvironment (e.g., non-tumor cells such as endothelial cells, macrophages, lymphocytes and fibroblasts), and stress conditions such as hypoxia and acidity.

Insights into Hypertension
Dr. Shengyu Mu
’s laboratory in the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology published their recent research findings in the high-impact journal Circulation Research as a continuous study from their previous work published in Nature Communications. The current report further elucidated the pathological role of adaptive immunity, particularly CD8+ T cells, in contributing to the development of salt-sensitive hypertension. Contributing authors from UAMS include Lance Benson, Dr. Yunmeng Liu, Dr. Sung Rhee, Yunping Guo, Katherine Deck and Christoph Mora (Pharmacology & Toxicology); Dr. Lin-Xi Li, Dr. Lu Huang and Tucker Andrews (Microbiology & Immunology), and Dr. Zhiqiang Qin (Pathology).  

Resident Travel Grant
Congratulations to fourth-year Radiation Oncology resident Dr. Arpan Prabhu on receiving a travel grant from the Council of Affiliated Regional Radiation Oncology Societies (CARROS) to attend the American College of Radiology annual meeting in Washington, D.C., this week. Thank you for representing UAMS at the national level, Dr. Prabhu!

Thankful Colleague
Finally this week, I want to share a heartfelt open letter from a colleague who experienced the very best of UAMS when her mother spent four weeks at UAMS before succumbing to her illness. Dr. Deidre Wyrick is an Assistant Professor in the Division of Pediatric Surgery and Section of Pediatric Care Medicine, and Trauma Medical Director at Arkansas Children’s. Dr. Wyrick emphasized the contributions and compassion of many attending physicians, residents, nurses and others who made all the difference in her mother’s last days. “I am proud to work at a place that gave my mom such great care …,” Dr. Wyrick wrote. “UAMS, as an institution, should also be proud that these people who have been decimated by a pandemic still have empathy and compassion for the people they serve.”

I join with Dr. Wyrick in saying special thanks to resident physicians Drs. Collette Tilly, Kara Phillips, Erin Creighton and Don Vickers; faculty members Drs. Seth Berney, Jumin Sunde, Nikhil Meena and Michelle Krause; nurses Lorin Smith, Sydney Timmerman, Jodi Miles and Jillian Edwards; and housekeeper Antoinette Solomon.

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – April 20, 2022

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!

Thank You, Dr. Romero
Dr. José Romero
has provided superb leadership and service for UAMS, our state and the nation as a member of our faculty since 2008. And for nearly two years, he has expertly guided Arkansas through the COVID-19 pandemic as Arkansas Secretary of Health. Congratulations to Dr. Romero on his new position as Director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, where he will start on June 5. As Dr. Romero winds down his time in Arkansas, I want to thank him for his outstanding service as Professor and Chief of Pediatric Infectious Diseases for 12 years prior to assuming leadership of the Arkansas Department of Health. Arkansas has been exceptionally fortunate to have Dr. Romero’s leadership during the pandemic, and that leadership extended to the national level through many roles including a term as Chair of the CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. Thank you and very best wishes, Dr. Romero!

Psychologists Rock
This is national Psychology Week, and I want to take a moment to thank our dedicated psychologists and neuropsychologists in the departments of Psychiatry and Pediatrics for their many contributions to society and improving the lives of Arkansans. They provide services across UAMS and Arkansas Children’s campuses in Little Rock and Northwest Arkansas to support patients across the lifespan. These providers are embedded in numerous programs, including the Child Study Center, Dennis Developmental Center, Schmieding Developmental Center, Internal Medicine, Trauma, Transplant, the Psychiatric Research Institute, Arkansas Children’s and the Pulaski County Regional Crisis Stabilization Unit. Our psychologists also lead initiatives with community partners to support patients and families, such as Arkansas Building Effective Services for Trauma (ARBEST) and Community-Based Autism and Treatment (CoBALT). Many are also engaged in cutting-edge research and in education. Many serve as leaders at the state and national level. Thank you all for your commitment to excellence!

Journal Leadership
A shout-out to Dr. Grover Miller, Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, on being named as an Associate Editor for the Drug Metabolism and Transport section of Frontiers in Pharmacology. The specialty section covers regulation of drug metabolizing enzymes and transporters, genetic variability and polymorphisms, design of innovative tools for determining drug metabolism and transport, in vitro to in vivo extrapolations, and effective drug design.

Transforming Cancer Medicine
Congratulations to Dr. Donald Johann, Associate Professor of Biomedical Informatics and Internal Medicine, who is an author on a paper in the high-impact journal Nature Scientific Data on the analytic validity of liquid biopsies. The use of routine blood draws to diagnose and monitor the status of cancer patients, rather than tissue biopsies, is revolutionizing the practice of clinical oncology and how drugs are designed. Dr. Johann has been at the forefront of research such as this to understand the analytical validity (performance) and technical limitations of this technology. The study generated the most comprehensive public-facing dataset of its kind, providing valuable insights into ultra-deep circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA, or liquid biopsy) sequencing technology.

Improving Stroke Care
Dr. Aliza Brown
, Associate Professor of Neurology, has devoted her career to improving care for stroke patients – which is crucial in a state that consistently ranks high for acute stroke death and risk factors. Most recently, Dr. Brown was integral to the Arkansas Department of Health’s successful application for an estimated $1.8 million grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention’s Paul Coverdell National Acute Stroke Registry. The grant will be used to decrease disparities in access and improve the quality of care for high-risk populations. Dr. Brown is serving in this initiative through the Department of Neurology and the UAMS Institute for Digital Health and Innovation’s Stroke Program. Other partners with ADH include hospitals in the stroke registry, emergency medical services, the American Heart Association, the Arkansas Acute Stroke Care Task Force, and the Arkansas Minority Health Commission.

Gynecology Conference Contributors
UAMS and Arkansas Children’s were well represented at the North American Society for Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology’s recent Annual Clinical and Research Meeting in Chicago. The Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology’s Dr. Laura Hollenbach and Dr. Kathryn Stambough hosted three workshop sessions alongside Dr. Laura Hobart-Porter (Pediatrics/Physical Medicine & Rehab), Dr. Joana Mack (Pediatrics/Hematology), and Dr. Spencer Lewis (Radiology/Pediatric Interventional Radiology), showcasing our outstanding Spina Bifida and Vascular Anomalies programs at ACH. Also presented were two abstracts co-authored by Dr. Kevin Wong (Radiology/Pediatric Interventional Radiology) with medical student Ryan Hui and OB/GYN resident Dr. Tucker Doiron.

Thankful Colleagues
Finally this week, I want to share a couple of appreciative notes I recently received from team members who are thankful for their colleagues.

The first was from Dr. Omar Atiq, Professor of Internal Medicine and Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery. Dr. Atiq wrote to four chairs – Surgery’s Dr. Ron Robertson, Otolaryngology’s Dr. John Dornhoffer, Orthopaedic Surgery’s Dr. Lowry Barnes, and Dermatology’s Dr. Sara Shalin – to express his gratitude for the oncologic surgeons on their teams.

“As a practicing medical oncologist, I wish to acknowledge the satisfaction and joy your oncologic surgeons bring to the rest of us in the Cancer Service Line,” Dr. Atiq wrote. “They are dependable, competent, available and a pleasure to work with. Their excellence and professionalism reflects well on their leaders – all of you.”

The second note was from Carla Williams, Student Clerkship Coordinator for the Department of Surgery. “I would like to thank my coworker, Tondra Thomas, Assistant Department Administrator,” Carla wrote. “I am new to the Student Clerkship Coordinator position, and Tondra is very helpful. She helps me with spreadsheets. Our positions are totally different, but she has always helped make my job much easier. She is very hardworking and dependable. She goes the extra mile and is always willing to help others.”

Kudos to all of these wonderful COM team members!

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – April 13, 2022

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!

Nutrition Sciences Award
Congratulations to Dr. Aline Andres, Professor of Pediatrics and Associate Director of the Arkansas Children’s Nutrition Center (ACNC), on receiving the 2022 ANS Nutrition Sciences Award from the American Society for Nutrition. The award recognizes Dr. Andres for her work to advance the understanding of how dietary, metabolic and lifestyle factors impact the growth, development and long-term health of children. Professor and ACNC Director Dr. Mario Ferruzzi explains why the recognition is so well-earned for Dr. Andres and her team. “Their critical work here at the ACNC requires time and commitment and is unique in its combination of diverse and complex clinical designs,” he said. “Dr. Andres’ efforts are critical to our goal to improve infant and child health.”

Trauma Team Excellence
The Division of Trauma, Critical Care and Acute Care Surgery has been doing phenomenal work, thanks to strong leadership by Department of Surgery Chair Dr. Ron Robertson and faculty who have taken on leadership roles at UAMS and beyond. The successful launch of the life-saving ECMO program during the pandemic and integral contributions to the new Cardiovascular Service Line are just a couple of examples of the team’s major achievements. Dr. Ben Davis, Medical Director of the SICU and ECMO programs, has been named Director of the growing division, and Dr. Kyle Kalkwarf and Dr. Avi Bhavaraju have been named Associate Trauma Medical Directors. Together with Dr. Robertson, they will steer the UAMS trauma program through the upcoming site survey with the American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma. Congratulations also to Dr. Kalkwarf on being named Trauma Medical Consultant to the Arkansas Department of Health, which he will advise on continued development of the statewide trauma system.

Robotics Goes Outpatient
A shout-out to the Women and Infants Service Line, UAMS Robotics Committee and many perioperative team members for successfully completing the first Da Vinci Robotic case in UAMS One Day Surgery. Special thanks to the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology’s Dr. Alexis White, Dr. Luann Racher and Dr. Chad Taylor for leading the transition of Da Vinci Robotic surgery to the outpatient setting, and congratulations to second-year OB/GYN resident Dr. Natalie Tips, who performed the majority of the case as operating surgeon on the robotic console. Well done.

Teach the Teacher
The 13th annual Teach the Teacher Symposium was a great success thanks to the hard work of the organizers, insightful speakers and panelists from across our college and UAMS, and the many faculty and learners who contributed to more than two dozen posters on teaching and health care education topics. Special thanks to Dr. Karina Clemmons, Assistant Dean for Medical Education and Associate Professor of Medical Humanities and Bioethics, for her leadership of the April 1 symposium, along with Dr. Sara Tariq, Associate Dean for Student Affairs and Professor of Internal Medicine, and the UAMS Academic Affairs Educators Academy. Learn more about the presentations, panel discussions and posters presented during the workshop here.

First-Place Predoctoral Research
Lance Benson, a Ph.D. candidate in Dr. Shengyu Mu’s laboratory in the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, took first place in the American Physiology Society Predoctoral Excellence in Renal Research competition. The award follows his selection as one of five finalists from around the country who were invited to present their research into kidney disease at the Experimental Biology annual meeting. Lance won the top award for his presentation, “The IFNγ-PDL1 Pathway Enhances the Interaction Between CD8+ T Cells and Distal Convoluted Tubules to Promote Salt-Sensitive Hypertension.” Congratulations!

Conference Contributions
Emergency Medicine Assistant Professors Dr. Meredith Von Dohlen and Dr. Lauren Evans and second-year resident Dr. Adam Watkins did a great job at the Council of Residency Directors in Emergency Medicine’s recent Academic Assembly conference in San Diego. Dr. Watkins presented a case in the Clinical Pathologic Case competition; Dr. Von Dohlen was a faculty discussant of another case; and Dr. Evans served as a judge for this prestigious national competition. Dr. Von Dohlen also presented a research abstract, “Emergency Medicine Resident RVU Trends at an Academic Medical Center,” on behalf of the department’s Division of Medical Education.

Student Presenters
Congratulations to third-year medical students Sophia Ly and Alyson McKinnon on their recent presentations at the American Academy of Dermatology Annual Conference in Boston. Sophia, who is mentored by Dermatology Professor Dr. Henry Wong, presented “Treatment with rituximab for refractory adult dermatomyositis complicated with calcinosis cutis.” Alyson, who is mentored by Dr. Andrea Mabry of Pinnacle Dermatology, presented “Autoimmune progesterone dermatitis following infertility treatment.” Great job!

Estimating Postpartum Blood Loss
Dr. Muhammad Athar, Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology, is the first author on a newly published paper in the International Journal of Obstetric Anesthesia that explores inaccuracies in the visual estimation of blood loss during postpartum hemorrhage under different scenarios. Dr. Athar collaborated with researchers at Stanford University on the study. Postpartum hemorrhage is the leading cause of maternal mortality nationwide, making accurate blood loss estimation essential for optimal management. Well done.

Roots & Wings
Gifts that fund scholarships are among the most forward-thinking ways to support the College of Medicine and our mission in Arkansas. It is always humbling to hear about the motivations and inspirations for these gifts. The late Dr. Marvin Murphy was a cardiologist at UAMS for over three decades until his retirement in 1996. His wife, Rosanne Murphy of Hot Springs, has given $100,000 to establish an endowed scholarship. In a UAMS news article, she said her husband was passionate about UAMS’ mission to educate outstanding doctors. “He and I always sought to impart two things to our children – roots and wings,” Mrs. Murphy said. “With this scholarship, in honoring him, our family seeks to help physicians establish strong roots at UAMS and to move forward to serve, honor and care for patients and their families.”

More Inspired Giving
Meanwhile, in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, faculty have established a scholarship in honor of Dr. Gloria Richard-Davis, Professor, reproductive endocrinology and infertility specialist, and Executive Director of the UAMS Division for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. The scholarship will attract and support visiting medical students from underrepresented groups, in support of the department’s commitment to recruit a more diverse resident population and OB/GYNs for Arkansas. “Dr. Richard-Davis has worked tirelessly for diversity, equity and inclusion among medical students, residents and colleagues,” said OB/GYN Chair Dr. Nirvana Manning. “Thank you to Dr. Luann Racher, who was instrumental in getting this up and going.” Learn more about the scholarship here.

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – April 6, 2022

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!

Great Day for Research
The inaugural Translational Research Institute (TRI) Research Day was a big success yesterday thanks to Dr. Laura James and her team in TRI and the contributions of many presenters. The event at Heifer International Headquarters featured keynote presentations by Dr. Rachel Hess, Co-Principal Investigator of the Utah Clinical and Translational Science Institute, and Dr. Stacie Jones, Professor of Pediatrics, Division of Allergy and Immunology. Also presenting talks were KL2 Mentored Research Career Development Scholars Dr. Jennifer Vincenzo (College of Health Professions) and Dr. Britni Ayers (UAMS Northwest, Community Health & Research); TL1 Health Sciences Innovation and Entrepreneurship (HSIE) fellows Dr. Shana Owens (Microbiology/Immunology) and Dr. Thomas Nienaber (Pediatrics); and TRI pilot awardees Dr. Emily Kocurek (Internal Medicine) and Dr. Sara Landes (Psychiatry).

I had a great time as a judge for the poster competition and am delighted to congratulate the winners: Overall Visual – Dr. Cody Ashby (Biomedical Informatics); Overall Content – Dr. Yasir Rahmatallah (Biomedical Informatics); Overall Oral/Discussion – Dr. Melissa Zielinski (Psychiatry); Overall Impact – Dr. Isabelle Racine Miousse (Biochemistry/Molecular Biology); and People’s Choice – Dr. Nishank Jain (Internal Medicine). Learn more about all of the presenters and poster entries in the TRI Research Day program.

Entrepreneurship Award
Congratulations to Dr. Shana Owens, a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology, and team members from the University of Arkansas-Fayetteville on taking home the top prize at the 2022 Arkansas Governor’s Cup for student entrepreneurs. Dr. Owens, a member of Dr. Craig Forrest’s laboratory, is CEO of GammaVet. The company has developed a prototype for a commercial diagnostic device that detects a viral infection that plagues nearly one-third of cats. (Read more in this Arkansas Democrat-Gazette story.) The venture is also part of Dr. Owens’ work in the Health Sciences Innovation and Entrepreneurship (HSIE) training program, a partnership of the UAMS Translational Research Institute and the UA Sam M. Walton College of Business. As mentioned in today’s top accolade, Dr. Owens also presented on her work at the TRI Research Day. Well done!

Hospital Medicine Leadership
Dr. Franklin John Gray Jr.
, Assistant Professor in the Division of Hospital Medicine, was inducted as the 2022-2023 President of the Arkansas Chapter of the Society for Hospital Medicine during the chapter’s spring meeting. Congratulations and kudos to Dr. Gray for his service to UAMS, hospitalists and their patients across the state.

Health Literacy and COVID-19
Radiation Oncology
resident Dr. Arpan Prabhu and colleagues have published an article exploring the quality and readability of COVID-19 patient education articles online. The article, “Assessing COVID-19 Health Information on Google Using the Quality Education Scoring Tool: Cross-sectional and Readability Analysis,” was published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research. The multi-institution research team found that articles vastly varied in their attributes and levels of bias, and would benefit from revisions for increased readability. Dr. Pearman Parker, an Assistant Professor in the UAMS College of Nursing, also contributed to the project.

Travel Award
A shout-out to Lucy Fry, a graduate student in the lab of Dr. Tiffany Weinkopff in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology, on being selected to attend and receive a highly competitive travel award for the Molecular Parasitology Meeting at Woods Hole, Massachusetts, in September. The award reflects her excellent work in Dr. Weinkopff’s lab, where she studies the pathogenesis of Leishmania, a parasite that is spread by sandflies and causes disease primarily in the tropics and subtropics.

Resident of the Year
Finally this week, very special congratulations to fourth-year General Surgery resident Dr. Tamara Osborn on being voted Resident of the Year by our graduating seniors. This well-earned honor reflects Dr. Osborn’s excellent clinical work and teaching – and so much more. Dr. Katie Kimbrough, Associate Professor and Residency Program Director, sums it up perfectly:

“Dr. Osborn is one of the brightest and most capable people with whom I have worked. I have personally observed her teaching, and she can be consistently found teaching good clinical and operative skills to junior-level residents and students, and she is wonderful at explaining difficult concepts to them. Most importantly, she also models good ethical and moral behavior to junior-level learners. Remarkably, even coping with a family tragedy over the last year, Dr. Osborn has shown a great deal of maturity, poise and resilience throughout this time. She continues to amaze me with her perseverance and dedication to teaching and to our program. I couldn’t be more proud of her. There is no one I can think of more deserving for this award.”

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – March 30, 2022

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!

Secret Sauce
I had the honor last night of joining with many others throughout the community in paying tribute to Dr. Sara Tariq, Professor of Internal Medicine and Associate Dean for Student Affairs. Dr. Tariq was the special honoree at the annual “Taste of Little Rock” fundraiser for the University of Arkansas-Little Rock, her undergraduate alma mater. Dr. Tariq has been a source of pride for us here at UAMS for many years. I felt that sense of pride when reading a guest column by Dr. Tariq in the Arkansas Democrat Gazette last week. As a highly respected leader, she has a keen perspective on the “secret sauce” that makes leaders – and their teams – successful.

“Research shows that when team members feel a strong relationship with their leaders, they feel more engaged,” Dr. Tariq wrote. “This results in a measurable and transformational impact on the organization. Relationships are the ‘special sauce’ of our ability to attract and keep the very best people. Leadership is not the simple transaction between managers and employees; it is a dynamic that is created through intentional acts of investment in people.”

You nailed it, Dr. Tariq. COM team members can read the full column here.

Enhancing Clinical Research Data
Congratulations to Dr. Maryam Garza, Assistant Professor in the Department of Biomedical Informatics, on her election as Operations Committee Co-Chair of the Vulcan Accelerator, a clinical research-focused project of the Health Level Seven International (HL7) data standards organization. Vulcan and other accelerators are focused on the crucial work of speeding the development and availability of Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) compliant data to deliver better health outcomes. The work depends on experts in interoperability and standards-based data exchange, such as Dr. Garza, from academia, government agencies, technology companies and other organizations.

Financial Profit in Medicine
A position paper from the American College of Physicians (ACP) coauthored by Dr. Omar Atiq, Professor of Internal Medicine, has won the John A. Benson Jr., M.D., Professionalism Article Prize for Commentary from the American Board of Internal Medicine (ABIM) Foundation. The paper explores the effects of the growth of corporate interests and influence in health care on patients, physicians and the health care system. The article from the ACP Health and Public Policy Committee, which Dr. Atiq chairs, also makes recommendations for policies that can foster and sustain the physician-patient relationship. Dr. Atiq is now President-Elect of the ACP. Well done!

Papers Published
Dr. Zhiqiang Qin
, Associate Professor of Pathology, and colleagues have published two recent articles, including one exploring how some anti-COVID-19 drugs, especially Remdesivir, may induce oncogenic herpesvirus reactivation. The article, with postdoctoral fellow Dr. Jungang Chen as first author, was published in the American Society for Microbiology journal Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. Dr. Chen is also a first author on an article from Dr. Qin’s group, published in the Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, that identifies some new natural compounds with excellent anti-small-cell lung cancer activities. Other UAMS contributors to these papers included Dr. Lu Dai and Dr. Steven Post (Pathology); Dr. Samantha Kendrick (Biochemistry and Molecular Biology); and Dr. Shengyu Mu (Pharmacology and Toxicology.)

COVID Prevalence in Children
Researchers at UAMS, Arkansas Children’s and the Arkansas Department of Health found evidence through a seroprevalence study that SARS-CoV2 infections in children were more common in Arkansas than previously recognized during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. The study, led by the Department of Microbiology and Immunology’s Dr. Karl Boehme and Dr. Craig Forrest and the Department of Pediatrics’ Dr. Josh Kennedy, was published this month in the Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society.

The research team tested remnant serum samples from children who visited Arkansas hospitals or clinics for non-COVID reasons from April 2020 through April 2021. The presence of antibodies in samples revealed a steady increase of infections during the first eight months of the pandemic, followed by a more rapid increase. The researchers also found racial and ethnic disparities, with Hispanic and Black children being at increased risk for COVID infection. Along with many faculty members, contributors included postdoctoral fellow Dr. Shana Owens (Dr. Forrest’s lab), Pediatrics resident Dr. Katherine Caid and medical student Zeel Modi. Great work, all.

Distinguished Graduate
This week’s Accolades started, and now ends, with a note about a colleague who has made their mark as an alumnus. Dr. Terry Harville, Professor of Pathology and Internal Medicine, is highly regarded among peers nationwide for his expertise in pediatric allergy, asthma, immunology, autoimmunity and much more. Recently, his expertise has been integral in groundbreaking research into “long COVID.” However, it is also wonderful when your accomplishments are recognized by those who were peers and teachers in your formative years. I am pleased to congratulate Dr. Harville on being named to the Lake County Schools Alumni Hall of Fame in Florida, where he is a proud graduate of the Groveland High School Class of 1971!

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – March 23, 2022

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!

Research Excellence Today & Tomorrow
The caliber of UAMS researchers today and in recent years, the quality of our research environment, and the potential for extraordinary research accomplishments in the years ahead have all been on display with recent developments.

First, it is my great pleasure to join with Dr. Nancy Rusch, Vice Dean for Research, to announce the launch of four inaugural “Creativity Hubs.” Each group will receive an investment of $300,000 over the next 18 months to grow collaborative and thematic research programs. The hubs will work to expand interdisciplinary research, plan programmatic grant proposals, strengthen workforce diversity, and mentor junior faculty and trainees in specific areas of research strength. These four initiatives were chosen from 23 applications submitted to the College of Medicine Research Office. Funding is being provided by the COM and the Office of the UAMS Vice Chancellor for Research and Innovation, led by Dr. Shuk-Mei Ho. Watch for more information in the March COMmunication e-newsletter.

Meanwhile, congratulations to the Creativity Hubs and leaders listed below, along with their colleagues:

Neurodegenerative Diseases
Co-led by Dr. Steven Barger and Dr. Paul Drew

Musculoskeletal Health & Disease
Led by Dr. Teresita Bellido

Lifespan Research to Improve Cardiovascular Health
Led by Dr. Elisabet Borsheim

Artificial Intelligence for Health
Led by Dr. Fred Prior

Also, you may have seen the UAMS news story last week about the more than 50 current and retired UAMS faculty who were listed among the top 2% of most influential researchers in a study by Stanford University. As Dr. Ho said in the article, “Our strong and supportive research environment is what allows investigators to achieve this kind of distinction and excellence.”

Bravo to all of our influential and impactful researchers!

Mask Mandate Insights
Researchers from the UAMS Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health and College of Medicine collaborated with the Arkansas Department of Health (ADH), Arkansas Center for Health Improvement (ACHI) and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on a project that showed how mask mandates in Arkansas school districts helped to limit COVID-19 at the schools. The research was published in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report and was featured in a number of news reports. The College of Medicine’s Dr. Kanna Lewis (Family and Preventive Medicine), Dr. Franklin John Gray (Hospital Medicine) and Dr. Joseph Thompson (Pediatrics and ACHI President) were among the outstanding contributors to this important research. Read more in the UAMS Newsroom.

Gold Standard for Care
Congratulations to the College of Medicine faculty and many Arkansas Children’s team members who achieved accreditation from the Foundation for Accreditation of Cellular Therapy (FACT) for three areas at Arkansas Children’s. Kudos to the Division of Pediatric Hematology-Oncology’s Dr. Arun Modi for his leadership on accreditation for hematopoietic cellular therapy accreditation and Dr. Suzanne Saccente and team for their successful efforts on accreditation for peripheral blood cellular therapy product collection. Kudos to the Department of Pathology’s Dr. Bobby Boyanton and Dr. Eric Rosenbaum for their achievement in cellular therapy processing with minimal manipulation in the blood bank. FACT designations are the gold standard for quality of care and place Arkansas Children’s in an elite group of pediatric hospitals across the country. Well done!

Five in a Day
Dr. Everett “Pat” Magann, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, recently had the pleasure of receiving notification of five acceptances for review articles in Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey in one day – the most in a single day in his 30-plus years in academic medicine. All of them were the result of scholarly collaborations with several students, residents, fellows, faculty colleagues and staff. Click here for a list of the articles and contributing UAMS team members. Congratulations Dr. Magann and team!

Matched!
Finally this week, very special congratulations to our graduating seniors on their fantastic results on Match Day last Friday. The pandemic clearly was “no match” for the tenacity of the Class of 2022! Kudos to our Academic Affairs and Graduate Medical Education teams for their outstanding work throughout this year’s National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) process, which also resulted in our own residency programs having a great Match this year. A shout-out as well to the UAMS AV Team for doing a great job with the off-campus livestream of the ceremony, which allowed some of our seniors to participate virtually and enabled more family and friends of our graduates, along with UAMS team members, to enjoy the event. In case you missed it, here are links to the ceremony video and the UAMS news story about the event and some of our fabulous seniors. You can click here to see where everyone is headed for their residency.

Filed Under: Accolades

Accolades – March 16, 2022

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!

Epic Innovation
Kudos to the UAMS Institute for Digital Health and Innovation (IDHI), the Department of Biomedical Informatics and UAMS Information Technology (IT) for their work to create a novel “copy” of the Epic electronic medical record system specially designed for students, residents and researchers. Special thanks to Dr. Kevin Sexton, Associate Chief Clinical Informatics Officer and Division Director of IDHI Innovations, and Dr. Joseph Sanford, IDHI Director, Associate Vice Chancellor and Chief Clinical Informatics Officer, for their leadership of the project. The copy Epic system uses synthetic data rather than actual patient data, enabling users to experience and learn from the clinical workflows of Epic without putting anyone at risk. Read more in the UAMS Newsroom.    

Research Highlighted
Luis Juncos, M.D.
, a Professor in the Division of Nephrology and Director of Nephrology for the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System, coauthored an article published last week in Science Translational Medicine and featured on journal’s website homepage. The article focuses on reducing ischemic kidney injury, a major contributor to the development of delayed graft function after transplantation, through application of a synchronization modulation electric field to maintain Na +/K +-ATPase functions. Dr. Juncos collaborated on the paper with researchers at the University of South Florida and others.

Winning Speech
Congratulations to senior medical student Paige Jones-Brooks on her first-place win for “Start Your Chest Compressions,” her first-ever speech in a Toastmasters competition. She was participating in the District 43-Area B2 competition on Saturday through the newly launched UAMS Confident Communicators Toastmasters Club for underrepresented students, and will now move on to the Division Competition on April 2. Toastmasters International is an educational organization that teaches public speaking and leadership skills to build confident speakers, communicators and leaders. Paige serves as Vice President of Membership for the UAMS club. (Students interested in joining the club can contact Sharanda Williams, Assistant Dean for Student Affairs and Diversity, for more information.)

Surgery First
A shout-out to Dr. Katy Marino, Assistant Professor in the Division of Thoracic Surgery, and her team on the recent completion of the first minimally invasive, robotic assisted lung lobectomy performed at UAMS and in central Arkansas using the new Intuitive da Vinci Xi platform. The achievement is a clear reflection of Dr. Marino’s commitment to advanced training and her dedication to providing patients with the best possible care. Well done, Dr. Marino!

Resident Published
Dr. Husam Salah, a third-year Internal Medicine resident who will serve as Chief Resident next year, is the first author of a meta-analysis accepted for publication in the American Journal of Cardiology. Dr. Salah collaborated with his mentor, Associate Professor Dr. Srikanth Vallurupalli, and other current and former Cardiovascular Medicine colleagues on a meta-analysis of studies comparing anterior-lateral (AL) versus anterior-posterior (AP) electrode position for biphasic cardioversion in atrial fibrillation.

Inspired Giving
I continue to be amazed at the generosity of UAMS alumni, former patients and so many others who contribute to our scholarships, programs and initiatives in support of our mission. Just as wonderful is the inspiration for so many gifts – you! One recent example is a $1 million gift from 1979 alumnus Dr. Mark Harriman to support the new Orthopaedic and Spine Hospital and Department of Orthopaedic Surgery under Dr. Lowry Barnes’ stellar leadership. Another example is a $1 million pledge from an anonymous, grateful patient to honor the Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery’s Dr. James Suen through a future endowed chair focused on research into trigeminal neuralgia, an excruciatingly painful condition that typically involves the lower face and jaw.

Student Ambassadors
Finally this week, I want to take a moment to thank the 12 COM students who were selected and are serving as UAMS Student Ambassadors this year. The program, sponsored by the UAMS Alumni and Annual Giving Office, provides students with opportunities to volunteer, network and serve UAMS alumni. During the pandemic, the student ambassadors have contributed to virtual events, video thank you messages, and assisting with UAMS Day of Giving. Participating COM students include: Kacee Daniels, Elizabeth Draper, Sarah Hall, Michael Held, Clark Kennedy, Brianna Long, ChrisTina Okolo, Meredith Ott, Olivia Speed, Julia Townsley, Matthew Tran and Margaret Woodruff. Thank you all for your service!

Filed Under: Accolades

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