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Events to Know

May 22
Neurosurgery Grand Rounds: Dr. Jaroslaw Aronowski (Department of Neurology) presents, “Experimental Intracerebral Hemorrhages.” 7:30 a.m. MSB 7.037.

Microbiology & Molecular Genetics Seminar Series: Dr. M. Gabriela Bowden (Texas A&M University Health Science Center) presents “The Panton Valentine Leukocidin is a virulence factor in S. aureus necrotizing pneumonia.” 4 p.m., MSB 2.103. Reception to follow in MSB 1.180.

May 27
Department of Pediatrics Research Conference: Dr. Katarzyna Cieslik, Department of Pediatrics, presents “14-3-3e knockout leads to cardiac defect and inhibition of cell cycle progression in the developing heart.” Noon MSB B.100.

May 29
Microbiology & Molecular Genetics Seminar Series: Dr. Kim Orth (UT Southwestern) presents “Black Death, Black Spot, Black Pearl: Tales of Bacterial Effectors.” 4 p.m., MSB 2.103. Reception to follow in MSB 1.180.

June 5
Microbiology & Molecular Genetics Seminar Series: Dr. Jun Liu (Dept. of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine) presents “A tale of two pathogens: HIV and Borrelia burgdorferi.” 4 p.m., MSB 2.103. Reception to follow in MSB 1.180.

June 12
Retirement planning Q&A session. UT HCPC first floor auditorium. 11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.

June 26
Presidential Update from Dr. James Willerson. 11:30 a.m. MSB 3.001.

June 26
Presidential Update from Dr. James Willerson. 11:30 a.m. MSB 3.001.

Microbiology & Molecular Genetics Seminar Series: Dr. Barrett R. Harvey (Institute of Molecular Medicine) presents “Passive protection from enterococcal infection.” 4 p.m., MSB 2.103. Reception to follow in MSB 1.180.

UTMost

Texas Ignition Fund

Take advantage of a funding opportunity from the Office of Technology Management and the University of Texas System. The Texas Ignition Fund (TIF), a $2 million UT System grant program sponsored by the Board of Regents, is designed to stimulate commercialization of research discoveries at the 15 UT institutions.
For more information refer to the Office of Technology Management Web site.

In Memoriam —
Dr. Harold Pruessner

Dr. Harold Pruessner, who served as the chair of the Department of Family Practice and Community Medicine, died Dec. 21, 2007 at his Caldwell ranch. He was 82.

Pruessner joined the Medical School in 1972 as the second member of the department of family practice. He became chair in 1986 and retired in 1993.

 He is survived by his wife, Alma; sons Michael Verber, Harold Pruessner Jr., and David Pruessner; daughters Audrey McGuyer and Janice Pruessner; 12 grandchildren; one great-grandchild; a brother, Robert Pruessner; and a sister, Mary Hudspeth.


Scoop is a weekly electronic newsletter providing timely information to the Medical School.

Submit event items or news tips for Scoop by noon on Thursday preceding the week of publication in which you would like your event or news to appear (seven days in advance).

To submit content for Scoop, send an e-mail to scoop@uth.tmc.edu.


Giuseppe N. Colasurdo, M.D.
Dean

Brian Minton
Web Developer II

Darla Brown
Director of Communications

January 17, 2008
Produced by the Office of Communications

Duke named commencement speaker

Dr. James “Red” Duke

Dr. James “Red” Duke

Dean Giuseppe Colasurdo has announced that Dr. James “Red” Duke will be the commencement speaker for the Medical School’s Class of 2008.

Duke, holder of the John B. Holmes Professorship in the Clinical Sciences, has been a faculty member at the Medical School since 1972. Known nationally for his syndicated television spot, “Dr. Red Duke’s Health Reports,” Duke was instrumental in introducing Memorial Hermann’s LifeFlight and bringing a Level 1 Trauma Unit to Texas.

“I am very pleased that we will have Dr. Duke, with his great historical knowledge of our institution, be our commencement speaker this year,” Dean Colasurdo said.

Commencement will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday, May 31 in the George R. Brown Convention Center.

-D. Brown


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Medical errors focus of new study

This month, researchers at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston plan to launch their part of a multi-center project that will examine the complexities of emergency medicine and inefficiencies that are most likely to cause errors in the delivery of patient care.

The first phase of the five-year project, funded by a $4.7 million grant to Arizona State University (Principal Investigator Vimla L. Patel, Ph.D.) from the James S. McDonnell Foundation, is designed to study the processes underlying critical care decision-making to identify inefficiencies and weaknesses. The second phase will examine how to correct problems within the health care delivery system to reduce and prevent medical errors, reduce health care costs and increase health care quality.

Dr. Jiajie Zhang, the Doris L. Ross Professor and associate dean of research at School of Health Information Sciences at Houston, and Dr. David Robinson, research director and vice chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine, are co-investigators at the Houston site. They will conduct the research with partners at the leading institution, Arizona State University, and two other study sites, Banner Health System in Phoenix and Washington University in St. Louis.

“Our job is to understand the complexity of the emergency room setting and determine an optimal way to organize this rapidly changing, high-stress environment,” Zhang said. “Once the system is more efficient, medical errors will be reduced.”

To accomplish this, Zhang and graduate research associates will shadow health care providers in the emergency center at Memorial Hermann – Texas Medical Center. They will use their observations, along with data from the electronic medical record systems, to create a computer model of activities and human thought processes and behaviors in the emergency center. Observations will include such details of how frequently physicians access medical records, how they communicate with the nurses and pharmacists, and how they prioritize the order in which patients should receive treatment.

At the Houston research site, Zhang said, the research will focus on the trauma unit, with the flexibility to expand the scope of the project to the medicine unit, the pediatric emergency center and also to Lyndon B. Johnson General Hospital’s Emergency Center.
“This is an enormous task to identify and map the processes behind of emergency medicine and all the nuances of patient care,” Robinson said. “We are going to take an analytical look at how the system operates so that we’ll have a better understanding of where error comes from. Then we can make changes in the way we provide patient care.”
According to a 1999 Institute of Medicine report, an estimated 44,000 to 98,000 people die in hospitals as a result of medical errors each year in the United States. Robinson said the fast-paced environment makes emergency centers particularly vulnerable to errors, which may stem from something as simple as sloppy handwritten orders to a problem as complex as delays in patient care because of overcrowding. Most errors are corrected before there is an adverse event with patient care, Robinson said, but preventing even the slightest error is the best way to ensure patient safety.

“Error is not about blame,” Robinson said. “We need to look at the system as a whole and identify the factors that play into errors in the acute care setting.”

Dr. M. Michael Shabot, system chief medical officer at Memorial Hermann Healthcare System and adjunct professor at the UT School of Health Information Sciences, will serve as adviser to the project.

“The Memorial Hermann Healthcare System applauds the UT Health Science Center at Houston, Dr. Jiajie Zhang and Dr. David Robinson for undertaking this groundbreaking research on errors in emergency and critical care,” Shabot said. “Drs. Zhang’s and Robinson’s earlier work in this field, in conjunction with Dr. Vimla Patel of Arizona State University, is already yielding important insights into the classification, cause and prevention of medical errors, especially in emergency situations. The entire health care community, and patients most of all, will benefit from this important research.”

-M. Raine

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Preventive Cardiology Forum XVIII

Francisco Fuentes, M.D.

Francisco Fuentes, M.D.

The 18th Preventive Cardiology Forum is a free conference in collaboration with the Medical School, Memorial Hermann Hospital, the American Heart Association, Texas Tech University Health Science Center at El Paso, UT School of Public Health Brownsville Regional Campus, Memorial Health System of East Texas, and Baylor College of Medicine. The conference, which will focus on prevention, reduction, and regression of cardiovascular disease, will be held 7:30 a.m. – 1 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 2 in MSB 3.001.

Organized by Francisco Fuentes, M.D., speakers include L. Maximilian Buja, M.D., K. Lance Gould, M.D., Susan T. Laing, M.D., and Gurur Biliciler-Denktas, M.D.  Call Sandra Vick, 713-500-6576, or e-mail ms.pcfreg@uth.tmc.edu, for more information.

For more Headlines, see Page 2 Stories