The Journal of Hospital Medicine turns 20

IF 2.3 4区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Journal of hospital medicine Pub Date : 2024-11-11 DOI:10.1002/jhm.13548
Samir S. Shah MD, MSCE, MHM, The Journal of Hospital Medicine Editorial Leadership Team
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Our redesigned website and active engagement by our expanded digital media team on a variety of platforms, including LinkedIn, X (formerly Twitter), Instagram, and Threads, allow readers to engage with us in ways that best meet their needs. Moreover, our pioneering editorial and digital media fellowship programs play a key role in developing academic leaders. Notably, our commitment extends beyond research and education to embracing the dynamic ways healthcare intersects with society. Thus, we have published research and perspectives on vulnerable populations, such as Veterans, LGBTQ+ individuals, the elderly, children, and incarcerated individuals, and perspectives on voting rights, climate change, reproductive rights, and gun violence, issues that inevitably affect our patients and colleagues.</p><p>Healthcare, by its nature, intersects with policy and legislation. Decisions made by lawmakers—whether at the federal or state level—have a tangible effect on patient health. For example, changes to child labor laws in some states place some of our most vulnerable populations at risk of exploitation.<span><sup>1</sup></span> Permissive gun laws in one state are associated not only with higher within state gun-related suicides and homicides but also with other states' firearm-related deaths.<span><sup>2</sup></span> Decisions surrounding women's healthcare, including abortion access, contraception, and reproductive rights, are being made in statehouses across the country.<span><sup>3</sup></span> The consequences of these decisions are not abstract: we see them in the lives of real people—in children and adolescents, like the more than 1200 killed in gun-related violence in 2024, and in women who experienced life-threatening septic abortions due to delayed care in restrictive states.<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span></p><p>As healthcare providers, we are caregivers and advocates for our patients first and foremost. As a journal, our responsibility is to acknowledge and inform our readers about broader societal issues, including those shaped by political discourse, that directly influence our patients' health. The decisions those of us in healthcare make—from how to console grieving parents, counsel a pregnant woman whose fetus has chromosomal abnormalities, or navigate end-of-life care to how we incorporate decarbonization activities into our organizational processes—are intertwined with the sociopolitical context in which we practice.</p><p>Consider the recent federal policy change to cap the monthly insulin prices for Medicare recipients at $35.<span><sup>6</sup></span> For millions of Americans with diabetes, this is not simply a policy or political issue—it's a change that reverses lethal medication rationing due to high cost, giving them access to life-saving medication without fear of financial ruin. Similarly, policies that allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices, which would ease the financial burden on patients, illustrate how government decisions can directly affect health outcomes.<span><sup>7</sup></span> Medicaid, in contrast to Medicare, is administered at the state level. This difference adds a layer of complexity as access to care, the quality of that care, and the protection of fundamental rights can vary significantly depending on local policy choices.</p><p>Some may question whether a medical journal should address issues like these, but healthcare does not exist in a vacuum—it is shaped by laws, policies, and social dynamics. To ignore how these factors influence patient care, health, and well-being would be to overlook an essential aspect of our work as clinicians. We must acknowledge the realities that affect our patients' lives and advocate for improvements to their care. We see this approach as being true to the core mission of medicine, which societal factors have always influenced. Public health initiatives like clean water and vaccination programs arose from a need to address the broader determinants of health. The opioid epidemic cannot be understood without acknowledging its social, economic, and political underpinnings. Likewise, the effects of climate change on public health, racial disparities in healthcare, or access to reproductive care are issues that demand the attention of both policymakers and healthcare professionals.</p><p>By providing a forum for scholarly dissemination and discussion of these broader determinants of health, we remain true to our mission. As we move into the next decade, we remain committed to advocating for our patients' health and well-being.</p><p>Katherine A. Auger (Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, <span>[email protected]</span>); Jennifer Baird (Children's Hospital of Los Angeles, <span>[email protected]</span>); Anthony C. Breu (Harvard Medical School, <span>[email protected]</span>); Michelle N. Brooks (South Texas Veterans Health Care System, <span>[email protected]</span>); Daniel J. Brotman (Johns Hopkins University, <span>[email protected]</span>); Susan L. Calcaterra (University of Colorado, <span>[email protected]</span>); Paula Chatterjee (University of Pennsylvania, <span>[email protected]</span>); Alex J. Chinn (Lt. Col. Luke Weathers, Jr. VA Medical Center, <span>[email protected]</span>); Donna Coetzee (University of Minnesota, <span>[email protected]</span>); Stephanie K. Doupnik (Vanderbilt University, <span>[email protected]</span>); Lenny Feldman (Johns Hopkins University, <span>[email protected]</span>); Catherine Glatz (University of Rochester, <span>[email protected]</span>); Rachita Gupta (University of Colorado, <span>[email protected]</span>); Matthew Hall (Children's Hospital Association, <span>[email protected]</span>); Heather N. Hofmann (Loma Linda University, <span>[email protected]</span>); Keri Holmes-Maybank (Medical University of South Carolina, <span>[email protected]</span>); Molly Horstman (Baylor College of Medicine, <span>[email protected]</span>); Nathan Houchens (University of Michigan, <span>[email protected]</span>); Anand D. Jagannath (Oregon Health &amp; Science University, <span>[email protected]</span>); Karen E. Jerardi (Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, <span>[email protected]</span>); Leah N. Jones (Children's Mercy Kansas City, <span>[email protected]</span>); Farah Acher Kaiksow (University of Wisconsin, <span>[email protected]</span>); Zahir Kanjee (Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, <span>[email protected]</span>); Michelle M. Kelly (University of Wisconsin, <span>[email protected]</span>); Benjamin Kinnear (University of Cincinnati, <span>[email protected]</span>); Elise P. Lu (University of Western Ontario, <span>[email protected]</span>); Sanjay Mahant (University of Toronto, <span>[email protected]</span>); Manpreet Malik (Emory University, <span>[email protected]</span>); Kimberly D. Manning (Emory University, <span>[email protected]</span>); Jessica L. Markham (Children's Mercy Kansas City, <span>[email protected]</span>); Stephanie K. Mueller (Brigham and Women's Hospital), Oanh Kieu Nguyen (University of California, San Francisco, <span>[email protected]</span>); Andrew P. J. Olson (University of Minnesota); Michael Osnard (Johns Hopkins University, <span>[email protected]</span>); Rachel J. Peterson (Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, <span>[email protected]</span>); Priya Prasad (University of California, San Francisco, <span>[email protected]</span>); Rehan Qayyum (Eastern Virginia Medical School, <span>[email protected]</span>); Jennifer Readlynn (University of Rochester, <span>[email protected]</span>); Gregory Ruhnke (University of Chicago, <span>[email protected]</span>); Maria Santos (Providence Cedars Sinai Tarzana Medical Center, <span>[email protected]</span>); Shamini Selvakumar (McMaster University, <span>[email protected]</span>); Suchita Shah Sata (Duke University, <span>[email protected]</span>); Jeffrey L. Schnipper (Brigham and Women's Hospital, <span>[email protected]</span>); Erin E. Shaughnessy (University of Alabama, Birmingham, <span>[email protected]</span>); Heidi J. Sucharew (University of Cincinnati, <span>[email protected]</span>); Maha Sulieman (Emory University, <span>[email protected]</span>); Stephanie Parks Taylor (University of Michigan, <span>[email protected]</span>); Michael Tchou (University of Colorado, <span>[email protected]</span>); Joseph S. Thomas (Buffalo Medical Group, <span>[email protected]</span>); Patricia Tran (University of Illinois, Peoria, <span>[email protected]</span>); Amanda J. Ullman (University of Queensland, <span>[email protected]</span>); Marie E. Wang (Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, <span>[email protected]</span>); Andrew White (University of Washington, <span>[email protected]</span>); Charlie M. Wray (University of California, San Francisco, <span>[email protected]</span>); Ali R. Yazdanyar (University of Pennsylvania, <span>[email protected]</span>).</p><p>The authors declare no conflict of interest.</p>","PeriodicalId":15883,"journal":{"name":"Journal of hospital medicine","volume":"20 1","pages":"5-7"},"PeriodicalIF":2.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-11-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/jhm.13548","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of hospital medicine","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://shmpublications.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jhm.13548","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

We are honored to lead the Journal of Hospital Medicine into its 20th year, continuing our commitment to publishing high-quality research and commentary that advance the field, influence policy, and improve patient care. Enhancing clinical knowledge also remains integral to our mission, hence the many forums to which our readers can avail themselves, including Clinical Progress Notes, Clinical Guideline Highlights for the Hospitalist, Things We Do for No Reason™, Clinical Care Conundrums, and, most recently, Visual Vignettes, a column focused on physical diagnosis.

We have also adapted to and shaped new ways of consuming medical information as we build a community around the journal. Our redesigned website and active engagement by our expanded digital media team on a variety of platforms, including LinkedIn, X (formerly Twitter), Instagram, and Threads, allow readers to engage with us in ways that best meet their needs. Moreover, our pioneering editorial and digital media fellowship programs play a key role in developing academic leaders. Notably, our commitment extends beyond research and education to embracing the dynamic ways healthcare intersects with society. Thus, we have published research and perspectives on vulnerable populations, such as Veterans, LGBTQ+ individuals, the elderly, children, and incarcerated individuals, and perspectives on voting rights, climate change, reproductive rights, and gun violence, issues that inevitably affect our patients and colleagues.

Healthcare, by its nature, intersects with policy and legislation. Decisions made by lawmakers—whether at the federal or state level—have a tangible effect on patient health. For example, changes to child labor laws in some states place some of our most vulnerable populations at risk of exploitation.1 Permissive gun laws in one state are associated not only with higher within state gun-related suicides and homicides but also with other states' firearm-related deaths.2 Decisions surrounding women's healthcare, including abortion access, contraception, and reproductive rights, are being made in statehouses across the country.3 The consequences of these decisions are not abstract: we see them in the lives of real people—in children and adolescents, like the more than 1200 killed in gun-related violence in 2024, and in women who experienced life-threatening septic abortions due to delayed care in restrictive states.4, 5

As healthcare providers, we are caregivers and advocates for our patients first and foremost. As a journal, our responsibility is to acknowledge and inform our readers about broader societal issues, including those shaped by political discourse, that directly influence our patients' health. The decisions those of us in healthcare make—from how to console grieving parents, counsel a pregnant woman whose fetus has chromosomal abnormalities, or navigate end-of-life care to how we incorporate decarbonization activities into our organizational processes—are intertwined with the sociopolitical context in which we practice.

Consider the recent federal policy change to cap the monthly insulin prices for Medicare recipients at $35.6 For millions of Americans with diabetes, this is not simply a policy or political issue—it's a change that reverses lethal medication rationing due to high cost, giving them access to life-saving medication without fear of financial ruin. Similarly, policies that allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices, which would ease the financial burden on patients, illustrate how government decisions can directly affect health outcomes.7 Medicaid, in contrast to Medicare, is administered at the state level. This difference adds a layer of complexity as access to care, the quality of that care, and the protection of fundamental rights can vary significantly depending on local policy choices.

Some may question whether a medical journal should address issues like these, but healthcare does not exist in a vacuum—it is shaped by laws, policies, and social dynamics. To ignore how these factors influence patient care, health, and well-being would be to overlook an essential aspect of our work as clinicians. We must acknowledge the realities that affect our patients' lives and advocate for improvements to their care. We see this approach as being true to the core mission of medicine, which societal factors have always influenced. Public health initiatives like clean water and vaccination programs arose from a need to address the broader determinants of health. The opioid epidemic cannot be understood without acknowledging its social, economic, and political underpinnings. Likewise, the effects of climate change on public health, racial disparities in healthcare, or access to reproductive care are issues that demand the attention of both policymakers and healthcare professionals.

By providing a forum for scholarly dissemination and discussion of these broader determinants of health, we remain true to our mission. As we move into the next decade, we remain committed to advocating for our patients' health and well-being.

Katherine A. Auger (Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, [email protected]); Jennifer Baird (Children's Hospital of Los Angeles, [email protected]); Anthony C. Breu (Harvard Medical School, [email protected]); Michelle N. Brooks (South Texas Veterans Health Care System, [email protected]); Daniel J. Brotman (Johns Hopkins University, [email protected]); Susan L. Calcaterra (University of Colorado, [email protected]); Paula Chatterjee (University of Pennsylvania, [email protected]); Alex J. Chinn (Lt. Col. Luke Weathers, Jr. VA Medical Center, [email protected]); Donna Coetzee (University of Minnesota, [email protected]); Stephanie K. Doupnik (Vanderbilt University, [email protected]); Lenny Feldman (Johns Hopkins University, [email protected]); Catherine Glatz (University of Rochester, [email protected]); Rachita Gupta (University of Colorado, [email protected]); Matthew Hall (Children's Hospital Association, [email protected]); Heather N. Hofmann (Loma Linda University, [email protected]); Keri Holmes-Maybank (Medical University of South Carolina, [email protected]); Molly Horstman (Baylor College of Medicine, [email protected]); Nathan Houchens (University of Michigan, [email protected]); Anand D. Jagannath (Oregon Health & Science University, [email protected]); Karen E. Jerardi (Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, [email protected]); Leah N. Jones (Children's Mercy Kansas City, [email protected]); Farah Acher Kaiksow (University of Wisconsin, [email protected]); Zahir Kanjee (Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, [email protected]); Michelle M. Kelly (University of Wisconsin, [email protected]); Benjamin Kinnear (University of Cincinnati, [email protected]); Elise P. Lu (University of Western Ontario, [email protected]); Sanjay Mahant (University of Toronto, [email protected]); Manpreet Malik (Emory University, [email protected]); Kimberly D. Manning (Emory University, [email protected]); Jessica L. Markham (Children's Mercy Kansas City, [email protected]); Stephanie K. Mueller (Brigham and Women's Hospital), Oanh Kieu Nguyen (University of California, San Francisco, [email protected]); Andrew P. J. Olson (University of Minnesota); Michael Osnard (Johns Hopkins University, [email protected]); Rachel J. Peterson (Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, [email protected]); Priya Prasad (University of California, San Francisco, [email protected]); Rehan Qayyum (Eastern Virginia Medical School, [email protected]); Jennifer Readlynn (University of Rochester, [email protected]); Gregory Ruhnke (University of Chicago, [email protected]); Maria Santos (Providence Cedars Sinai Tarzana Medical Center, [email protected]); Shamini Selvakumar (McMaster University, [email protected]); Suchita Shah Sata (Duke University, [email protected]); Jeffrey L. Schnipper (Brigham and Women's Hospital, [email protected]); Erin E. Shaughnessy (University of Alabama, Birmingham, [email protected]); Heidi J. Sucharew (University of Cincinnati, [email protected]); Maha Sulieman (Emory University, [email protected]); Stephanie Parks Taylor (University of Michigan, [email protected]); Michael Tchou (University of Colorado, [email protected]); Joseph S. Thomas (Buffalo Medical Group, [email protected]); Patricia Tran (University of Illinois, Peoria, [email protected]); Amanda J. Ullman (University of Queensland, [email protected]); Marie E. Wang (Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, [email protected]); Andrew White (University of Washington, [email protected]); Charlie M. Wray (University of California, San Francisco, [email protected]); Ali R. Yazdanyar (University of Pennsylvania, [email protected]).

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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医院医学杂志》创刊 20 周年。
我们很荣幸能够带领《医院医学杂志》进入第20个年头,继续致力于发表高质量的研究和评论,推动该领域的发展,影响政策,改善患者护理。提高临床知识也是我们使命的一部分,因此我们的读者可以利用许多论坛,包括临床进展笔记,医院医生临床指南重点,我们无缘无故做的事情™,临床护理难题,以及最近的视觉小插曲,一个专注于身体诊断的专栏。我们也适应并塑造了新的方式来消费医学信息,因为我们建立了一个围绕期刊的社区。我们重新设计的网站和我们扩大的数字媒体团队在各种平台上的积极参与,包括LinkedIn, X(以前的Twitter), Instagram和Threads,允许读者以最能满足他们需求的方式与我们互动。此外,我们开创性的编辑和数字媒体奖学金项目在培养学术领袖方面发挥着关键作用。值得注意的是,我们的承诺超越了研究和教育,拥抱医疗保健与社会交叉的动态方式。因此,我们发表了关于弱势群体的研究和观点,比如退伍军人、LGBTQ+个人、老年人、儿童和被监禁的人,以及关于投票权、气候变化、生殖权利和枪支暴力的观点,这些问题不可避免地会影响我们的病人和同事。医疗保健就其性质而言,与政策和立法相交叉。立法者的决定——无论是联邦还是州一级的——对病人的健康有切实的影响。例如,一些州对童工法的修改使我们的一些最弱势群体面临被剥削的风险一个州允许枪支的法律不仅与本州内较高的涉枪自杀和杀人有关,而且与其他州涉枪死亡有关围绕妇女保健的决定,包括堕胎、避孕和生殖权利,正在全国各地的州议会做出这些决定的后果不是抽象的:我们在真实的人的生活中看到它们——在儿童和青少年中,比如2024年在与枪支有关的暴力事件中丧生的1200多人,以及在限制州因延误护理而经历危及生命的败血性流产的妇女。4,5作为医疗保健提供者,我们首先是患者的护理者和倡导者。作为一本期刊,我们的责任是承认并告知读者更广泛的社会问题,包括那些受政治话语影响的问题,这些问题直接影响到我们患者的健康。我们这些从事医疗保健工作的人所做的决定——从如何安慰悲伤的父母,为胎儿染色体异常的孕妇提供咨询,或如何引导临终关怀,到如何将脱碳活动纳入我们的组织流程——都与我们所处的社会政治背景交织在一起。考虑到最近联邦政策的变化,对数百万美国糖尿病患者来说,这不仅仅是一个政策或政治问题——这是一个改变,扭转了由于高成本而导致的致命药物配给,让他们能够获得拯救生命的药物,而不必担心经济上的崩溃。同样,允许医疗保险协商药品价格的政策,这将减轻患者的经济负担,说明政府的决定如何直接影响健康结果与医疗保险不同,医疗补助由州一级管理。这种差异增加了一层复杂性,因为获得医疗服务的机会、医疗服务的质量和对基本权利的保护可能因地方政策选择而有很大差异。有些人可能会质疑医学杂志是否应该讨论这些问题,但医疗保健不是存在于真空中——它是由法律、政策和社会动态形成的。忽视这些因素如何影响病人的护理、健康和幸福,将会忽视我们作为临床医生工作的一个重要方面。我们必须承认影响患者生活的现实,并倡导改善他们的护理。我们认为这种方法符合医学的核心使命,而社会因素一直对其产生影响。清洁水和疫苗接种计划等公共卫生倡议源于解决更广泛的健康决定因素的需要。如果不承认阿片类药物流行的社会、经济和政治基础,就无法理解它。同样,气候变化对公共卫生的影响、医疗保健方面的种族差异或获得生殖保健的机会都是需要决策者和医疗保健专业人员注意的问题。通过提供一个学术传播和讨论这些更广泛的健康决定因素的论坛,我们始终忠于我们的使命。 随着我们进入下一个十年,我们将继续致力于倡导患者的健康和福祉。Katherine A. Auger(辛辛那提儿童医院医疗中心,[email protected]);Jennifer Baird(洛杉矶儿童医院,[email protected]);Anthony C. Breu(哈佛医学院,[email protected]);米歇尔·n·布鲁克斯(南德克萨斯州退伍军人医疗保健系统,[email protected]);Daniel J. Brotman(约翰霍普金斯大学,[email protected]);Susan L. Calcaterra(科罗拉多大学,[email protected]);Paula Chatterjee(宾夕法尼亚大学,[email protected]);Alex J. Chinn (Luke Weathers中校,Jr. VA医疗中心,[email protected]);Donna Coetzee(明尼苏达大学,[email protected]);Stephanie K. Doupnik(范德比尔特大学,[email protected]);莱尼·费尔德曼(约翰霍普金斯大学,[email protected]);Catherine Glatz(罗切斯特大学,[email protected]);Rachita Gupta(科罗拉多大学,[email protected]);Matthew Hall(儿童医院协会,[email protected]);Heather N. Hofmann(洛马琳达大学,[email protected]);Keri Holmes-Maybank(南卡罗莱纳医科大学,[email protected]);Molly Horstman(贝勒医学院,[email protected]);Nathan houchen(密歇根大学,[email protected]);Anand D. Jagannath(俄勒冈健康&amp;科学大学,[email protected]);Karen E. Jerardi(辛辛那提儿童医院医疗中心,[email protected]);利亚·n·琼斯(Leah N. Jones)(堪萨斯城儿童慈善机构,[email protected]);Farah Acher Kaiksow(威斯康星大学,[email protected]);Zahir Kanjee (Beth Israel Deaconess医疗中心,[email protected]);米歇尔·m·凯利(威斯康星大学,[email protected]);Benjamin Kinnear(辛辛那提大学,[email protected]);Elise P. Lu(西安大略大学,[email protected]);Sanjay Mahant(多伦多大学,[email protected]);Manpreet Malik(埃默里大学,[email protected]);Kimberly D. Manning (Emory大学,[email protected]);杰西卡·l·马卡姆(Jessica L. Markham)(堪萨斯城儿童慈善机构,[email protected]);Stephanie K. Mueller (Brigham and Women's Hospital), Oanh Kieu Nguyen(加州大学旧金山分校,[email protected]);Andrew P. J. Olson(明尼苏达大学);Michael Osnard(约翰霍普金斯大学,[email protected]);瑞秋·j·彼得森(辛辛那提儿童医院医疗中心,[email protected]);Priya Prasad(加州大学旧金山分校,[email protected]);Rehan Qayyum(东弗吉尼亚医学院,[email protected]);Jennifer Readlynn(罗切斯特大学,[email protected]);Gregory Ruhnke(芝加哥大学,[email protected]);玛丽亚·桑托斯(Providence Cedars Sinai Tarzana医疗中心,[email protected]);Shamini Selvakumar(麦克马斯特大学,[email protected]);Suchita Shah Sata(杜克大学,[email protected]);Jeffrey L. Schnipper(布莱根妇女医院,[email protected]);Erin E. Shaughnessy(伯明翰阿拉巴马大学,[email protected]);Heidi J. Sucharew(辛辛那提大学,[email protected]);Maha Sulieman(埃默里大学,[email protected]);斯蒂芬妮·帕克斯·泰勒(密歇根大学,[email protected]);Michael Tchou(科罗拉多大学,[email protected]);Joseph S. Thomas (Buffalo医疗集团,[email protected]);Patricia Tran(伊利诺伊大学皮奥里亚分校,[email protected]);Amanda J. Ullman(昆士兰大学,[email protected]);Marie E. Wang (Lucile Packard儿童医院,[email protected]);Andrew White(华盛顿大学,[email protected]);Charlie M. Wray(加州大学旧金山分校,[email protected]);Ali R. Yazdanyar(宾夕法尼亚大学,[email protected])。作者声明无利益冲突。
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来源期刊
Journal of hospital medicine
Journal of hospital medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
11.50%
发文量
233
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: JHM is a peer-reviewed publication of the Society of Hospital Medicine and is published 12 times per year. JHM publishes manuscripts that address the care of hospitalized adults or children. Broad areas of interest include (1) Treatments for common inpatient conditions; (2) Approaches to improving perioperative care; (3) Improving care for hospitalized patients with geriatric or pediatric vulnerabilities (such as mobility problems, or those with complex longitudinal care); (4) Evaluation of innovative healthcare delivery or educational models; (5) Approaches to improving the quality, safety, and value of healthcare across the acute- and postacute-continuum of care; and (6) Evaluation of policy and payment changes that affect hospital and postacute care.
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Issue Information Issue Information Pathways to promotion: Making everyday work count towards scholarship opportunities Pathways to promotion: A road map for growth and impact in academic medicine
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