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Showing posts from December, 2021

Save The Date for the 2022 MedStar Health-Georgetown University Research Symposium

Mark your calendars for the 2022 MedStar Health-Georgetown University Research Symposium scheduled for Monday, May 9, 2022!

Earlier this year in May, investigators, educators, innovators, and associates came together virtually for three days at the 2021 MedStar Health-Georgetown University Research Symposium and CENTILE’S Colloquium for Educators in the Health Professions. Nearly 300 research posters and abstracts were presented by MedStar investigators and residents in eleven research areas. Read more about our three day virtual 2021 MedStar Health-Georgetown University Research Symposium on our website. To view all posters, presentations and videos from the 2021 MedStar Health-Georgetown University Research Symposium and CENTILE’S Colloquium for Educators in the Health Professions, please visit here. Please note an email address ending in @medstar.net or @gunet.georgetown.edu is required to access this information.

Did you miss the 2021 MedStar Health-Georgetown University Research Symposium?!

Check out highlights from our Research Symposium this year

 

While we are keeping a close on ability to safely get together for a live, in person symposium in May, we are asking you to save the date for May 9, 2022.  Fingers crossed we can safely get together!





A Spotlight on MedStar Research AIDE and Educating our Workplace

MedStar Research AIDE (Anti-Racism, Inclusivity, Diversity, Equity), our associate led EI&D group, has held meetings since last June to gather ideas, create action plans, and learn about MedStar-wide EI&D initiatives. AIDE recognizes the importance of educating our leaders and associates on how MHRI can become a more inclusive and equitable organization and create an openly anti-racist and anti-discriminatory environment in the workplace.

From the start, the work of the AIDE team has been a priority for MHRI. As a Research Institute, much of our decision-making is grounded in research – and studies clearly show that diverse, inclusive teams, in which members are fully seen, heard, developed, engaged, and rewarded, are consistently more innovative, demonstrate stronger decision-making, and display greater team satisfaction. In a Harvard Business Review article, the author explains, “While there is a business case for diversity—one that rests on sound evidence, an expansive definition of what makes a business successful, and the presence of facilitating conditions…we should not need ‘economic grounds’ to justify investing in people from underrepresented groups.”  We see the work of AIDE as an essential key to fostering a workplace that is equitable for all, in which associate differences are celebrated, and in which team members feel safe to bring their whole selves to work. With an understanding of the current landscape, we acknowledge that there is an enormous amount of work ahead of us to create a workplace that is truly inclusive and equitable.

The MedStarResearch AIDE team continues to provide educational sessions and resources on topics of racism, inclusion, diversity, and equity and how they impact our research, workplace and community. These sessions offer the opportunity for us to learn from our peers and encourage the power of storytelling, as part of a larger initiative to cultivate an inclusive work environment.

Within research, this content helps bring awareness to some of the most pressing issues facing medicine and healthcare today, from offering insights into how to better relate to patients and study participants, to how historical events have contributed to overall mistrust of the medical industry, and most importantly how our research can help identify gaps and solutions to improving health equity overall.

Over the last year, the team has provided several presentations covering various topics such as diversity & inclusion in the workplace, the Tuskegee syphilis study, Asian American Pacific Islander Diversity, honoring Henrietta Lacks, the evolution of disability research & inclusion and more.

As we continue to educate ourselves and learn from one another, let us be mindful of the impact we can create both internally and externally to build an equitable health care system for all.

We are Witnessing a Health Data Revolution

This week I had the pleasure of writing an editorial column for Modern Healthcare about how healthcare systems across the country are at the forefront of exciting times in the use of big data and data science to improve lives through data. As an academic health system, MedStar Health is advancing health through research using machine learning and artificial intelligence to reshape the future of medicine. Together with other healthcare systems, we can ethically share de-identified data to use these powerful data science tools to quickly respond to urgent medical questions to improve health through data.

Read More Here.


Connecting with Community

Below is my monthly message for the December 2021 edition of the MHRI newsletter, Focus. You can view Focus articles online at https://www.medstarhealth.org/blog.



Dear Friends and Colleagues,

‘Tis the season for celebrations and precious moments to connect with family, friends, and loved ones. I hope you get to embrace the spirit of self-care and wellness by surrounding yourself with the people and things that bring you the most joy throughout the holiday season. While we need to remain vigilant, the pandemic has also given us a renewed appreciation for the importance of our personal connections and desire to be part of a community.

Being connected to your personal community becomes part of who you are, what you do and ultimately, how you view yourself. Our community is also a key differentiator for us at MedStar Health as we seek to bring together research, education, innovation and excellent patient care as an academic health system. An academic health system expands the traditional concept of an academic medical center by incorporating the importance of health (beyond just medicine) and using the power of an entire system (imbedded in the diverse communities throughout our region) to advance health for all.

As individuals, we seek health and wellness as a key part of preventing disease and avoiding the need for medicine. Similarly as investigators,  we appreciate that overall wellbeing is determined more by social factors (environment, behavior, economics, etc.) then by genetics and clinical care. That’s why we at the Research Institute have committed to investigating social determinates of health in our work to identify better ways to deliver healthcare. It is only through research that is grounded in our community and existing cultural systems, that we can better understand the structural, socioeconomic and civic drivers of different communities’ health and identify what needs to be done to address the disparities that exist. 

In this issue of FOCUS, we examine the disparities of heart disease, HIV and violence.  Whether in Baltimore City, DC, rural America or even on a native American Indian reservation, our investigators are committed to understanding the reason underserved communities are disproportionally affected by illness and devise potential solutions to close these gaps in health, healthcare and wellness.

As we gather for the holidays, I hope you have the opportunity to demonstrate gratitude for your own personal community.  At the same time, I hope you share in the pride of being part of an academic health system that is connecting us to diverse communities and continue to uphold our commitment to advancing health for all.

Happy holidays everyone!

Neil

Read Focus online at MedStarHealth.org/blog.