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Science and scholarship: Ten volumes of the Journal Hospital Medicine

In 2015, the Journal of Hospital Medicine will be publishing its 10th volume, marking an important milestone for hospital medicine. The journal has survived an early period where the need for and viability of an academic hospital medicine journal was not at all clear. More to the point, the Journal of Hospital Medicine has prospered and grown.

The journal continues to evolve as hospital medicine grows and changes. When the Journal of Hospital Medicine began, there was no particular focus on readmissions, ‐blockers were important to reduce perioperative risk, and tight glucose control was thought to be a critical goal for hospitalized patients. Evidence for hospitalists' effectiveness was also changing; initial evidence supporting uniform improvements in length of stay and possible improvement in outcomes were soon tempered by larger‐scale studies.

Clearly, things have changed in medicine writ large, and hospital medicine has changed and caused things to be changed as well. We now exist in a world of value‐based purchasing, accountable care, long‐overdue focus on patient‐centered care (and research), and all in a healthcare setting that is increasingly electronic in nature. Although healthcare delivery has changed, hospital medicine has retained critical core values, including our specialty's focus on interdisciplinary care, quality improvement, and safety.

The Journal of Hospital Medicine has been active in reflecting the field of hospital medicine since the journal began. Due in no small part to the vision of the field's leaders and the exertion and vision of the Journal of Hospital Medicine's founding editor, Mark Williams, the journal is a vigorous and important contributor to academic internal medicine. It has gone from 6 issues per year to 12 issues, has rapidly expanded the number of downloads and citations, and its impact in the field of medicine continues to grow.

When reflecting on the words most often used in the Journal of Hospital Medicine's article titles (Figure 1) over the last 9 volumes, we were not surprised to see that the words hospital and hospitalists figured prominently. However, we were more pleased to see that the words patient and care were a large part of the universe of the Journal of Hospital Medicine's article titles.

Figure 1
Title words in the Journal of Hospital Medicine's articles through 2014.

The Journal of Hospital Medicine's articles are also being read and cited more and more often. The top 10 most downloaded articles are ones that represent a wide range of topics of clinical and operational importance to the field (Table 1), and the 10 most cited articles (Table 2) represent how the scholarship being produced by the field of hospital medicine is being used to advance other scientific and policy initiatives. Only 1 article[1] was listed in both places, demonstrating the difference between what the Journal of Hospital Medicine publishes as a way to help hospitalists provide better care on a day‐to‐day basis and what the journal publishes to advance the field.

The Journal of Hospital Medicine's 10 Most Downloaded Articles
Article Title Total Downloads
1. Making inpatient medication reconciliation patient centered, clinically relevant, and implementable: a consensus statement on key principles and necessary first steps[3] 9,766
2. Promoting effective transitions of care at hospital discharge: a review of key issues for hospitalists[1] 4,243
3. The key principles and characteristics of an effective hospital medicine group: an assessment guide for hospitals and hospitalists[4] 3,722
4. Observation and inpatient status: clinical impact of the 2‐midnight rule[5] 2,587
5. Measuring the modified early warning score and the Rothman Index: advantages of utilizing the electronic medical record in an early warning system[6] 1,923
6. Acute coronary syndrome update for the hospitalist[7] 1,514
7. Hospital performance trends on national quality measures and the association with Joint Commission accreditation[8] 1,505
8. The core competencies in hospital medicine: a framework for curriculum development by the Society of Hospital Medicine[9] 1,218
9. Iliac vein compression syndrome: an underdiagnosed cause of lower extremity deep venous thrombosis[10] 1,135
10. Aspirin versus anticoagulation for prevention of venous thromboembolism major lower extremity orthopedic surgery: a systematic review and meta‐analysis[11] 1,069
The Journal of Hospital Medicine's 10 Most Cited Articles
Title Total Citations
1. Promoting effective transitions of care at hospital discharge: a review of key issues for hospitalists[1] 152
2. Managing discontinuity in academic medical centers: strategies for a safe and effective resident sign‐out[12] 110
3, Reduction of 30‐day postdischarge hospital readmission or emergency department (ED) visit rates in high‐risk elderly medical patients through delivery of a targeted care bundle[13] 69
4. Mastery learning of thoracentesis skills by internal medicine residents using simulation technology and deliberate practice[14] 61
5. Use of simulation‐based mastery learning to improve the quality of central venous catheter placement in a medical intensive care unit[15] 60
6. Transition of care for hospitalized elderly patientsdevelopment of a discharge checklist for hospitalists[16] 59
7. Hospitalist handoffs: a systematic review and task force recommendations[17] 54
8. Inpatient management of diabetes and hyperglycemia among general medicine patients at a large teaching hospital[18] 53
9. Transitions of care consensus policy statement: American College of Physicians, Society of General Internal Medicine, Society of Hospital Medicine, American Geriatrics Society, American College of Emergency Physicians, and Society for Academic Emergency Medicine[19] 50
10. Diabetes care in hospitalized noncritically ill patients: more evidence for clinical inertia and negative therapeutic momentum[20] 49

Our 10th volume will continue the work of promoting scholarship and inquiry in hospital medicine by retaining a clear focus on the science that represents the best of an intellectual agenda[2] for our field. To achieve this important goal, the Journal of Hospital Medicine and the field will need to develop durable evidence for not only how hospitalists deliver care, but also evidence for how care can be improved by providing better treatments. Stated differently, hospitalists and the Journal of Hospital Medicine will need to be focused not only on improving the healthcare system, but also on evaluating new technologies, drugs, and devices that can be used in a value‐focused health system.

In 2015, the Journal of Hospital Medicine will also be launching a new series focusing on improving healthcare value. Titled Choosing Wisely: Next Steps in Improving Healthcare Value, this series of invited reviews will cover important topics needed to frame approaches to reducing healthcare costs while improving care quality and safety. This American Board of Internal Medicine‐sponsored series will be accompanied by a parallel series titled Things We Do for No Reason. Things We Do will provide a series of case studies of tests, medications, or procedures hospitalists encounter every day. We hope these topics, along with the Society of Hospital Medicine's Choosing Wisely focus areas, will continue to outline useful opportunities to improve healthcare value at the bedside or at least frame what we expect will be a lively debate.

We are confident that the combination of highest‐quality peer review and new article offerings will only enhance our ability to share the highest‐quality research, perspectives, reviews, and clinical cases and conundrums with Journal of Hospital Medicine readers. The journal's editors and I look forward to this new year, the Journal of Hospital Medicine's 10th volume, and to many volumes of the Journal of Hospital Medicine to come.

References
  1. Kripalani S, Jackson AT, Schnipper JL, Coleman EA. Promoting effective transitions of care at hospital discharge: a review of key issues for hospitalists. J Hosp Med. 2007;2(5):314323.
  2. Goldman L. An intellectual agenda for hospitalists: lessons from bloodletting. J Hosp Med. 2013;8(7):418419.
  3. Greenwald JL, Halasyamani L, Greene J, et al. Making inpatient medication reconciliation patient centered, clinically relevant and implementable: a consensus statement on key principles and necessary first steps. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(8):477485.
  4. Cawley P, Deitelzweig S, Flores L, et al. The key principles and characteristics of an effective hospital medicine group: an assessment guide for hospitals and hospitalists. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(2):123128.
  5. Sheehy AM, Caponi B, Gangireddy S, et al. Observation and inpatient status: clinical impact of the 2‐midnight rule. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(4):203209.
  6. Finlay GD, Rothman MJ, Smith RA. Measuring the modified early warning score and the Rothman Index: advantages of utilizing the electronic medical record in an early warning system. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(2):116119.
  7. Bhatt DL. Acute coronary syndrome update for hospitalists. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(suppl 4):S15S21.
  8. Schmaltz SP, Williams SC, Chassin MR, Loeb JM, Wachter RM. Hospital performance trends on national quality measures and the association with Joint Commission accreditation. J Hosp Med. 2011;6(8):454461.
  9. The core competencies in hospital medicine: a framework for curriculum development by the society of hospital medicine. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(suppl 1):295.
  10. Naik A, Mian T, Abraham A, Rajput V. Iliac vein compression syndrome: an underdiagnosed cause of lower extremity deep venous thrombosis. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(7):E12E13.
  11. Drescher FS, Sirovich BE, Lee A, Morrison DH, Chiang WH, Larson RJ. Aspirin versus anticoagulation for prevention of venous thromboembolism major lower extremity orthopedic surgery: a systematic review and meta‐analysis. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(9):579585.
  12. Vidyarthi AR, Arora V, Schnipper JL, Wall SD, Wachter RM. Managing discontinuity in academic medical centers: strategies for a safe and effective resident sign‐out. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(4):257266.
  13. Koehler BE, Richter KM, Youngblood L, et al. Reduction of 30‐day postdischarge hospital readmission or emergency department (ED) visit rates in high‐risk elderly medical patients through delivery of a targeted care bundle. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(4):211218.
  14. Wayne DB, Barsuk JH, O'Leary KJ, Fudala MJ, McGaghie WC. Mastery learning of thoracentesis skills by internal medicine residents using simulation technology and deliberate practice. J Hosp Med. 2008;3(1):4854.
  15. Barsuk JH, McGaghie WC, Cohen ER, Balachandran JS, Wayne DB. Use of simulation‐based mastery learning to improve the quality of central venous catheter placement in a medical intensive care unit. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(7):397403.
  16. Halasyamani L, Kripalani S, Coleman E, et al. Transition of care for hospitalized elderly patients—development of a discharge checklist for hospitalists. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(6):354360.
  17. Arora VM, Manjarrez E, Dressler DD, Basaviah P, Halasyamani L, Kripalani S. Hospitalist handoffs: a systematic review and task force recommendations. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(7):433440.
  18. Schnipper JL, Barsky EE, Shaykevich S, Fitzmaurice G, Pendergrass ML. Inpatient management of diabetes and hyperglycemia among general medicine patients at a large teaching hospital. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(3):145150.
  19. Snow V, Beck D, Budnitz T, et al. Transitions of Care Consensus policy statement: American College of Physicians, Society of General Internal Medicine, Society of Hospital Medicine, American Geriatrics Society, American College of Emergency Physicians, and Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(6):364370.
  20. Cook CB, Castro JC, Schmidt RE, et al. Diabetes care in hospitalized noncritically ill patients: more evidence for clinical inertia and negative therapeutic momentum. J Hosp Med. 2007;2(4):203211.
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In 2015, the Journal of Hospital Medicine will be publishing its 10th volume, marking an important milestone for hospital medicine. The journal has survived an early period where the need for and viability of an academic hospital medicine journal was not at all clear. More to the point, the Journal of Hospital Medicine has prospered and grown.

The journal continues to evolve as hospital medicine grows and changes. When the Journal of Hospital Medicine began, there was no particular focus on readmissions, ‐blockers were important to reduce perioperative risk, and tight glucose control was thought to be a critical goal for hospitalized patients. Evidence for hospitalists' effectiveness was also changing; initial evidence supporting uniform improvements in length of stay and possible improvement in outcomes were soon tempered by larger‐scale studies.

Clearly, things have changed in medicine writ large, and hospital medicine has changed and caused things to be changed as well. We now exist in a world of value‐based purchasing, accountable care, long‐overdue focus on patient‐centered care (and research), and all in a healthcare setting that is increasingly electronic in nature. Although healthcare delivery has changed, hospital medicine has retained critical core values, including our specialty's focus on interdisciplinary care, quality improvement, and safety.

The Journal of Hospital Medicine has been active in reflecting the field of hospital medicine since the journal began. Due in no small part to the vision of the field's leaders and the exertion and vision of the Journal of Hospital Medicine's founding editor, Mark Williams, the journal is a vigorous and important contributor to academic internal medicine. It has gone from 6 issues per year to 12 issues, has rapidly expanded the number of downloads and citations, and its impact in the field of medicine continues to grow.

When reflecting on the words most often used in the Journal of Hospital Medicine's article titles (Figure 1) over the last 9 volumes, we were not surprised to see that the words hospital and hospitalists figured prominently. However, we were more pleased to see that the words patient and care were a large part of the universe of the Journal of Hospital Medicine's article titles.

Figure 1
Title words in the Journal of Hospital Medicine's articles through 2014.

The Journal of Hospital Medicine's articles are also being read and cited more and more often. The top 10 most downloaded articles are ones that represent a wide range of topics of clinical and operational importance to the field (Table 1), and the 10 most cited articles (Table 2) represent how the scholarship being produced by the field of hospital medicine is being used to advance other scientific and policy initiatives. Only 1 article[1] was listed in both places, demonstrating the difference between what the Journal of Hospital Medicine publishes as a way to help hospitalists provide better care on a day‐to‐day basis and what the journal publishes to advance the field.

The Journal of Hospital Medicine's 10 Most Downloaded Articles
Article Title Total Downloads
1. Making inpatient medication reconciliation patient centered, clinically relevant, and implementable: a consensus statement on key principles and necessary first steps[3] 9,766
2. Promoting effective transitions of care at hospital discharge: a review of key issues for hospitalists[1] 4,243
3. The key principles and characteristics of an effective hospital medicine group: an assessment guide for hospitals and hospitalists[4] 3,722
4. Observation and inpatient status: clinical impact of the 2‐midnight rule[5] 2,587
5. Measuring the modified early warning score and the Rothman Index: advantages of utilizing the electronic medical record in an early warning system[6] 1,923
6. Acute coronary syndrome update for the hospitalist[7] 1,514
7. Hospital performance trends on national quality measures and the association with Joint Commission accreditation[8] 1,505
8. The core competencies in hospital medicine: a framework for curriculum development by the Society of Hospital Medicine[9] 1,218
9. Iliac vein compression syndrome: an underdiagnosed cause of lower extremity deep venous thrombosis[10] 1,135
10. Aspirin versus anticoagulation for prevention of venous thromboembolism major lower extremity orthopedic surgery: a systematic review and meta‐analysis[11] 1,069
The Journal of Hospital Medicine's 10 Most Cited Articles
Title Total Citations
1. Promoting effective transitions of care at hospital discharge: a review of key issues for hospitalists[1] 152
2. Managing discontinuity in academic medical centers: strategies for a safe and effective resident sign‐out[12] 110
3, Reduction of 30‐day postdischarge hospital readmission or emergency department (ED) visit rates in high‐risk elderly medical patients through delivery of a targeted care bundle[13] 69
4. Mastery learning of thoracentesis skills by internal medicine residents using simulation technology and deliberate practice[14] 61
5. Use of simulation‐based mastery learning to improve the quality of central venous catheter placement in a medical intensive care unit[15] 60
6. Transition of care for hospitalized elderly patientsdevelopment of a discharge checklist for hospitalists[16] 59
7. Hospitalist handoffs: a systematic review and task force recommendations[17] 54
8. Inpatient management of diabetes and hyperglycemia among general medicine patients at a large teaching hospital[18] 53
9. Transitions of care consensus policy statement: American College of Physicians, Society of General Internal Medicine, Society of Hospital Medicine, American Geriatrics Society, American College of Emergency Physicians, and Society for Academic Emergency Medicine[19] 50
10. Diabetes care in hospitalized noncritically ill patients: more evidence for clinical inertia and negative therapeutic momentum[20] 49

Our 10th volume will continue the work of promoting scholarship and inquiry in hospital medicine by retaining a clear focus on the science that represents the best of an intellectual agenda[2] for our field. To achieve this important goal, the Journal of Hospital Medicine and the field will need to develop durable evidence for not only how hospitalists deliver care, but also evidence for how care can be improved by providing better treatments. Stated differently, hospitalists and the Journal of Hospital Medicine will need to be focused not only on improving the healthcare system, but also on evaluating new technologies, drugs, and devices that can be used in a value‐focused health system.

In 2015, the Journal of Hospital Medicine will also be launching a new series focusing on improving healthcare value. Titled Choosing Wisely: Next Steps in Improving Healthcare Value, this series of invited reviews will cover important topics needed to frame approaches to reducing healthcare costs while improving care quality and safety. This American Board of Internal Medicine‐sponsored series will be accompanied by a parallel series titled Things We Do for No Reason. Things We Do will provide a series of case studies of tests, medications, or procedures hospitalists encounter every day. We hope these topics, along with the Society of Hospital Medicine's Choosing Wisely focus areas, will continue to outline useful opportunities to improve healthcare value at the bedside or at least frame what we expect will be a lively debate.

We are confident that the combination of highest‐quality peer review and new article offerings will only enhance our ability to share the highest‐quality research, perspectives, reviews, and clinical cases and conundrums with Journal of Hospital Medicine readers. The journal's editors and I look forward to this new year, the Journal of Hospital Medicine's 10th volume, and to many volumes of the Journal of Hospital Medicine to come.

In 2015, the Journal of Hospital Medicine will be publishing its 10th volume, marking an important milestone for hospital medicine. The journal has survived an early period where the need for and viability of an academic hospital medicine journal was not at all clear. More to the point, the Journal of Hospital Medicine has prospered and grown.

The journal continues to evolve as hospital medicine grows and changes. When the Journal of Hospital Medicine began, there was no particular focus on readmissions, ‐blockers were important to reduce perioperative risk, and tight glucose control was thought to be a critical goal for hospitalized patients. Evidence for hospitalists' effectiveness was also changing; initial evidence supporting uniform improvements in length of stay and possible improvement in outcomes were soon tempered by larger‐scale studies.

Clearly, things have changed in medicine writ large, and hospital medicine has changed and caused things to be changed as well. We now exist in a world of value‐based purchasing, accountable care, long‐overdue focus on patient‐centered care (and research), and all in a healthcare setting that is increasingly electronic in nature. Although healthcare delivery has changed, hospital medicine has retained critical core values, including our specialty's focus on interdisciplinary care, quality improvement, and safety.

The Journal of Hospital Medicine has been active in reflecting the field of hospital medicine since the journal began. Due in no small part to the vision of the field's leaders and the exertion and vision of the Journal of Hospital Medicine's founding editor, Mark Williams, the journal is a vigorous and important contributor to academic internal medicine. It has gone from 6 issues per year to 12 issues, has rapidly expanded the number of downloads and citations, and its impact in the field of medicine continues to grow.

When reflecting on the words most often used in the Journal of Hospital Medicine's article titles (Figure 1) over the last 9 volumes, we were not surprised to see that the words hospital and hospitalists figured prominently. However, we were more pleased to see that the words patient and care were a large part of the universe of the Journal of Hospital Medicine's article titles.

Figure 1
Title words in the Journal of Hospital Medicine's articles through 2014.

The Journal of Hospital Medicine's articles are also being read and cited more and more often. The top 10 most downloaded articles are ones that represent a wide range of topics of clinical and operational importance to the field (Table 1), and the 10 most cited articles (Table 2) represent how the scholarship being produced by the field of hospital medicine is being used to advance other scientific and policy initiatives. Only 1 article[1] was listed in both places, demonstrating the difference between what the Journal of Hospital Medicine publishes as a way to help hospitalists provide better care on a day‐to‐day basis and what the journal publishes to advance the field.

The Journal of Hospital Medicine's 10 Most Downloaded Articles
Article Title Total Downloads
1. Making inpatient medication reconciliation patient centered, clinically relevant, and implementable: a consensus statement on key principles and necessary first steps[3] 9,766
2. Promoting effective transitions of care at hospital discharge: a review of key issues for hospitalists[1] 4,243
3. The key principles and characteristics of an effective hospital medicine group: an assessment guide for hospitals and hospitalists[4] 3,722
4. Observation and inpatient status: clinical impact of the 2‐midnight rule[5] 2,587
5. Measuring the modified early warning score and the Rothman Index: advantages of utilizing the electronic medical record in an early warning system[6] 1,923
6. Acute coronary syndrome update for the hospitalist[7] 1,514
7. Hospital performance trends on national quality measures and the association with Joint Commission accreditation[8] 1,505
8. The core competencies in hospital medicine: a framework for curriculum development by the Society of Hospital Medicine[9] 1,218
9. Iliac vein compression syndrome: an underdiagnosed cause of lower extremity deep venous thrombosis[10] 1,135
10. Aspirin versus anticoagulation for prevention of venous thromboembolism major lower extremity orthopedic surgery: a systematic review and meta‐analysis[11] 1,069
The Journal of Hospital Medicine's 10 Most Cited Articles
Title Total Citations
1. Promoting effective transitions of care at hospital discharge: a review of key issues for hospitalists[1] 152
2. Managing discontinuity in academic medical centers: strategies for a safe and effective resident sign‐out[12] 110
3, Reduction of 30‐day postdischarge hospital readmission or emergency department (ED) visit rates in high‐risk elderly medical patients through delivery of a targeted care bundle[13] 69
4. Mastery learning of thoracentesis skills by internal medicine residents using simulation technology and deliberate practice[14] 61
5. Use of simulation‐based mastery learning to improve the quality of central venous catheter placement in a medical intensive care unit[15] 60
6. Transition of care for hospitalized elderly patientsdevelopment of a discharge checklist for hospitalists[16] 59
7. Hospitalist handoffs: a systematic review and task force recommendations[17] 54
8. Inpatient management of diabetes and hyperglycemia among general medicine patients at a large teaching hospital[18] 53
9. Transitions of care consensus policy statement: American College of Physicians, Society of General Internal Medicine, Society of Hospital Medicine, American Geriatrics Society, American College of Emergency Physicians, and Society for Academic Emergency Medicine[19] 50
10. Diabetes care in hospitalized noncritically ill patients: more evidence for clinical inertia and negative therapeutic momentum[20] 49

Our 10th volume will continue the work of promoting scholarship and inquiry in hospital medicine by retaining a clear focus on the science that represents the best of an intellectual agenda[2] for our field. To achieve this important goal, the Journal of Hospital Medicine and the field will need to develop durable evidence for not only how hospitalists deliver care, but also evidence for how care can be improved by providing better treatments. Stated differently, hospitalists and the Journal of Hospital Medicine will need to be focused not only on improving the healthcare system, but also on evaluating new technologies, drugs, and devices that can be used in a value‐focused health system.

In 2015, the Journal of Hospital Medicine will also be launching a new series focusing on improving healthcare value. Titled Choosing Wisely: Next Steps in Improving Healthcare Value, this series of invited reviews will cover important topics needed to frame approaches to reducing healthcare costs while improving care quality and safety. This American Board of Internal Medicine‐sponsored series will be accompanied by a parallel series titled Things We Do for No Reason. Things We Do will provide a series of case studies of tests, medications, or procedures hospitalists encounter every day. We hope these topics, along with the Society of Hospital Medicine's Choosing Wisely focus areas, will continue to outline useful opportunities to improve healthcare value at the bedside or at least frame what we expect will be a lively debate.

We are confident that the combination of highest‐quality peer review and new article offerings will only enhance our ability to share the highest‐quality research, perspectives, reviews, and clinical cases and conundrums with Journal of Hospital Medicine readers. The journal's editors and I look forward to this new year, the Journal of Hospital Medicine's 10th volume, and to many volumes of the Journal of Hospital Medicine to come.

References
  1. Kripalani S, Jackson AT, Schnipper JL, Coleman EA. Promoting effective transitions of care at hospital discharge: a review of key issues for hospitalists. J Hosp Med. 2007;2(5):314323.
  2. Goldman L. An intellectual agenda for hospitalists: lessons from bloodletting. J Hosp Med. 2013;8(7):418419.
  3. Greenwald JL, Halasyamani L, Greene J, et al. Making inpatient medication reconciliation patient centered, clinically relevant and implementable: a consensus statement on key principles and necessary first steps. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(8):477485.
  4. Cawley P, Deitelzweig S, Flores L, et al. The key principles and characteristics of an effective hospital medicine group: an assessment guide for hospitals and hospitalists. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(2):123128.
  5. Sheehy AM, Caponi B, Gangireddy S, et al. Observation and inpatient status: clinical impact of the 2‐midnight rule. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(4):203209.
  6. Finlay GD, Rothman MJ, Smith RA. Measuring the modified early warning score and the Rothman Index: advantages of utilizing the electronic medical record in an early warning system. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(2):116119.
  7. Bhatt DL. Acute coronary syndrome update for hospitalists. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(suppl 4):S15S21.
  8. Schmaltz SP, Williams SC, Chassin MR, Loeb JM, Wachter RM. Hospital performance trends on national quality measures and the association with Joint Commission accreditation. J Hosp Med. 2011;6(8):454461.
  9. The core competencies in hospital medicine: a framework for curriculum development by the society of hospital medicine. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(suppl 1):295.
  10. Naik A, Mian T, Abraham A, Rajput V. Iliac vein compression syndrome: an underdiagnosed cause of lower extremity deep venous thrombosis. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(7):E12E13.
  11. Drescher FS, Sirovich BE, Lee A, Morrison DH, Chiang WH, Larson RJ. Aspirin versus anticoagulation for prevention of venous thromboembolism major lower extremity orthopedic surgery: a systematic review and meta‐analysis. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(9):579585.
  12. Vidyarthi AR, Arora V, Schnipper JL, Wall SD, Wachter RM. Managing discontinuity in academic medical centers: strategies for a safe and effective resident sign‐out. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(4):257266.
  13. Koehler BE, Richter KM, Youngblood L, et al. Reduction of 30‐day postdischarge hospital readmission or emergency department (ED) visit rates in high‐risk elderly medical patients through delivery of a targeted care bundle. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(4):211218.
  14. Wayne DB, Barsuk JH, O'Leary KJ, Fudala MJ, McGaghie WC. Mastery learning of thoracentesis skills by internal medicine residents using simulation technology and deliberate practice. J Hosp Med. 2008;3(1):4854.
  15. Barsuk JH, McGaghie WC, Cohen ER, Balachandran JS, Wayne DB. Use of simulation‐based mastery learning to improve the quality of central venous catheter placement in a medical intensive care unit. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(7):397403.
  16. Halasyamani L, Kripalani S, Coleman E, et al. Transition of care for hospitalized elderly patients—development of a discharge checklist for hospitalists. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(6):354360.
  17. Arora VM, Manjarrez E, Dressler DD, Basaviah P, Halasyamani L, Kripalani S. Hospitalist handoffs: a systematic review and task force recommendations. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(7):433440.
  18. Schnipper JL, Barsky EE, Shaykevich S, Fitzmaurice G, Pendergrass ML. Inpatient management of diabetes and hyperglycemia among general medicine patients at a large teaching hospital. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(3):145150.
  19. Snow V, Beck D, Budnitz T, et al. Transitions of Care Consensus policy statement: American College of Physicians, Society of General Internal Medicine, Society of Hospital Medicine, American Geriatrics Society, American College of Emergency Physicians, and Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(6):364370.
  20. Cook CB, Castro JC, Schmidt RE, et al. Diabetes care in hospitalized noncritically ill patients: more evidence for clinical inertia and negative therapeutic momentum. J Hosp Med. 2007;2(4):203211.
References
  1. Kripalani S, Jackson AT, Schnipper JL, Coleman EA. Promoting effective transitions of care at hospital discharge: a review of key issues for hospitalists. J Hosp Med. 2007;2(5):314323.
  2. Goldman L. An intellectual agenda for hospitalists: lessons from bloodletting. J Hosp Med. 2013;8(7):418419.
  3. Greenwald JL, Halasyamani L, Greene J, et al. Making inpatient medication reconciliation patient centered, clinically relevant and implementable: a consensus statement on key principles and necessary first steps. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(8):477485.
  4. Cawley P, Deitelzweig S, Flores L, et al. The key principles and characteristics of an effective hospital medicine group: an assessment guide for hospitals and hospitalists. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(2):123128.
  5. Sheehy AM, Caponi B, Gangireddy S, et al. Observation and inpatient status: clinical impact of the 2‐midnight rule. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(4):203209.
  6. Finlay GD, Rothman MJ, Smith RA. Measuring the modified early warning score and the Rothman Index: advantages of utilizing the electronic medical record in an early warning system. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(2):116119.
  7. Bhatt DL. Acute coronary syndrome update for hospitalists. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(suppl 4):S15S21.
  8. Schmaltz SP, Williams SC, Chassin MR, Loeb JM, Wachter RM. Hospital performance trends on national quality measures and the association with Joint Commission accreditation. J Hosp Med. 2011;6(8):454461.
  9. The core competencies in hospital medicine: a framework for curriculum development by the society of hospital medicine. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(suppl 1):295.
  10. Naik A, Mian T, Abraham A, Rajput V. Iliac vein compression syndrome: an underdiagnosed cause of lower extremity deep venous thrombosis. J Hosp Med. 2010;5(7):E12E13.
  11. Drescher FS, Sirovich BE, Lee A, Morrison DH, Chiang WH, Larson RJ. Aspirin versus anticoagulation for prevention of venous thromboembolism major lower extremity orthopedic surgery: a systematic review and meta‐analysis. J Hosp Med. 2014;9(9):579585.
  12. Vidyarthi AR, Arora V, Schnipper JL, Wall SD, Wachter RM. Managing discontinuity in academic medical centers: strategies for a safe and effective resident sign‐out. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(4):257266.
  13. Koehler BE, Richter KM, Youngblood L, et al. Reduction of 30‐day postdischarge hospital readmission or emergency department (ED) visit rates in high‐risk elderly medical patients through delivery of a targeted care bundle. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(4):211218.
  14. Wayne DB, Barsuk JH, O'Leary KJ, Fudala MJ, McGaghie WC. Mastery learning of thoracentesis skills by internal medicine residents using simulation technology and deliberate practice. J Hosp Med. 2008;3(1):4854.
  15. Barsuk JH, McGaghie WC, Cohen ER, Balachandran JS, Wayne DB. Use of simulation‐based mastery learning to improve the quality of central venous catheter placement in a medical intensive care unit. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(7):397403.
  16. Halasyamani L, Kripalani S, Coleman E, et al. Transition of care for hospitalized elderly patients—development of a discharge checklist for hospitalists. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(6):354360.
  17. Arora VM, Manjarrez E, Dressler DD, Basaviah P, Halasyamani L, Kripalani S. Hospitalist handoffs: a systematic review and task force recommendations. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(7):433440.
  18. Schnipper JL, Barsky EE, Shaykevich S, Fitzmaurice G, Pendergrass ML. Inpatient management of diabetes and hyperglycemia among general medicine patients at a large teaching hospital. J Hosp Med. 2006;1(3):145150.
  19. Snow V, Beck D, Budnitz T, et al. Transitions of Care Consensus policy statement: American College of Physicians, Society of General Internal Medicine, Society of Hospital Medicine, American Geriatrics Society, American College of Emergency Physicians, and Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. J Hosp Med. 2009;4(6):364370.
  20. Cook CB, Castro JC, Schmidt RE, et al. Diabetes care in hospitalized noncritically ill patients: more evidence for clinical inertia and negative therapeutic momentum. J Hosp Med. 2007;2(4):203211.
Issue
Journal of Hospital Medicine - 10(1)
Issue
Journal of Hospital Medicine - 10(1)
Page Number
64-66
Page Number
64-66
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Science and scholarship: Ten volumes of the Journal Hospital Medicine
Display Headline
Science and scholarship: Ten volumes of the Journal Hospital Medicine
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© 2014 Society of Hospital Medicine
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