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A Landmark Event

The Hospitalist. 2006 March;2006(03):

The good news is that, as reflected in our abstract submissions, there is a deep pool of good work in hospital medicine to write about and publish. The other good news is that our field is one in which many of the best innovations and much of the important research comes from community settings and not just academic centers. In fact our strength in research comes from the fact that we can draw from both academic and community programs to create new, “generalizable” knowledge. An even greater strength is when these programs collaborate to take advantage of the best that each has to offer to research.

I encourage each of us to think about the work we are doing and to think about what innovative, creative, or successful program should be shared and implore each of us to submit our work to JHM. Help make JHM the best source for innovation and best practices in hospital medicine. Help shape JHM into the best possible journal it can be—the one you open right away and read through because it is so relevant to your practice.

As our field grows we will look back on this moment as a critical landmark in the development of our field. Hold on to your first issue: It may be a valuable collector’s item when volume 50 is being published and JHM is one of the world’s leading journals. What practices will we look back on and laugh at? What practices will have survived years of scrutiny? What will our field look like? Only time will tell. Read JHM to find out. TH

SHM President Dr. Pantilat is an associate professor of clinical medicine at the University of California at San Francisco.

Letters

Excellent Communication

I recently read “Say What?” (Dec. 2005, p. 20)—excellent article. I have been a coding and clinic management consultant for 14 years and the communication issue is huge.

Now that I am working with a hospitalist group, all the points made are right on, and with so many of the new hospitalists being [recently] out of school they never get seasoned in a clinic practice. You can tell the difference! Of our 10 physicians, four are [direct from medical] school to us and the others are from clinic practice. I can tell the difference in patience, politics, and all kinds of issues. Good article and pertinent to the needs, whether they know it or not.

Kay Faught

Practice Administrator

Southern Oregon Hospitalists

Medford, Ore.

Photo Snafu

On p. 22 of the Jan. 2006 issue, we transposed photo captions. The image labeled “Dr. Hartman” is actually William Newbrander, MHA, PhD. The image labeled “Dr. Newbrander” is actually A. Frederick Hartmann, Jr., MD, MPH.

We apologize for any confusion created due to the inaccurate captions. TH