Yale GIM September 2025 Section Faculty & Staff Meeting
January 29, 2026Yale GIM Section Faculty & Staff Meeting - September 11, 2025 - Section of General Internal Medicine
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- 00:17Okay. Why don't we get
- 00:19started? Welcome to today's
- 00:22Yale GIM faculty meeting. Agenda
- 00:24is,
- 00:25right here.
- 00:27Let's see.
- 00:30Say hit this button. There
- 00:32we go. So we're gonna
- 00:33just talk briefly about our
- 00:35meeting schedule for the year.
- 00:36We're gonna review,
- 00:38faculty,
- 00:39promotions and reappointments that occurred
- 00:41during the year that just
- 00:42ended.
- 00:43We're gonna welcome new faculty,
- 00:46and then we're gonna talk
- 00:47about proposed
- 00:48promotions and reappointments for the
- 00:50upcoming year along with the
- 00:51FDA queue process.
- 00:53That discussion would be led
- 00:54by our vice chief for
- 00:56faculty affairs,
- 00:57David Feline.
- 00:59Ben's gonna give us a
- 01:00quick,
- 01:01blurb on the upcoming,
- 01:03SGIM,
- 01:05regional meeting.
- 01:06And then Larry Young and
- 01:07Laura Whitley. Larry in person,
- 01:09Laura, virtually will be joining
- 01:11us,
- 01:12for an update on the
- 01:13appointment and promotions department,
- 01:16process in the department for
- 01:17the upcoming year. So
- 01:19a lot to talk about
- 01:21for sure.
- 01:23So there's about thirty somewhat
- 01:25people online as well. If,
- 01:28when Larry's here, if questions
- 01:30come up, you can put
- 01:31them into the chat.
- 01:33Okay. So in terms of
- 01:34our faculty meetings,
- 01:35don't,
- 01:36keep on your schedule our
- 01:38weekly two weekly faculty meetings,
- 01:40our GM grand rounds, and
- 01:42our research,
- 01:43in progress and educational strategies
- 01:45meeting meetings at noon. We
- 01:46had a wonderful GM Grand
- 01:48Rounds this morning on,
- 01:49screening for,
- 01:52genetic,
- 01:53problems related to cancer. So,
- 01:57just keep those meetings along
- 01:59with your new meetings on
- 02:00your schedule.
- 02:01Our three of our retreats
- 02:03are booked. The fall retreat
- 02:05is gonna be a research
- 02:06retreat is gonna be on
- 02:07December ninth.
- 02:08The winter professional development retreat
- 02:11led by Abba Black will
- 02:12be on February second.
- 02:14The educational retreat, I think,
- 02:15is gonna be on June
- 02:16fifth. Is that what I
- 02:17heard this morning?
- 02:18Yeah. June fifth. And then
- 02:20the leadership,
- 02:21retreat with Doug,
- 02:23TBA.
- 02:24And then, of course, there
- 02:25are social events. The next
- 02:27one,
- 02:28coming up is Yale g
- 02:29I m,
- 02:31Yale g I m day
- 02:32at the Yale Bowl,
- 02:33and that is the twenty
- 02:35eighth of September twenty seventh
- 02:36of September. So,
- 02:38please reach out to, our
- 02:40office for tickets and bring
- 02:42your families. It's always a
- 02:43fun day.
- 02:44Of course, then we'll have
- 02:45our holiday party in December
- 02:46and our SGI and reception
- 02:48in the spring.
- 02:49So lots going on.
- 02:52Speaking of which, next week,
- 02:54our general and total medicine
- 02:55grand rounds, Jeffrey Cohen, associate
- 02:57professor of dermatology,
- 02:59update on,
- 03:00systemic therapies for psoriasis
- 03:03and eczema.
- 03:05And next, Thursday at noon
- 03:06is a very special lecture
- 03:07for us, the fourth annual
- 03:09Ingenie Hennel
- 03:10lecture in diversity, equity, inclusion
- 03:12at twelve noon. This is
- 03:14gonna be in the Cohen
- 03:15Auditorium, so please note the
- 03:17change in location.
- 03:18Susanna Morales, an associate professor,
- 03:22from Weill Cornell, is gonna
- 03:23be talking about towards health
- 03:25equity.
- 03:27So,
- 03:29be there.
- 03:31Okay.
- 03:32In terms of faculty
- 03:33promotions and reappointments,
- 03:35this past year,
- 03:37we fifteen people were promoted,
- 03:38two to professor,
- 03:40three to associate professor,
- 03:41one to, professor associate professor
- 03:44adjunct, and nine to assistant
- 03:45professor.
- 03:47These nine folks promoted to
- 03:48assistant professor were folks who
- 03:50were instructors,
- 03:52last year. So in a
- 03:54sense, it's also a new
- 03:55a new appointment,
- 03:57for those folks as well
- 03:58as a promotion.
- 03:59And then we've got twelve
- 04:00faculty reappointed,
- 04:02two to associate professor and
- 04:03ten to assistant professor.
- 04:06Three, faculty,
- 04:07reviews are pending. So if
- 04:09you're in that pending
- 04:10group, fear not. The process
- 04:12will be done soon.
- 04:15So, congratulations to Jeffrey Kravitz
- 04:17who was promoted to, professor
- 04:19of medicine.
- 04:20Jeffrey, as you know, is
- 04:21a service line manager for
- 04:22primary care at the VA.
- 04:25Also,
- 04:26congratulations to Chris Rouser for
- 04:27his promotion to professor.
- 04:29Chris is also the associate
- 04:30chief of medicine at the
- 04:32VA.
- 04:33Abba Black, congratulations on your
- 04:35promotion to associate professor.
- 04:37Abba, as you all know,
- 04:38is our vice chief, with
- 04:40a new title this year
- 04:41for vice chief for collaborative
- 04:43excellence.
- 04:44Congratulations to Abba.
- 04:46Juergen Hallock, was also promoted
- 04:48to associate professor.
- 04:50He's part of the BA
- 04:51Connecticut hospital medicine program.
- 04:53Congratulations,
- 04:55Juergen.
- 04:56And David Rosenthal was promoted
- 04:57to associate professor. David is
- 04:59now,
- 05:00based with us. We heard
- 05:01from David last week
- 05:02about his upcoming, movie on
- 05:04primary care.
- 05:06So congratulations
- 05:07to, David.
- 05:09Christopher Wrench, was promoted to
- 05:10associate professor adjunct.
- 05:12Christopher is a key player,
- 05:15in the veterans aging cohort
- 05:16study. So congratulations to Christopher.
- 05:19Okay. And here are our
- 05:20promotions to assistant professor. Again,
- 05:22majority of these people were
- 05:23instructors last year, so it's
- 05:26promotion and new appointments.
- 05:28Cara Barelli is promote promoted
- 05:30to assistant professor of medicine.
- 05:31Cara is part of the
- 05:32Yale program in addiction medicine.
- 05:35Andrew Cox was promoted to
- 05:36assistant professor. Andrew is part
- 05:38of VA primary care.
- 05:40Sami Hamdan was promoted to
- 05:42assistant professor.
- 05:44Sami has a role in
- 05:45the primary care residency program
- 05:47and the program in addiction
- 05:48medicine.
- 05:49Haedong Liu was promoted to
- 05:51assistant professor of medicine.
- 05:53Hedong is a key,
- 05:55researcher in the Yale program
- 05:57in addiction medicine.
- 05:59Andrea Roberts was promoted to
- 06:01assistant professor. She's based at
- 06:02VA Connecticut Hospital Medicine.
- 06:05Shelby Rosario
- 06:06was promoted to assistant professor
- 06:08of medicine.
- 06:09Her appointments are within the
- 06:11department and in the med
- 06:12piece program.
- 06:13In our department, she serves
- 06:14as a director of URIM
- 06:16physician experience
- 06:18mentoring program.
- 06:20Richard Smith was promoted to
- 06:21assistant professor of medicine. Richard
- 06:23is part of our VA
- 06:24Connecticut occupational health services program.
- 06:27And Min Hee Sung was
- 06:28promoted to,
- 06:29assistant professor of medicine. Min
- 06:31Hee is part of our,
- 06:32VA Connecticut
- 06:33research group.
- 06:35Nate Wood was promoted to
- 06:37assistant professor of medicine.
- 06:39Nate is a member of
- 06:40our primary care residency program
- 06:42and also serves as the
- 06:43director of culinary
- 06:45medicine
- 06:46here at the medical center.
- 06:49And our reappointments,
- 06:50Tracy and Jeremy were both
- 06:52reappointed to the rank of
- 06:53associate professor of medicine.
- 06:55Congratulations to Tracy and Jeremy.
- 06:58The following individuals were re
- 07:00reappointed to the rank of
- 07:01assistant professor,
- 07:03and the print is small,
- 07:04so I'll lean in. Alex
- 07:05Cho, Jackie Cook, Tara Herbert,
- 07:08Angie, who's here,
- 07:10and,
- 07:11Jenna Klimevich.
- 07:13Congratulations to that group of
- 07:15reappointments.
- 07:17Then,
- 07:18Dimitri, Cara,
- 07:19Rachel, Jonathan, and Matthew were
- 07:21also reappointed to
- 07:24the rank of assistant professor.
- 07:27In addition,
- 07:28here are some new leadership
- 07:29appointments that occurred,
- 07:31towards the end of the
- 07:32year,
- 07:33and beginning this year. Jorge
- 07:35Jorge Moreno is gonna be
- 07:36now the assistant director of
- 07:38Yima.
- 07:40Richard is now the chief
- 07:42of occupational health of the
- 07:43veterans,
- 07:44via Connecticut.
- 07:46And JD, was appointed as
- 07:48the inaugural associate dean for
- 07:50education technology and innovation.
- 07:52So congratulations
- 07:54to all our faculty who
- 07:55were appointed,
- 07:56reappointed,
- 07:58and appointed to these new
- 08:00leadership positions.
- 08:02Way to go.
- 08:08Okay. So,
- 08:10welcoming additional
- 08:11new faculty to the section.
- 08:13So there are eleven new
- 08:14faculty as of July first,
- 08:15one assistant professor,
- 08:17one assistant clinical professor, four
- 08:19clinical,
- 08:21four assistant professor adjuncts, three
- 08:23instructors,
- 08:24one associate research scientist, and
- 08:26one clinical associate.
- 08:28So David Fink, who I
- 08:29think I saw walk in
- 08:31here, is here.
- 08:32David is an assistant professor
- 08:34of medicine,
- 08:35and is based at the
- 08:36Yale Center on Evidence, Equity,
- 08:38and Patient Centeredness and Pain
- 08:40Treatment concept.
- 08:41David,
- 08:42came to us from New
- 08:43York City, and now he's
- 08:45here in New Haven. Welcome
- 08:46aboard,
- 08:47David.
- 08:49Alicia Bolden is appointed as
- 08:51assistant professor adjunct,
- 08:53in the Yale physician assistant
- 08:55program.
- 08:56Welcome aboard, Alicia.
- 08:57Gordon Hill is now assistant
- 08:59professor adjunct in the Yale
- 09:01program in addiction medicine.
- 09:04Gordon's been with us, and,
- 09:05we're glad that he still
- 09:06is.
- 09:08Natalia Kunst,
- 09:10who's, at the who got
- 09:12received her degree at the
- 09:13University of Oslo
- 09:14is, appointed as assistant professor
- 09:16adjunct for the National Collision
- 09:18Scholars Program.
- 09:20Jennifer Dubervall is appointed as
- 09:22assistant professor
- 09:23adjunct for the Yale PA
- 09:25program,
- 09:26and Mario Oka Perito who
- 09:29oversees
- 09:30our resident who train at,
- 09:32Fairhaven,
- 09:34Community Health Center,
- 09:35for the traditional health, internal
- 09:37medicine program has been appointed
- 09:39as an assistant clinical professor.
- 09:41Congratulations, Mario.
- 09:43Alyssa Chen, a recent graduate
- 09:45of our NCSP,
- 09:47is now an instructor with
- 09:48us. Alyssa, welcome aboard. Congratulations.
- 09:52Rita Rienzo has been appointed
- 09:53as an instructor in the
- 09:54PA program.
- 09:56Richie Verma.
- 09:58Is Richie here yet, Brad?
- 09:59He is.
- 10:01Has been appointed as an
- 10:02instructor,
- 10:03based in the Yale primary
- 10:04care residency program.
- 10:06Christine Ramsey,
- 10:07associate research science, for, VAX,
- 10:11and Alice Chen,
- 10:13clinical associate in the Yale
- 10:15program in addiction medicine.
- 10:17So welcome to all our
- 10:18new faculty. We're so glad
- 10:20to have you
- 10:23here. Onto,
- 10:28our upcoming,
- 10:29promotions and reappointments and FDA
- 10:31queue process. I'll turn the
- 10:33podium over to your vice
- 10:34chief for faculty affairs,
- 10:36David Feline. David.
- 10:39Thank you, Patrick.
- 10:42It's nice to see the
- 10:43fruits of all of the
- 10:44the work that we do
- 10:46over the years represented in
- 10:47these appointments and promotions. And
- 10:50congratulations to each of you
- 10:52who I know have spent
- 10:53a lot of time,
- 10:54working with your documents and
- 10:56getting your, paperwork together.
- 10:58In addition,
- 11:00thank you to Michelle and
- 11:01Vivian who provide invaluable
- 11:03health,
- 11:05as well as Larry and,
- 11:07Laura Whitley from the department.
- 11:10This year,
- 11:11we're working with,
- 11:14proposing for promotion
- 11:15for individuals,
- 11:17to professor.
- 11:18Three of those are on
- 11:19the full time faculty.
- 11:21One
- 11:22would be a clinical professor,
- 11:24which is actually fairly unusual
- 11:26here, and Larry may be
- 11:27able to speak to that.
- 11:29And we've got seven individuals,
- 11:32who are currently assistant professors
- 11:34that we will be proposing
- 11:35for associate professors.
- 11:38Six of those are on
- 11:39full time faculty and one
- 11:41is associate professor
- 11:43adjunct.
- 11:44And then, one person that
- 11:46we're gonna be proposing for
- 11:48senior research scientist.
- 11:51And,
- 11:53reappointments,
- 11:55that's actually twenty one. One
- 11:57at the associate professor level
- 11:58and twenty at the assistant
- 12:01professor level.
- 12:03Just talk briefly about the
- 12:05FDAC process
- 12:07now that it's not,
- 12:09indirectly in our view.
- 12:11Congratulations
- 12:12for everybody,
- 12:14who brought their materials together.
- 12:17Again, Vivian and Michelle,
- 12:19you know, we achieved, I
- 12:21believe, sort of a hundred
- 12:22percent success rate, which is,
- 12:26amazing given the size of
- 12:28our,
- 12:29section.
- 12:30And I I also wanna
- 12:32say thank you to the
- 12:34senior faculty
- 12:35who meet,
- 12:37on a weekly basis
- 12:39in the early spring, sort
- 12:40of March through June,
- 12:42to review all of the
- 12:43materials
- 12:45and to pull out from
- 12:46your FDAC
- 12:47what you're looking to do,
- 12:49what are the challenges,
- 12:51what has been beneficial,
- 12:53and to try to provide
- 12:55substantial and substantive guidance,
- 12:58making sure that you're aware
- 12:59of the resources
- 13:01in the section, in the
- 13:02department, across the,
- 13:04across campus,
- 13:06wide. So,
- 13:08again, you can see the
- 13:09numbers here.
- 13:11And the only thing I'll
- 13:12add to that, you know,
- 13:13we've been talking about this
- 13:15for a couple of years.
- 13:16We've got some headway.
- 13:18I've been meeting with,
- 13:20Jen Miller, Anne Black, and
- 13:21Ryan
- 13:22McNeil,
- 13:24so that our doctoral faculty,
- 13:26which has really been growing
- 13:28over the last,
- 13:29five to ten years, thanks
- 13:31to many of your efforts,
- 13:34will have a place to
- 13:35sort of meet separately,
- 13:37talk about,
- 13:38their
- 13:39pathways moving forward, talk let
- 13:42them get to know each
- 13:43other. I think they're probably
- 13:44upwards of thirty individuals
- 13:46with doctoral
- 13:48degrees in engineering,
- 13:50ethics,
- 13:52informatics,
- 13:54epidemiology,
- 13:55everything you can imagine. It's
- 13:57really quite,
- 13:59impressive the breadth of experience
- 14:01we have within our doctoral
- 14:03faculty.
- 14:04So, the goal, we've met
- 14:06twice.
- 14:07The goal is to have
- 14:08a meeting of the doctoral
- 14:09faculty sometime this fall, sort
- 14:11of plan a sequence of,
- 14:13repeated meetings over a time
- 14:15so that we can collectively
- 14:17address issues around, mentorship promotion,
- 14:20and opportunities,
- 14:21especially in this environment.
- 14:23And in fact, Anne has
- 14:25worked to, pull together a,
- 14:28a just a very brief
- 14:29survey so that we hear
- 14:30from the faculty as to
- 14:32what areas they would be
- 14:33interested in hearing about. So
- 14:35if you've been hearing about
- 14:36that or if you feel
- 14:37like you you may have
- 14:38been,
- 14:39left out, don't worry. It's
- 14:41all, coming together, and we
- 14:43look forward to, meeting with
- 14:44everybody.
- 14:45Any questions?
- 14:49I'll turn it back to
- 14:50Patrick.
- 14:53Thank you, David.
- 14:55So I I think this
- 14:56initiative was new initiative. David's
- 14:58really spearheaded about helping to
- 15:00bring the PhD faculty together
- 15:02so they can support each
- 15:03other in their academic careers.
- 15:05Career development is really a
- 15:07a important new program that
- 15:08we're doing in this section.
- 15:09So,
- 15:10I'm looking forward to seeing
- 15:11that come together. Ben Gallagher,
- 15:13you're gonna give us a
- 15:15little bit of cheerleading here,
- 15:16right,
- 15:18for the SGIM.
- 15:20Ben is are you now
- 15:21the president of I will
- 15:22I'm the president-elect
- 15:24when this meeting is over,
- 15:25and that's when that transition
- 15:26happens. Okay. So few months.
- 15:28Yes. Next year is gonna
- 15:29Yeah. Okay. Say goodbye. Chance.
- 15:31Alright, everybody. So good to
- 15:32see you all. I just
- 15:33wanna spend a little bit
- 15:34of time talking about the
- 15:35upcoming regional meeting for SGIM.
- 15:37I think it's we're actually
- 15:39lucky that our region is
- 15:40so geographically
- 15:41closed in, and that it's
- 15:42pretty easy to go to
- 15:43these regional meetings. You don't
- 15:44have to book a flight
- 15:45or book a hotel and
- 15:46that kind of thing. So
- 15:47this, meeting is happening this
- 15:49November, Saturday,
- 15:51November eighth
- 15:52at Harvard Medical School at
- 15:53the same center that we've
- 15:55done in that that that
- 15:56site before. This QR code
- 15:57will take you to the
- 15:58registration website and the early
- 16:00bird rate will end in
- 16:02the beginning of October.
- 16:04It's really a pretty reasonable
- 16:05registration fee and it's for
- 16:07trainees and and students etcetera.
- 16:08It's even more discounted than
- 16:10that.
- 16:11I wanna go over briefly
- 16:12what's gonna be on the
- 16:14agenda.
- 16:15I don't have the exact
- 16:16play by play but these
- 16:17are all the components. So
- 16:18our plenary speaker is gonna
- 16:20be Sarah Kimball who's an
- 16:21internist at BU who does
- 16:22a lot of work in
- 16:23immigrant and migrant health. I
- 16:26don't have the the talk
- 16:27the talk title yet, but
- 16:28I think especially given the
- 16:29political environment,
- 16:30we're all wondering about how
- 16:32to take care of folks,
- 16:33who may be in danger
- 16:35because of immigration status.
- 16:37We then have a series
- 16:38of plenary oral presentations from
- 16:40each of these three categories.
- 16:42So it's the top scoring,
- 16:44presentations in scientific abstracts,
- 16:46innovations, and clinical vignettes.
- 16:49Then interspersed throughout the day,
- 16:51we have different oral sessions
- 16:52on
- 16:53those same categories, scientific abstracts,
- 16:55innovations, and clinical vignettes.
- 16:58And also, this year, three
- 16:59different clinical updates. And this
- 17:01year, we've decided to broaden
- 17:03beyond just outpatient, inpatient, but
- 17:05do some specific topics.
- 17:07We've got one on addiction
- 17:08medicine where two of our
- 17:09faculty, Erica Hyman and Sami
- 17:11Hamdan are,
- 17:13contributing to and they did
- 17:14a run through for us,
- 17:15last night and I think
- 17:15it's gonna be really great.
- 17:16But we also have one
- 17:17on menopause,
- 17:19and also on liver disease
- 17:20and hospitalized patients. So I
- 17:21think those will be all
- 17:22very relevant to folks that
- 17:24practice in various settings.
- 17:25A number of different workshops
- 17:27as well.
- 17:28This year, for the first
- 17:29time, Jackie Savage, who's in
- 17:31our section and who has
- 17:32been leading a sort of
- 17:33medical jeopardy at the Connecticut
- 17:35ACP meeting, is going to
- 17:36do the same thing at
- 17:38our,
- 17:39SGIM meeting, and we have
- 17:40three different teams,
- 17:42none from Yale. So if
- 17:43we continue to do this
- 17:44next year, I would suggest
- 17:46YPC or try to program
- 17:47try to field teams for
- 17:49that, but I think that
- 17:49will be a lot of
- 17:50fun. We're again gonna have
- 17:51a bite sized teaching competition,
- 17:54where
- 17:55trainees and junior faculty will
- 17:56be showcasing their teaching skills
- 17:59and hopefully that will also
- 18:00feed into a national showcase
- 18:02for each region and winner
- 18:03will get to showcase their
- 18:05presentations and then we end
- 18:06the day with a poster
- 18:07session. So it's a one
- 18:09day meeting,
- 18:10it's pretty easy to get
- 18:11to, not too expensive.
- 18:13We usually have a pretty
- 18:13good showing of people who
- 18:14are presenting and,
- 18:16supporting folks, mentees that are
- 18:18presenting,
- 18:19and I think it'll be
- 18:19a lot of fun. It's
- 18:20a great way to meet
- 18:21people in different,
- 18:23from different parts of our
- 18:24region, you know, in similar
- 18:25disciplines and who are are
- 18:26like minded, etcetera. So I
- 18:28think it'll be a lot
- 18:28of fun.
- 18:30Related to this,
- 18:31in October, the deadlines for
- 18:34nominating folks for regional awards
- 18:36and also nominating yourself or
- 18:38other, folks that you work
- 18:39with for leadership positions within
- 18:41the region
- 18:42will come due. The awards
- 18:44are for both junior and,
- 18:46senior faculty related to clinical
- 18:48work, education, research,
- 18:50advocacy, leadership, etcetera. So I
- 18:52encourage you to check out,
- 18:53the the different qualifications for
- 18:55those awards. And then the
- 18:57leadership
- 18:58nominations
- 18:58are for the main positions
- 19:01which are president,
- 19:02secretary, treasurer,
- 19:04DEI chair, membership chair, and
- 19:05they may be also on
- 19:06for an associate member which
- 19:07is a a student or
- 19:09trainee or or fellow.
- 19:11And so, in addition to
- 19:12to Jackie, Alana and Ab
- 19:14are also part of the
- 19:15leadership team,
- 19:16and the the competitiveness of
- 19:18this is is very variable.
- 19:19Sometimes
- 19:20you get to kind of
- 19:21walk into this because nobody
- 19:22else is volunteering. Sometimes it's
- 19:23you get to have an
- 19:24elections and everything in between,
- 19:26but I found it to
- 19:27be really a great opportunity
- 19:29to get to,
- 19:30meet other folks in SGIM
- 19:32in the region and get
- 19:32a little more involved nationally
- 19:34and also just to learn
- 19:35how to plan a scientific
- 19:37meeting,
- 19:37which is relevant for folks
- 19:39in a variety of different,
- 19:41kind of career paths, whether
- 19:43it's education or clinical work
- 19:44or or research. So I
- 19:46would encourage you to consider
- 19:48your colleagues and yourselves for
- 19:49these awards
- 19:51and and positions.
- 19:53Lastly,
- 19:54it seems like the national
- 19:55meeting from this year just
- 19:56ended but we're already well
- 19:58underway planning the national meeting
- 20:00for twenty twenty six which
- 20:01is in Washington DC
- 20:03And we're currently,
- 20:04in the
- 20:06submission phase for workshops and,
- 20:08and clinical updates. The submissions
- 20:10for the all the different
- 20:11abstracts happen in
- 20:13December and then the peer
- 20:14review that happens in January,
- 20:16February. But what we really
- 20:17are looking for,
- 20:19this month and and next
- 20:21month is peer reviewers for
- 20:22the clinical updates and workshops.
- 20:24This,
- 20:25QR code will take you
- 20:26to the, the survey to
- 20:29sign up for peer review.
- 20:30Obviously, all of these meetings
- 20:32rely on peer reviewers who
- 20:33are volunteering their time. The
- 20:34more people that volunteer, the
- 20:36fewer,
- 20:37submissions you will individually be
- 20:38assigned to,
- 20:40to review and, and so
- 20:41I think everyone would appreciate
- 20:43that. So hopefully, we'll get
- 20:44a good showing at the,
- 20:46the New England meeting and
- 20:47and a lot of submissions
- 20:48to the national meeting as
- 20:49well. So Questions for Ben?
- 20:53And that was very helpful.
- 20:55Thank you so much. And
- 20:56I I just wanna reemphasize
- 20:58the importance of, this regional
- 21:00meeting is a great opportunity
- 21:02for everybody in the section,
- 21:04to network with faculty from
- 21:05around the region to get
- 21:07your
- 21:08your, presentations,
- 21:11out there.
- 21:13Ben, if you could send
- 21:13around that information about the,
- 21:16signing up for the peer
- 21:17review again, maybe send it
- 21:18to Vicki so she can
- 21:19distribute the section, that would
- 21:20be great.
- 21:21Also,
- 21:22you know, there's
- 21:23forty odd people online right
- 21:25now. I got one
- 21:26quick addition here. Dan Tobin
- 21:28reminding us again about the
- 21:31Connecticut chapter of the,
- 21:33American College of Physicians meeting
- 21:34scheduled for October tenth. We've
- 21:36all gotten emails about this
- 21:38already.
- 21:39It's a great meeting. Lots
- 21:40of fun.
- 21:42Try to make that meeting
- 21:43as well.
- 21:45So thank you for that.
- 21:47So,
- 21:48you know,
- 21:49we're very fortunate,
- 21:51in general internal medicine that
- 21:52we have a department
- 21:54of medicine that's really supportive
- 21:55of our faculty.
- 21:57In particular, our appointments and
- 21:58promotions committee, which is led
- 22:00by Larry Young, who's here
- 22:01today to meet with us,
- 22:03Laura Whitley, who's the manager
- 22:05for faculty affairs for the
- 22:06department, I think, is online,
- 22:08perhaps.
- 22:09I am. Yes. Thank you.
- 22:10Hi, Laura. Thank you for
- 22:12being here.
- 22:13So, we're gonna have an
- 22:15update from, Larry and Laura.
- 22:17And, Larry, come on up
- 22:19and take it away.
- 22:21And thank you for being
- 22:22here.
- 22:28Set up my best to
- 22:29do this. I would go.
- 22:34I'll just go go on
- 22:35to the Yeah. Channel.
- 23:02Hi, everybody.
- 23:04I
- 23:05no. One period.
- 23:08For a second so we
- 23:08could see it. Yeah.
- 23:11Nine eight seven eight.
- 23:13One one zero six
- 23:16nine four seven eight.
- 23:36Yeah. I think the stalls
- 23:37feature in term life.
- 23:40She's happy. You're good.
- 23:42Yeah.
- 23:44Yeah.
- 23:49We
- 23:51it's in.
- 23:59So It was
- 24:03open.
- 24:10It was a district. I
- 24:11mean, it was the process.
- 24:12I won't say it was
- 24:12district. Sorry. It was like,
- 24:14almost.
- 24:15But it wasn't, like,
- 24:16meeting issues instead of everything.
- 24:18Yes. I still Yeah. Struggling.
- 24:20No.
- 24:26There you go.
- 24:28A little more.
- 24:32So,
- 24:33hi, everybody. I'm Larry Young,
- 24:35and I'm
- 24:37a cardiologist,
- 24:38but I've been working in
- 24:39this, position as vice chair
- 24:42for faculty affairs for a
- 24:43while
- 24:45and working closely with Patrick
- 24:46and
- 24:47and David.
- 24:49I think,
- 24:51this section is in particularly
- 24:53good hands when it comes
- 24:54to career development. I don't
- 24:55think there's any section in
- 24:57the department that does it
- 24:58as well,
- 25:00as, as,
- 25:02this particular pair of leaders.
- 25:04So congrats to David and
- 25:06Patrick for really taking it
- 25:08seriously.
- 25:13Right. So there's very little
- 25:15that I have to add,
- 25:17but I'll try to,
- 25:19throw out some tips, clarify
- 25:21some things, and I do
- 25:23want it to be interactive.
- 25:24I've found that these sessions
- 25:26are really best if the
- 25:27questions just come along as
- 25:29they come along.
- 25:31And,
- 25:32I will look for
- 25:36we'll look for,
- 25:37your input as well.
- 25:40So just a little bit
- 25:41of feedback.
- 25:43General medicine was exemplary.
- 25:45The department as a whole
- 25:46has kinda caught up to
- 25:47you guys. And so this
- 25:49is departmental data for the
- 25:51last mentoring,
- 25:52year, and the FDAC is
- 25:55our repository
- 25:56for information. I don't see
- 25:57the FDAC as an end
- 25:59all, but rather where information
- 26:01goes so that you can
- 26:02have a meaningful discussion
- 26:04with your mentor, your section
- 26:06chief,
- 26:08your leaders, David, others.
- 26:10And
- 26:11so, it's actually a tool.
- 26:13And I think,
- 26:14nothing more, nothing less,
- 26:17but,
- 26:18an opportunity
- 26:19to set the
- 26:22discussion in in motion.
- 26:26So particularly
- 26:27glad that
- 26:30junior faculty who submitted FDACs,
- 26:32a hundred percent of them
- 26:33met with mentors. That's the
- 26:35first year that's happened.
- 26:36Of course, it should be
- 26:38a hundred percent. It should
- 26:39never be ninety nine. If
- 26:40somebody
- 26:41wants mentorship, they should always
- 26:43a hundred percent get it,
- 26:45and I'm really pleased this
- 26:46year that we hit that
- 26:47target.
- 26:48And,
- 26:50almost everybody, and this should
- 26:51be a hundred percent too,
- 26:53met with their second chief
- 26:54or designee. And
- 26:56I must say
- 26:57over the last three years,
- 26:59there's been,
- 27:01a growing acceptance amongst senior
- 27:04faculty
- 27:04who said, why do I
- 27:06need to go through this
- 27:07process?
- 27:08Realizing that the opportunity to
- 27:10sit down with the the
- 27:12section chief or the leader,
- 27:13a leader in the section
- 27:14was an opportunity for,
- 27:17bidirectional
- 27:18communication,
- 27:19a chance for you to
- 27:20input on your thoughts about
- 27:23the section, the world, the
- 27:24faculty,
- 27:26and
- 27:27and and communication.
- 27:29There's never enough communication is
- 27:31the bottom line.
- 27:33So Patrick mentioned, I guess,
- 27:35ten percent of your faculty
- 27:37now are in the research
- 27:38faculty.
- 27:40And,
- 27:41you know, we'll see what
- 27:42happens next year. Right now,
- 27:44the FDAC is not required.
- 27:46It's recommended, and I would
- 27:48double underline. I think it's
- 27:50a great idea again.
- 27:53The,
- 27:54ARS faculty,
- 27:56only thirty nine percent in
- 27:58the department filled out the
- 28:00FDAC, and only twenty four
- 28:01percent did so and also
- 28:03met with their
- 28:04PI.
- 28:07You know, you meet
- 28:08the ARS faculty meet with
- 28:09their PIs a lot, but
- 28:12framing it in the discussion
- 28:13of it's been a year.
- 28:15Where are we? Where are
- 28:16we going?
- 28:17It's useful. It's useful just
- 28:19to get
- 28:20a non day by day
- 28:22task by task bit of
- 28:24feedback, and I would encourage
- 28:25it.
- 28:26The more senior research faculty,
- 28:29eighty five percent and sixty
- 28:31four percent met with their
- 28:33leadership. This was actually a
- 28:34requirement, and so we we
- 28:36didn't do very well, I
- 28:37would say, on this,
- 28:39that
- 28:40senior research faculty have
- 28:43issues that
- 28:44really require input from,
- 28:47from the
- 28:48second chief or designated leader
- 28:51and,
- 28:52and so important. And and
- 28:54this is a work in
- 28:55progress. I think
- 28:56that the school is also
- 28:58thinking about whether to make
- 28:59this more sort of encourage
- 29:01it more strongly with making
- 29:02it mandatory.
- 29:05So
- 29:07mentorship
- 29:09leads to successful career development,
- 29:11leads to promotion. Promotion is
- 29:13not an end all. It's
- 29:15really a recognition of everything
- 29:16you've done over the last
- 29:18six,
- 29:19ten, whatever it is, years.
- 29:22And
- 29:23and so,
- 29:26I think you've recruited a
- 29:27bunch of new faculty.
- 29:29Now's the time to start
- 29:30thinking about those of you
- 29:32who are gonna be their
- 29:33mentors
- 29:34about
- 29:35promotion,
- 29:37I e,
- 29:38what do we do over
- 29:39the next six years to
- 29:41foster successful career development? Because
- 29:44each and every one of
- 29:45you who's recruited here on
- 29:47faculty, the goal is to
- 29:49see you succeed. It makes
- 29:51no sense to bring people
- 29:52on and not see them
- 29:53succeed. It's just
- 29:56in every way, it's negative.
- 29:58And so, you know, from
- 29:59day one, we ought to
- 30:01be talking about
- 30:02promotion
- 30:04as you know, what are
- 30:05some of the, aspects of
- 30:07career development that lead to
- 30:10successful impactful work? And
- 30:12those are important discussions to
- 30:14have.
- 30:16We were now past the
- 30:17deadline. I haven't checked recently.
- 30:20I would imagine GenMed has
- 30:22met all the deadlines,
- 30:23July, August, September.
- 30:26And why is this? You
- 30:27know, why
- 30:29why do we have to
- 30:30almost a year ahead of
- 30:31time? It's because the process
- 30:33is
- 30:35extensive.
- 30:36You know, Yale is a
- 30:39a very traditional academic institution.
- 30:41We we have
- 30:43acquired our habits from the
- 30:46from the college and the
- 30:47university, and so it's multistep.
- 30:50And that means
- 30:52submitting
- 30:52materials during the summer as
- 30:55you've done,
- 30:57initial departmental
- 30:59review.
- 31:00Although after submission materials,
- 31:04Laura and her staff go
- 31:05through the materials, make sure
- 31:06they're in shape, and there
- 31:08may be a round or
- 31:09two.
- 31:10But then we started we
- 31:12met for the first time
- 31:13last week starting to review
- 31:15promotions,
- 31:16and there are seventy people
- 31:18coming up in the department
- 31:19for promotion this year. So
- 31:21that's a pretty big number.
- 31:24And, we try to keep
- 31:26at it and do so
- 31:27in a expeditious way so
- 31:29that
- 31:30we make the ultimate deadline,
- 31:32which is that people have
- 31:34their promotion approved
- 31:36by July
- 31:37of the of the
- 31:39target year.
- 31:41Letters
- 31:42take a while, and,
- 31:45I guess the update or
- 31:47the tip here is,
- 31:50the the average
- 31:52return on letters is now
- 31:55about,
- 31:56forty to fifty percent.
- 31:59And so,
- 32:02you know, there's a minimum
- 32:04number, and for most of
- 32:05the tracks, there's a backup
- 32:06list.
- 32:08That backup list now is
- 32:09reality.
- 32:10And so when you pick
- 32:11your reviewers, and
- 32:14I'm sure you will speak
- 32:15to your mentor and David
- 32:16and Patrick about picking reviewers,
- 32:19really important part promotion.
- 32:22You can just assume that
- 32:24everybody on your backup list
- 32:25is probably gonna get asked.
- 32:27And we are,
- 32:30probably initially going to ask
- 32:32for,
- 32:33not only the designated reviewers,
- 32:35but people on the backup
- 32:37list
- 32:38right away. That's not a
- 32:39school thing, but it's a
- 32:40department thing just because, otherwise,
- 32:42it can take months and
- 32:43months and months before we
- 32:45go through round one, two,
- 32:46three, four of of getting
- 32:47letters and that we're just
- 32:49done with that. We're tired
- 32:51of doing that. It's a
- 32:52lot of work for Laura
- 32:53and her
- 32:54Sal. So pick your reviewers,
- 32:56pay attention to the backup
- 32:58list, and
- 33:00this is really important.
- 33:03Then we review the letters.
- 33:05We advise we
- 33:07bring in,
- 33:09an opinion to the senior
- 33:10faculty and the senior faculty
- 33:12are the ones who will
- 33:13vote on your promotions. Actually,
- 33:15the A and P committee
- 33:16is not a voting. It's
- 33:18really,
- 33:19it makes a recommendation
- 33:20to the departments and your
- 33:22faculty.
- 33:24It then has to go
- 33:25through the school, and now
- 33:27you're picking up
- 33:29a group of faculty who
- 33:31aren't in our department, most
- 33:33of whom don't know you
- 33:34and haven't worked with you
- 33:37very much more arm's length.
- 33:40And
- 33:42and, you know, this this,
- 33:46you know, and and from
- 33:48different departments that see things
- 33:50a little bit differently. So
- 33:52you have these,
- 33:53you know, you have an
- 33:54internal view in the department.
- 33:56You have peer review from
- 33:58people in your field, and
- 33:59then you have this,
- 34:01secondary review in the
- 34:03school.
- 34:04The dean heads the senior
- 34:05committee, and Sam Paul heads
- 34:07the,
- 34:09associate professor level promotions.
- 34:14And,
- 34:15and, you know, all all
- 34:16reviewers and committee members, they
- 34:19also have their own perspectives
- 34:20on things. So this is
- 34:21sort of what what we're
- 34:23up
- 34:23against,
- 34:25have to deal with,
- 34:26but there are some general
- 34:28principles.
- 34:31So the AMP committee
- 34:34is,
- 34:36represents all the sections. That's
- 34:39really important because
- 34:40and Donna, I don't know
- 34:41if Donna's here, but,
- 34:44Donna provides a perspective,
- 34:46a context
- 34:47for,
- 34:49for
- 34:50the,
- 34:52area that you're working in,
- 34:53the venue that you're,
- 34:55staffing.
- 34:57And,
- 34:59and,
- 35:00so she provides the committee
- 35:02with perspective and context, but
- 35:06she also is an important
- 35:08point person
- 35:09to bring back to
- 35:12Patrick, David, and all of
- 35:13you
- 35:14insights that she has in
- 35:16terms of
- 35:18patterns, red flags, answering questions
- 35:21on what are people talking
- 35:22about in
- 35:24for twenty twenty six promotions
- 35:26in the various tracks. And
- 35:27it does shift a bit.
- 35:30You know? We're at a
- 35:32really
- 35:34fluid stage at the academic
- 35:36medical center in a big
- 35:37way. And so
- 35:39her sort of being on
- 35:40the committee and and communicating
- 35:42with all of you is
- 35:43really important.
- 35:45He's on virtually.
- 35:46Hey. Hi, Doug.
- 35:48Sorry, doctor Young. Before you
- 35:50move past the A and
- 35:51P process, I just wanted
- 35:52to add a comment there.
- 35:54The,
- 35:55deadlines
- 35:56screen that was shown, that
- 35:57slide, those are departmental deadlines.
- 36:00So we will give earlier
- 36:02deadlines for this section. We
- 36:03will also come back for
- 36:05requests for updates like doctor
- 36:06Young mentioned. I would just
- 36:08ask, you know, please treat
- 36:10those turnaround deadlines,
- 36:11as hard deadlines as well.
- 36:13So we wanna keep you
- 36:14moving as quickly as possible.
- 36:16So if we need updates,
- 36:18it means we can't go
- 36:19to the next step until
- 36:20we get that back. So
- 36:21your help with that is
- 36:22incredibly important. Thank you.
- 36:25Thanks, Laura.
- 36:27Okay. So let's talk a
- 36:29little bit about tracks and
- 36:30open it up more.
- 36:33So the academic clinician track
- 36:35is the
- 36:36is the fastest growing track
- 36:38in the department.
- 36:40And,
- 36:41this is to really,
- 36:43meet the the department's clinical
- 36:45mission.
- 36:46It emphasizes
- 36:47excellence in clinical care and
- 36:49education,
- 36:51program development, both clinical and
- 36:53educational,
- 36:54people serving as role models,
- 36:57for our trainees
- 36:58and also providing
- 37:00support for the research mission.
- 37:02And,
- 37:03that that may
- 37:05be that,
- 37:06you know, particular faculty member
- 37:08has a specific
- 37:10niche interest
- 37:12and
- 37:13sees a lot of patients
- 37:14with a particular type of
- 37:15problem and can interact with
- 37:17researchers who are studying that
- 37:19problem
- 37:20in a very meaningful
- 37:21and synergistic way to really
- 37:23promote the research. So we
- 37:24look at all of these
- 37:25things.
- 37:27I think it's fair to
- 37:28say that,
- 37:30that
- 37:32promotion
- 37:33does require not only the
- 37:35excellence, but something in terms
- 37:37of,
- 37:39program development initiatives
- 37:41that are
- 37:42meaningful, that impact, that really
- 37:45are value added to what
- 37:46we have.
- 37:47And that may be in
- 37:48education, that may be in
- 37:49clinical programs.
- 37:53And,
- 37:54and and so,
- 37:55that's something that,
- 37:57you know, ought to be
- 37:58one of the goals upfront
- 38:00is to figure out what
- 38:01what your niche is gonna
- 38:02be, what what can you
- 38:03get recognition for,
- 38:06as you,
- 38:07proceed through through the ranks.
- 38:12So in terms of,
- 38:14just being a bit careful
- 38:16in this track,
- 38:18there's no question
- 38:19that
- 38:20productivity
- 38:21will be looked at in
- 38:22this track.
- 38:23You know, we now are
- 38:25suddenly in the realm of
- 38:27the entire system is based
- 38:28on our views. And so,
- 38:30yes, people are looking at
- 38:31pro at productivity.
- 38:33And I don't think that
- 38:34people will get
- 38:36docked
- 38:37for being five percent below
- 38:39average, but if you're in
- 38:41the bottom five or ten
- 38:42percent
- 38:43of your particular specialty,
- 38:46that's gonna get recognized and,
- 38:49you know, you're not gonna
- 38:50get,
- 38:53you're not gonna get, a
- 38:54slap on the hand, but
- 38:56then again,
- 38:57the enthusiasm
- 38:58to promote people who are
- 38:59not,
- 39:00you know,
- 39:02coming close to something reasonable
- 39:04in terms of
- 39:05people are talking about that.
- 39:07And so,
- 39:09you know, so keep an
- 39:10eye on that.
- 39:11And the the same sort
- 39:13of keep an eye on
- 39:14philosophy
- 39:15when it comes to education.
- 39:18You know, one random negative
- 39:20review from a student that
- 39:23is sort
- 39:24of seems
- 39:25really incongruous with everything else
- 39:27that's in the file means
- 39:29little.
- 39:30But if you get two
- 39:31or three
- 39:32negative reviews that I'll comment
- 39:34on the same aspect of
- 39:35your performance,
- 39:37that's taken extremely seriously
- 39:39and can basically
- 39:41shut down promotions
- 39:42both in the department and
- 39:44the school level.
- 39:46So the corollary
- 39:47is,
- 39:48you know,
- 39:49watch get your your dashboard,
- 39:51our views, take a look
- 39:53at them, and your teaching
- 39:54evals always take a look
- 39:56at them. I suspect that
- 39:58in this group of pretty
- 40:00committed educators, the teaching evals
- 40:02are are gonna be strong
- 40:04and that you do go
- 40:06through this process with your
- 40:07mentors, but just just be
- 40:09careful.
- 40:11Yeah.
- 40:12Yeah. So for somebody who
- 40:14is in this track but
- 40:15has a fair amount of
- 40:16administrative Yeah. Requirements.
- 40:19The reviews are adjusted to
- 40:20the Yeah. Time they have.
- 40:22So this is the CFT
- 40:23calculation
- 40:24that when people have
- 40:26administrative leadership, educational leadership,
- 40:29research effort, even in this
- 40:31track, some people will have,
- 40:33you know, five percent on
- 40:34the big program project. You
- 40:36know? That's all adjusted
- 40:38out. Yeah.
- 40:42I have a question. Yeah.
- 40:45Hi.
- 40:46So
- 40:49our,
- 40:50early qualified health care centers
- 40:51don't necessarily track the RBUs
- 40:54to the degree in which
- 40:55the clarity report does. And
- 40:56so how does the,
- 40:58promotion committee take that into
- 40:59account? Yeah. So, then we're
- 41:01dependent on whatever the metric
- 41:03within your particular
- 41:05context is. And
- 41:06so,
- 41:08everybody tracks active clinical activity.
- 41:11And so it may not
- 41:12have an RBU number associated
- 41:14with it, but,
- 41:16we would depend on
- 41:17leadership to provide that kind
- 41:19of context. And
- 41:21and that's something that if
- 41:23you're in this track at
- 41:24the end of the year,
- 41:25when you meet with met
- 41:26your mentor and and or
- 41:28with David or Patrick,
- 41:30to
- 41:31just say, you know, how
- 41:33am I doing? Is this
- 41:34a reasonable level of clinical
- 41:37productivity?
- 41:41The the primary metric there
- 41:42is visit volume.
- 41:44Yeah. Very hard data to
- 41:45get, but we're working on
- 41:47it. Yeah.
- 41:48I understand
- 41:49that, you know, if we
- 41:50don't live in a system
- 41:51that necessarily generates data easily,
- 41:54but
- 41:55it's
- 41:56it's now is it's here.
- 41:58We need to we need
- 41:58to do better if we
- 41:59if we're having issues.
- 42:01So the other thing is
- 42:03that board certification
- 42:04is required, and we've had
- 42:07several people come up for
- 42:08promotion who have lapsed. And
- 42:10that's a problem. We'll just
- 42:12shut it down.
- 42:13So,
- 42:14so you need to maintain.
- 42:15You need to do whatever
- 42:17in
- 42:18for most of you, that's
- 42:19general internal medicine. Right? You
- 42:21don't have specialty boards,
- 42:24but just keep on top
- 42:25of that. Whatever it takes,
- 42:27just
- 42:28track it. It's public domain.
- 42:30Whole world knows when you
- 42:32lapse.
- 42:34And, so be careful about
- 42:35that. Better better than that.
- 42:37Yeah. Correct.
- 42:39Unless you're not seeing patients.
- 42:46So within this track,
- 42:48the clinical reputation
- 42:50doesn't necessarily
- 42:52have to be national, but
- 42:54certainly local, strong local. And
- 42:56I think the school has
- 42:57has done well by
- 42:59expanding the pool of local
- 43:01reviewers, which is that
- 43:04now people,
- 43:06outside of your section, which
- 43:08obviously cannot be arm's length,
- 43:10but within the department.
- 43:12So
- 43:13in cardiology, I could write
- 43:15a letter for you or
- 43:16in pulmonary, whatever. So people
- 43:19who you work with a
- 43:20lot
- 43:21can really comment on your
- 43:24clinical excellence. And
- 43:26and so I think that's
- 43:27really
- 43:28particularly for a specialty like
- 43:30yours where you're not getting
- 43:32referrals in from
- 43:34Rhode Island for general primary
- 43:36care.
- 43:38That's really important and works
- 43:41to your advantage. And and
- 43:42and those,
- 43:44those letters,
- 43:46you know, would be very
- 43:47meaningful.
- 43:48Is that true for a
- 43:49promotion to professor that you
- 43:51could have letters outside outside
- 43:53your section within your Yes.
- 43:56In the AC track.
- 43:57Thanks. Yeah. I mean, still,
- 44:00you know, you it can
- 44:01it can never be more
- 44:03than half of your letters.
- 44:05And
- 44:07and, also,
- 44:09you know, there's some advantage
- 44:11if you work with a
- 44:12particular orthopedic surgeon who
- 44:14is very impressed by your
- 44:16clinical acumen, then
- 44:18that's,
- 44:19you know, that's worth cultivating
- 44:21that relationship.
- 44:24We talked about program development
- 44:27and then,
- 44:28the,
- 44:29you know, the
- 44:31the outside,
- 44:34general internal medicine,
- 44:36associations,
- 44:38SGIM,
- 44:39double A CP.
- 44:41I mean,
- 44:42you know, as an assistant
- 44:43professor, you're gonna start regionally.
- 44:46And if you
- 44:47develop a good reputation regionally,
- 44:49then
- 44:50you'll get opportunities
- 44:52nationally.
- 44:53This is also something that
- 44:55your section does really well.
- 44:56But all of you as
- 44:57senior mentors who have these
- 44:59national ties,
- 45:01sponsorship.
- 45:02So mentorship
- 45:04sponsorship
- 45:05is not quite the same
- 45:06thing, but it's part of
- 45:07the job
- 45:08and
- 45:09always should be thinking about
- 45:12what you could do for
- 45:13your mentee in terms of
- 45:14giving them that opportunity.
- 45:17You know, all of us
- 45:18given opportunities have to shine.
- 45:20If you don't show up
- 45:21or you do a lousy
- 45:22job, that's a dead end
- 45:24that's not gonna do well
- 45:25for anybody.
- 45:27But getting in the door
- 45:29sometimes
- 45:30is
- 45:31difficult and getting a little
- 45:32bit of a head start
- 45:33from,
- 45:34sponsors is is great.
- 45:39So other questions about the
- 45:41AC track, and then we'll
- 45:42move on. I know time
- 45:44is moving.
- 45:46Doctor Young, I just wanted
- 45:47to clarify,
- 45:48something for the question that
- 45:50came up about professors
- 45:51using,
- 45:53referees in our department.
- 45:55I think you mentioned that
- 45:56they cannot
- 45:56exceed half of the letters.
- 45:58They actually cannot exceed half
- 45:59of the nonarms length letters.
- 46:01Yes. So, that's even a
- 46:03smaller number.
- 46:04Yeah. I'm just gonna do
- 46:06audio a little bit when
- 46:06you step away from the
- 46:07podium, if that would, Yeah.
- 46:09Okay. Thanks.
- 46:10Reminder. Yeah. So, obviously, anybody
- 46:12from Yale cannot is not
- 46:14an arms length letter. I
- 46:15mean, they're internal letters.
- 46:19So the CES track, I
- 46:21think, simply put, a lot
- 46:22of the same,
- 46:25metrics and goals
- 46:27are common with the AC
- 46:29track, the excellence in care
- 46:30and education and so forth.
- 46:32I think the
- 46:33the the track used to
- 46:35be called the CE track.
- 46:36All of us who grew
- 46:37up here remember, and now
- 46:39it has this s at
- 46:40the end that was very
- 46:41deliberate. And that was Dean
- 46:42Brown
- 46:43who really said that this
- 46:45track should be for clinician
- 46:48educators who do, quote, impactful
- 46:50scholarship. And she she attached
- 46:52the adjective
- 46:54for reason that
- 46:55not not simply,
- 46:58you know, a,
- 46:59a gesture of scholarship, but
- 47:01people were doing things that
- 47:02were meaningful.
- 47:04And so that has kind
- 47:05of become the,
- 47:08you know,
- 47:09a key characteristic
- 47:10of this track.
- 47:12And I think it's fair
- 47:14to say that
- 47:16we'll go to the third
- 47:17bullet point that scholarship is
- 47:20still
- 47:21broadly defined,
- 47:22which is to say that
- 47:24as opposed to the,
- 47:26research oriented tracks where original
- 47:29research is the coin of
- 47:30the realm,
- 47:31Here,
- 47:32if it's impactful, it it
- 47:34it can be,
- 47:36peer
- 47:37not just peer reviewed research,
- 47:39but
- 47:40books, chapters,
- 47:42reviews.
- 47:42If, you know, I've seen
- 47:44some of you write reviews
- 47:46in the New England Journal.
- 47:47That is it's read by
- 47:49thousands and thousands of people.
- 47:50It's highly impactful.
- 47:53And the same with clinical
- 47:55guidelines.
- 47:56You know? Everybody in the
- 47:58field reads those guidelines.
- 48:01And the,
- 48:03educational
- 48:04curricula, I guess, I'd I'd
- 48:05maybe and this is probably
- 48:07too simplified, but
- 48:09make the distinction
- 48:11that
- 48:12in the AC track, it's
- 48:14curricula that are used locally.
- 48:17In the CES track, it's
- 48:19curricula that are published or
- 48:21widely disseminated
- 48:23and thus have gone through
- 48:24peer review.
- 48:26When we get letters back
- 48:27saying that
- 48:29this curriculum,
- 48:31we've used it for the
- 48:32last ten years. It's the
- 48:34absolute backbone
- 48:35of our curriculum at
- 48:37Harvard or Stanford or somewhere
- 48:39like that. And, by the
- 48:41way, two hundred of my
- 48:42colleagues at other institutions use
- 48:44the curriculum.
- 48:45It has gone through peer
- 48:46review at the highest level.
- 48:48And so,
- 48:49you know, I'm sure there's
- 48:51a gray zone, but,
- 48:53simply put, to get full
- 48:55recognition for educational,
- 48:59curricula development,
- 49:02dissemination is kind of the
- 49:03key.
- 49:05Educational
- 49:06scholarship
- 49:07is a different issue. I
- 49:09mean, that's really original research
- 49:12and things that Donna and
- 49:13the ACES program and so
- 49:14forth. I mean, the goal
- 49:16there is really to
- 49:17provide
- 49:18scholarship,
- 49:19direct scholarship related to to
- 49:21to research, and that absolutely
- 49:23falls within the realm of
- 49:24the CES track.
- 49:27Couple of comments about the
- 49:29CES track. I think not
- 49:31a lot has changed here,
- 49:32except that
- 49:34the,
- 49:35the concept of,
- 49:38team science and multi PI
- 49:40grants and
- 49:42and, you know,
- 49:43co corresponding
- 49:45authors,
- 49:46I think, is here. And
- 49:47it's now not
- 49:49under discussion. It's here, and
- 49:50it's here to stay.
- 49:52I think people recognize
- 49:53the power of team science
- 49:56and that science is broad
- 49:57enough that
- 49:58the best papers now don't
- 50:00involve one technique. They involve
- 50:03ten techniques, and to have
- 50:05two experts
- 50:06is absolutely the norm.
- 50:10Still promotion to the CS
- 50:12track
- 50:13at the associate professor level
- 50:15basically
- 50:16requires,
- 50:17r o one
- 50:19with either PI or multi
- 50:21PI on that r o
- 50:22one.
- 50:23And,
- 50:25that's pretty much a hard
- 50:27stop. You know? There may
- 50:28be a rare instance where
- 50:29there's, you
- 50:31know, the equivalent
- 50:32level of support from a
- 50:34foundation
- 50:35or something else, but,
- 50:37and and so that takes
- 50:39planning. Right? Because
- 50:40you've gotta have that r
- 50:41o one in place by
- 50:43the start of year six,
- 50:45which means you probably have
- 50:46to start writing,
- 50:49during year four for sure
- 50:50and maybe even at the
- 50:51end of year three.
- 50:53And
- 50:54so,
- 50:55you know, for those of
- 50:56you who aspire to be
- 50:58clinical investigators,
- 51:01there's absolutely a timetable.
- 51:03And,
- 51:05and,
- 51:06you know, k award as
- 51:08you start your assistant professor,
- 51:10and then you've gotta think
- 51:12by the,
- 51:13end of your first term
- 51:15about getting getting
- 51:16grants drafted.
- 51:18And ask a Yeah. Question.
- 51:21It's a hard time to
- 51:22be an assistant professor trying
- 51:23to write r ones. Yes.
- 51:25It's a fun environment.
- 51:26I I mean, I wrote
- 51:27a lot last year and
- 51:29Yeah. Given things that happen,
- 51:30nothing's getting funded.
- 51:32Is this evolving, like, how
- 51:33this will be considered? Because
- 51:35I I mean, it it
- 51:36keeps me up at night.
- 51:37Yeah. I'm sure it does.
- 51:39It keeps all of us,
- 51:40like, cramped up all night
- 51:42and the next night.
- 51:45So I think the answer
- 51:47is,
- 51:51you know, is a little
- 51:52bit nuanced, but,
- 51:55have there been exceptions? There
- 51:57have been
- 51:58exceptions when
- 52:00people are really close,
- 52:02have a trajectory
- 52:04of publication,
- 52:06and scores on a grant
- 52:08that are really close trajectory
- 52:10of publication that looks great,
- 52:13you know, and
- 52:14and
- 52:15their work is just exciting
- 52:17in the field,
- 52:18then often well, not often.
- 52:20We've done it maybe half
- 52:21a dozen times at most.
- 52:24We
- 52:25go out for letters, and
- 52:27we consider an abbreviated
- 52:29term.
- 52:30So, generally, three years. So
- 52:32a promotion with an abbreviated
- 52:34term.
- 52:35But the key point is
- 52:37that it depends on the
- 52:38letters.
- 52:39So now
- 52:41we may buy into it
- 52:42in the department.
- 52:44The school may or may
- 52:46not support us, and the
- 52:47letter writers may say,
- 52:50hey. Listen. At Penn, you
- 52:51don't get promoted unless you
- 52:52have an r o one.
- 52:53So, no, they wouldn't be
- 52:55promoted.
- 52:56So
- 52:57that's as good
- 52:58as we can do, and
- 53:00and we've done that when
- 53:01we see the right trajectory.
- 53:06If not,
- 53:07there are people in the
- 53:08CES
- 53:09track
- 53:10who have r
- 53:11o ones. Maybe they got
- 53:12it a little late. They
- 53:13got it year
- 53:14seven.
- 53:15I mean, there are people
- 53:16in CES track who got
- 53:18an r one year seven,
- 53:20another one year eight, and
- 53:21another one year nine. Suddenly,
- 53:22they have three r o
- 53:23ones.
- 53:25So the CES track has
- 53:27more, but there are people
- 53:28in the CES track. Not
- 53:30a lot, but
- 53:32there's, you know, there's a
- 53:33handful of people who
- 53:35see themselves as mission educators
- 53:38and have a have a
- 53:40real presence
- 53:41as CE,
- 53:43but also have,
- 53:45independent
- 53:46investigator initiated
- 53:47research support.
- 53:50So,
- 53:52yeah, so
- 53:54we try to find a
- 53:55path forward. And, usually, there's
- 53:57a path forward.
- 53:59Sometimes it's a bit creative,
- 54:01but,
- 54:02you know, but the goal
- 54:04should be just to take
- 54:06the standard path.
- 54:07Sure. Sure. Of course, that's
- 54:09the goal.
- 54:11And, you know, and and
- 54:13to
- 54:14prepare well-to-do that. I mean
- 54:15so
- 54:16I don't think this happens
- 54:18in your section. In some
- 54:19of the sections, there are
- 54:20people who
- 54:21come on as assistant professors,
- 54:23and they don't get paid
- 54:24for until year three. It's
- 54:26like, well, where's that gonna
- 54:27go? You're gonna run out
- 54:28of time.
- 54:29You know? So
- 54:31there was a question. Just
- 54:32to go back to the
- 54:33comment about Yeah. Authorship, just
- 54:35to be clear. So Yeah.
- 54:36What I what I heard
- 54:37you say is that at
- 54:38this point, co senior, co
- 54:40first authorship Yeah. As recognized
- 54:41by a journal is
- 54:43considered the same as first
- 54:45or second. Yeah. I wouldn't
- 54:45say a hundred percent, but
- 54:47I'd say in the mid
- 54:48nineties. I think most people
- 54:51recognize that
- 54:53for really
- 54:55big time impactful work,
- 54:57it's not, you know,
- 55:00where there's night obviously, an
- 55:02identifiable
- 55:04you know, clearly an identifiable
- 55:06contribution, which is complementary
- 55:08to the other co.
- 55:11So but
- 55:13just segue, and I know
- 55:14time is tight. So let
- 55:16me just comment on middle
- 55:17author papers. Okay? So that's
- 55:19a whole different discussion.
- 55:22So middle author papers have
- 55:24enormous value in two senses.
- 55:27One is that
- 55:28you contribute to the science,
- 55:30and in some cases, the
- 55:31science wouldn't move forward.
- 55:35The collaboration
- 55:36with others, what you learn,
- 55:37what it sets
- 55:39the soil for that can
- 55:40grow out of that soil.
- 55:44But as an end all,
- 55:46you know, this is a
- 55:46little bit flippant, but you
- 55:48don't get grants and you
- 55:49don't get invited talks out
- 55:51of being a middle author
- 55:52generally.
- 55:54So
- 55:56so middle author,
- 55:58it it has a purpose,
- 56:01and
- 56:02it's a mean purpose. But
- 56:04in terms of the credit,
- 56:06career development,
- 56:07promotion, recognition,
- 56:10be careful.
- 56:12They're not mutually exclusive at
- 56:14all, which is to say,
- 56:16you know,
- 56:17but you need to absolutely
- 56:19prioritize things that people will
- 56:21identify
- 56:22that you wrote or your
- 56:24mentee wrote.
- 56:26And those are the things
- 56:27you're gonna get recognition
- 56:29for at a much, much
- 56:30higher level.
- 56:33Well, that's
- 56:35being harsh,
- 56:36Amy,
- 56:37but
- 56:38a little bit of truth
- 56:39to it maybe. Matthew, another
- 56:41way to say that is
- 56:42that I think middle of
- 56:43favors
- 56:44contribute to your body of
- 56:45work. Yeah. They demonstrate that
- 56:47you're a player in the
- 56:48research field, so they're important.
- 56:51Yeah. But they're not sufficient.
- 56:53Yes. So moving forward in
- 56:55this type of tracking in
- 56:56particular. They're they're not solely
- 56:58sufficient.
- 57:00Yeah.
- 57:02Doctor Young, you do have
- 57:03a few questions in chat
- 57:04as well. K. You wanna
- 57:06just read them out?
- 57:09Sure. So one of them
- 57:11is looking for the requirements
- 57:12for the AC track promotion
- 57:14and is looking for an
- 57:15example of the breakdown of
- 57:17number of letters that are
- 57:18arms length and nonarms length.
- 57:20Yeah. So we will distribute,
- 57:22PowerPoint that has,
- 57:24has this sort of,
- 57:26data as well as the
- 57:27link to the OAPD site.
- 57:29So two important sites.
- 57:31One is OAPD, which now
- 57:33has a very robust
- 57:37repository
- 57:38for guidance
- 57:40and instructions.
- 57:41And two is a link
- 57:43to Laura OAPD
- 57:45and to myself,
- 57:48so that, you know, so
- 57:49that,
- 57:50specific questions should be readily,
- 57:52readily answered.
- 57:54Again,
- 57:56probably unnecessary
- 57:57given the section that you're
- 57:58part of where there's just
- 58:00an enormous wealth of
- 58:03information and understanding expertise.
- 58:06But but that that is
- 58:08out there. And the OAPD
- 58:09site, I think it's worth
- 58:11visiting to
- 58:12look at the metrics and
- 58:14certainly didn't have time to
- 58:15go through the metrics for
- 58:16each of the tracks, and
- 58:18I'm not sure there's they're
- 58:20as well articulated as
- 58:22Mhmm. Perhaps you might want,
- 58:24but it does provide some
- 58:26broad,
- 58:27context for for the different
- 58:29tracks that's worth reviewing.
- 58:33And there was a second
- 58:34question I'm not quite sure
- 58:36on,
- 58:37about questions that often come
- 58:39up from the CES folks
- 58:40with regard to how the
- 58:41committee reviews
- 58:43nontraditional
- 58:43curriculum development like online curricula
- 58:46or podcast
- 58:47as opposed to traditional curriculum
- 58:49development within a department?
- 58:51Yeah. So that's an evolving
- 58:53field. I think the key
- 58:55is,
- 58:56is,
- 58:58the concept of
- 59:00peer review and validation from
- 59:02the academic community.
- 59:04So,
- 59:07you know, that,
- 59:09for nonpublished
- 59:10work,
- 59:11you know, podcasts and all
- 59:13that, then,
- 59:15there has to be some
- 59:16mechanism.
- 59:17And,
- 59:21you know, I think the
- 59:22the most,
- 59:24clear example, again, is when
- 59:26there's a curriculum that has
- 59:27been adopted by all of
- 59:29our sister institutions. That's institutions,
- 59:30that's pretty strong
- 59:32word of support that people
- 59:33who are our peer educators
- 59:35believe that it's,
- 59:37you know, that is great.
- 59:40So
- 59:41podcasts,
- 59:42you'll have to
- 59:45you'll have to help, I
- 59:46think, all of us understand
- 59:48the impact and, again, that
- 59:50it's
- 59:51getting,
- 59:54support
- 59:55from our peer community.
- 59:58And,
- 59:59and there may be ways
- 01:00:01to do that.
- 01:00:04But,
- 01:00:04so
- 01:00:05and this is where your
- 01:00:06CV two
- 01:00:08really is critical because nobody's
- 01:00:10gonna have a clue. You
- 01:00:12almost have to set the
- 01:00:13stage for this that
- 01:00:15here's the venue, and this
- 01:00:17is how
- 01:00:18it's reviewed by my
- 01:00:20peer educational
- 01:00:22community,
- 01:00:23and these are the metric.
- 01:00:24So, you know,
- 01:00:26so it's an evolving world
- 01:00:28as
- 01:00:29as these things,
- 01:00:33change and emerge and become
- 01:00:34more important
- 01:00:36in our lives.
- 01:00:38We will try to understand
- 01:00:39them. If you're working in
- 01:00:41that sort of area, you
- 01:00:42really have to explain it
- 01:00:44very clearly,
- 01:00:45very objectively.
- 01:00:46Like, here's the data,
- 01:00:48not just,
- 01:00:49you know, not just broad
- 01:00:51strokes.
- 01:00:52Thank you. Yep. I also
- 01:00:54just wanted to note that
- 01:00:56there's two relatively new areas
- 01:00:58in the c v one
- 01:00:59where you can capture items
- 01:01:00like this.
- 01:01:01There is now a media
- 01:01:03presence area below public service.
- 01:01:06And if you're listing any
- 01:01:07kind of interviews, blogs, etcetera,
- 01:01:10you can also include the
- 01:01:11citation,
- 01:01:13traffic, any other metrics about
- 01:01:15that. And then the second
- 01:01:16area is at the end
- 01:01:18of the bibliography,
- 01:01:19they've added a new section
- 01:01:20for publications for nonacademic
- 01:01:23audiences,
- 01:01:24such as op eds and
- 01:01:25lay press publications.
- 01:01:27So please take advantage of
- 01:01:28those areas too. Yeah. You
- 01:01:29know, I think the key
- 01:01:30question is how,
- 01:01:34I mean, I think we
- 01:01:35recognize
- 01:01:36that they are potentially
- 01:01:39impactful,
- 01:01:40but the judgment as to
- 01:01:41whether they will they are
- 01:01:43impactful
- 01:01:44is could depend on the
- 01:01:46person who writes your letter,
- 01:01:48what they think about it,
- 01:01:49the people on the committee,
- 01:01:51what they think about it.
- 01:01:53I think it's great that
- 01:01:54we're getting it onto the
- 01:01:56table for discussion, but
- 01:01:59the,
- 01:02:00you know, the way in
- 01:02:01which it actually factors into
- 01:02:03decisions
- 01:02:04is really
- 01:02:05sort of
- 01:02:07evolving.
- 01:02:08And I think at this
- 01:02:10point, there has to be
- 01:02:11the more substance you can
- 01:02:13put in to rationalize
- 01:02:15how it shows impact,
- 01:02:16the better off you'll be.
- 01:02:19Sebastian?
- 01:02:20Yeah. Thank you very much
- 01:02:21for the talk, actually. And
- 01:02:22this is perfect timing for
- 01:02:24me because today, I was
- 01:02:25entering
- 01:02:26my publications into my ERAS
- 01:02:27application for internal medicine residency.
- 01:02:27And I have a question
- 01:02:27about,
- 01:02:28application for internal medicine residency.
- 01:02:31And I have a question
- 01:02:32about, first author versus mid
- 01:02:34author papers.
- 01:02:35Say you are reviewing,
- 01:02:37internal medicine resident application,
- 01:02:40and, would you prefer to
- 01:02:42see, like, ten first outer
- 01:02:44papers or, like, thirty to
- 01:02:46four papers combination of both
- 01:02:48first and mid authors?
- 01:02:52Again, I think the priority
- 01:02:55you know? So the question
- 01:02:56always is,
- 01:02:57what did
- 01:02:58what is this person's work?
- 01:03:00What can they do?
- 01:03:02You know, what did they
- 01:03:03lead? What did they write?
- 01:03:04What did they take responsibility
- 01:03:06for? So,
- 01:03:09you know, I think I
- 01:03:11don't have,
- 01:03:12simple algebraic equation, but I
- 01:03:15think
- 01:03:16things early stage career that
- 01:03:18your first author on are
- 01:03:20really important.
- 01:03:21And then
- 01:03:22as you become,
- 01:03:24you know, a more advanced
- 01:03:25faculty member,
- 01:03:28things that your senior author
- 01:03:30that your trainee writes, well,
- 01:03:32that shows
- 01:03:33I mean, you still own
- 01:03:34that work
- 01:03:35very much, and it also
- 01:03:37shows that you have been
- 01:03:38successful in mentoring somebody
- 01:03:41to
- 01:03:42be a successful first author.
- 01:03:44So so it's sort of
- 01:03:46you get double credit. You
- 01:03:47get credit for the science.
- 01:03:48You get credit for the
- 01:03:49mentorship.
- 01:03:51So
- 01:03:53Thank you for combination.
- 01:03:55Okay. Thanks very much, and
- 01:03:57good luck to everybody.
- 01:03:59Thank you, Larry. And thanks
- 01:04:00to Laura for being here
- 01:04:02as well.
- 01:04:04Feel free,
- 01:04:05other questions about this whole
- 01:04:06process,
- 01:04:07reach out to myself or
- 01:04:09David. Reach out to the
- 01:04:10other senior faculty.
- 01:04:12We're here to answer your
- 01:04:13questions, and reach out to
- 01:04:14Donna who's on the committee.
- 01:04:16Thanks all.
- 01:04:17Hey,
- 01:04:19for.