Innovations in Trauma Resuscitation and Management (Trauma Interest Group-Sponsored)
Innovations in Trauma Resuscitation and Management Workshop will cover topics in trauma that are relevant to emergency physicians. Lightning style presentations will discuss: current literature, research, and education as related to video resuscitation
monitoring and review, scripted resuscitation management, emerging hemorrhage control agents, current use of REBOA in trauma resuscitation, and institutional opportunities in violence mitigation will be provided during this workshop. A moderated panel
discussion with audience questions will conclude the workshop.
- Construct a pre-brief script that promotes psychological safety to take home and use prior to learning conversations
- Discuss how choice of learning objective can impact your choice of debriefing and feedback method
- Name several debriefing/feedback methods and chose the appropriate method for different learning scenarios
- Practice leading small group discussions using group engagement strategies to maximize learner participation
Presenters:
- Michael P. Jones, MD
- Kaushal H. Shah, MD
- Robert D. Flint, Jr., MD
- Kathleen Williams, MD
- Matthew Chinn, MD
- Sehr Khan, MD
- Marc Kanter, MD, FACEP
- David A. Leon, MD, MS
- Austin Johnson, MD, PhD
-
Michael P. Jones, MD
Albert Einstein / Jacobi + Montefiore
Dr. Michael P. Jones is a Professor and Vice Chair for Education and the Residency Program Director for the Department of Emergency Medicine at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Jacobi and Montefiore Medical Centers in the Bronx, New York. He received his bachelor’s degree specializing in Biological Sciences, with a focus on vertebrate morphology and physiology, at Columbia University, his medical degree at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, and completed his emergency medicine residency training at Jacobi and Montefiore Medical Centers, where he was Chief Resident. He has been an Adjunct Instructor at Columbia University and is currently an Adjunct Instructor in Anatomy and Structural Biology and a Professor of Emergency Medicine at Albert Einstein.
Dr. Jones’s primary academic interests are medical student and resident education as well as trauma resuscitation and prehospital care. He is a founding member of a regional Emergency Medicine collaborative that has created a network for education and research throughout all of New York City’s emergency medicine residencies, offering free educational opportunities to hundreds of New York City Emergency Medicine residents, the largest such consortium in the country. Additionally, he is an expert and leader in trauma resuscitation and prehospital care, serving as the co-chair of the Society of Academic Emergency Medicine’s Trauma Committee and as the Vice-Chair of the NYC Regional EMS Council, the state mandated oversight body for prehospital care in New York City. Dr. Jones is also the Medical Director and Co-Chair of the Board Directors of the Central Park Medical Unit, an all volunteer ambulance corps that provides free emergency medical services in New York City's world famous Central Park. -
Kaushal H. Shah, MD
Weill Cornell Medical Center
Kaushal H. Shah received his undergraduate degree from Brown University in 1996 and his medical degree from Dartmouth Medical School in 2000. He completed his residency at the Harvard Affiliated Emergency Medicine Residency at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in 2003. Dr. Shah is currently a Professor and Vice Chair of Education for the New York Presbyterian-Weill Cornell Medicine Department of Emergency Medicine in New York. He was previously the Emergency Medicine Residency Director and an Associate Professor at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. Dr. Shah has a strong interest in education and trauma.
-
Robert D. Flint, Jr., MD
Assistant Professor, Emergency Medicine
University of Maryland School of Medicine
Dr. Flint joined the University of Maryland School of Medicine faculty in 2021 after spending twenty years in community emergency medicine (EM) practice. Having held the roles of department medical director, EMS medical director, as well as the education director for a regional staffing group, he brings significant experience in the areas of emergency department operations, administration, patient safety/risk management, and the business of medicine. Dr. Flint received his Bachelor of Art in History from the University of Rochester in Rochester, NY. He is a proud graduate of the University of Maryland School of Medicine. After completing an EM Residency at Albany Medical Center in Albany, NY, he moved back to Maryland where he has resided and practiced since. -
Kathleen Williams, MD
Medical College of Wisconsin
Kathleen Williams is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, Wisconsin where she currently serves as the residency program director. She received her undergraduate degree from Indiana University and her medical degree from Rush Medical College of Rush University in Chicago, Illinois. She completed her residency training in at the Medical College of Wisconsin and has completed both the ACEP teaching fellowship and the CORD Residency Administrative Fellowship.
Throughout her time as faculty at MCW, she has served the resident trainees in various capacities. She developed the institutional use of video-taped resuscitation for resident resuscitation training starting in 2015. She has interest in GME curriculum development and design, character development in GME training, and use of novel methods for physician coaching and team based training in resuscitation leadership.
She is an award winning educator, receiving numerous departmental, institutional and national awards for her programmatic developments and bedside education. -
Matthew Chinn, MD
Medical College of Wisconsin
Matthew Chinn, MD, FAEMS, is an Associate Professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the Medical College of Wisconsin (MCW) where he serves as the Senior Medical Director for the Froedtert Hospital Emergency Department and Co-Medical Director of the Froedtert Hospital Observation Unit. He received his Bachelor of Science at Texas A&M University and his Doctor of Medicine at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. He completed his Emergency Medicine residency at the University of Cincinnati and his EMS Medicine fellowship at the Medical College of Wisconsin. In addition to his hospital roles, he currently serves as an EMS Medical Director for a local fire department and has previously worked as a flight physician. He is a core faculty member in the EMS Medicine fellowship and the Health Executive Administrative Leadership (HEAL) fellowship programs at MCW. His academic interests are in hospital and emergency department operations, EMS, and teaching.
-
Sehr Khan, MD
Medical College of Wisconsin
Sehr Khan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the Medical College of Wisconsin. She received her bachelor of science in legal studies and psychology with a certificate in criminal justice from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
She received her Medical Doctorate from the Medical College of Wisconsin. Dr. Khan also completed her residency at MCW in Emergency Medicine, where she served as chief resident and completed a social emergency medicine track.
Dr. Khan's interests include injury prevention, education and trauma informed care. As a faculty member, Dr. Khan is active within the EM Division of Global and Population Health, serving as the director of community engagement and the social emergency medicine track director. Within the medical school, Dr. Khan serves as a learning community navigator and teaches students as part of the co-director of the summer injury prevention institute. Within the Injury Control Research center, Dr. Khan is the co-director of the training and educator core as part of national CDC funding granted to the MCW Comprehensive Injury Center. -
Marc Kanter, MD, FACEP
Lincoln Medical and Mental Health Center
Dr. Marc Kanter is currently the Chair of Emergency Medicine at Lincoln Medicine Center in the Bronx NY. He if formerly the Associate and Residency Program Director at Lincoln. Dr. Kanter has a background in EMS as a prehospital provider and completed medical school at NY Medical College. He went on to complete a year of Internal Medicine residency training in CT followed by Emergency Medicine residency training at Lincoln Medical Center, the busiest ED in NY State. He is an assistant professor of clinical Emergency Medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine and a fellow at the New York Medical College, Center for Disaster Medicine. He is a current member of the board of directors of the NY chapter of the American College of Emergency Physicians. He is a long time member of the Trauma Interest group of the Society of Academic Emergency Medicine. He is an associate member of the Association of Academic Chairs of Emergency Medicine. He is the NYC Health + Hospitals system representative for the NYC Regional EMS Advisory Committee.
-
David A. Leon, MD, MS
University of California, Davis
Hello! I am David A Leon, MD MS, assistant clinical professor at University of Caifornia Davis Health.
I am the first graduate from the combined EM-Anesthesia residency at Johns Hopkins University, the only combined EM-Anesthesia residency in the country. I moved to the West coast and I am now dual appointment at University of California Davis, where I am a assistant clinical professor in both departments of Emergency Medicine and Anesthesiology, splitting my time between the OR and the ED. I have interest in trauma and resuscitation, with particular interest in blood product utilization including whole blood and adjuncts to hemorrhage control, as well as the application of regional anesthesia in the ED with particular focus on thoracic nerve blocks. In and out of the ORs and ED, I am engaged with trauma and critical care, in the hopes of advancing resuscitation from the moment of injury throughout a patient's course in the hospital. I am an ATLS instructor and certified in REBOA placement. I am Hispanic and am interested in increasing Latino representation in medicine. I hope to pursue a critical care fellowship to furher expand my critical care knowledge. It is my pleasure and honor to learn together with providers from all fields, in the pursuit of improving patient outcomes. -
Austin Johnson, MD, PhD
University of Utah
Dr. Johnson is an Associate Professor and the Vice-Chair of Research in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Utah. Dr. Johnson received his PhD in Neuroscience and his MD from the University of Wisconsin Madison, followed by residency training in Emergency Medicine at Denver Health in Denver, CO. Dr. Johnson practicing clinical emergency medicine at the University of Utah where he runs a translational research lab focused on the development of new therapies for patients suffering from trauma, cardiac arrest, and stroke. Dr. Johnson's laboratory work has led to over 10 filed patents and over 50 publications. His grant funding has included the Department of Defense, the National Institute of Health, the Zoll Foundation, and the Food and Drug Administration.
