$10M gift for U-M's global health equity efforts
A new Center for Global Health Equity that will accelerate work by faculty, staff and students from across U-M schools, colleges, and institutes at all three campuses will be funded by a $10 million gift from Dr. Tadataka Yamada and Leslie Yamada. Dr. Yamada previously led U-M's Department of Internal Medicine in the 1990s before taking on leadership roles in two major pharmaceutical companies and the Gates Foundation.
Building on the Yamadas' vision, the center's initial concept was developed by a team led by Joseph Kolars, the Medical School's senior associate dean for education and global initiatives and director of its Global REACH program, and IHPI Director John Ayanian, who are working with faculty across the university to develop the concept further.
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Rebecca Cunningham, M.D., professor of emergency medicine and director of the Injury Prevention Center, joins 15 other IHPI members in the National Academy of Medicine. She will be officially inducted in 2020.
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Friese and Patel named NAM Emerging Leaders
Christopher Friese, Ph.D., R.N., AOCN, FAAN, and
Minal Patel, Ph.D., M.P.H., have been selected as 2019
--- 2020 National Academy of Medicine Emerging Leaders in Health and Medicine Scholars. The program facilitates opportunities for mentorship, collaboration, and innovation between the emerging leaders, NAM members, and experts across sectors.
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Friese
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Patel
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Registration is coming soon! This annual member event provides an important opportunity for our large and diverse community of health services research faculty to network, stay in-the-know on IHPI's plans and priorities, and celebrate individual and collective accomplishments.
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Has your work or that of a fellow IHPI member had policy or practice impact? Each year, the IHPI Impact Accelerator Award recognizes IHPI faculty members, regardless of career stage, who have demonstrated a commitment to making a policy or practice impact with their work.
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The National Clinician Scholars Program at IHPI seeks a co-director to serve as part of the top leadership team for this premier healthcare research and policy training program, run in collaboration with Duke, Penn, UCLA, UCSF, and Yale.
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IHPI welcomes new development staff
Laura Boudette, senior associate director of development, and Vince Cavataio, associate director of development, recently joined the Institute staff to support its development and gift activities.
Boudette will seek to develop a list of prospective donors and will help expand awareness of IHPI in her regional work that includes Chicago, Seattle, and other areas on the west coast. Cavataio will work on discovery activity and cultivate regional awareness of IHPI on the east coast, particularly in the New York and Washington, D.C. areas.
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Boudette
Cavataio
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ONLINE COURSE | EVIDENCE BASED & SELF-PACED
This free course will empower non-prescribing providers and other learners in directly impacting the opioid epidemic through increased knowledge and tools to transform practice and policies.
The course will consider the opioid epidemic from several evidence-based strategies including prevention, intervention, education and policy.
This open learning course is designed primarily for non-prescribing healthcare, behavioral health, dental, public health, and social services professionals, as well as graduate level students in these fields.
As a learner, you will have the ability to select all modules or individual topics that interest you most. The course can be followed in a linear or non-linear structure according to your preferred viewing order.
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Select your preferred learning platform to get started:
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COURSE MODULES INCLUDE
- Epidemiology of the Opioid Crisis
- Understanding of Pain and Drug Targeting
- Prevention of Misuse and Abuse
- Clinical Care and Population Health
- Addiction Treatment, Recovery and Public Policy Impact
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FREE CONTINUING EDUCATION
The University of Michigan Medical School designates this enduring material for a maximum of 15
AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™. The University of Michigan Medical School is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
This activity contributes to the CME component of the American Board of Anesthesiology's redesigned Maintenance of Certification in Anesthesiology
™ (MOCA
®) program, known as MOCA 2.0
®. Please consult the ABA website,
www.theABA.org, for a list of all MOCA 2.0 requirements.
This course is approved by the Michigan Social Work Continuing Education Collaborative-Approval #101619-02 for 15 CE hours. The Collaborative is the approving body for the Michigan Board of Social Work.
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Research & Policy
HIGHLIGHTS
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A $3.4 million grant from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) will allow the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) to conduct a needs assessment of substance use disorder (SUD) treatment and recovery provider capacity for the state's Medicaid program.
Kara Zivin, Ph.D., M.S., M.A., U-M professor of psychiatry, will lead the evaluation team.
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Donald Likosky, Ph.D., an associate professor of cardiology, calls himself a "basic scientist for healthcare delivery systems." Using a variety of health services research methods, his work focuses a figurative microscope on the structure of healthcare organizations to better understand variability in outcomes, with the goal of improving quality in cardiac surgery and other fields.
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Several teams of U-M researchers have received millions of dollars in new federal funding to address the opioid epidemic head-on.
Mark Ilgen, Ph.D.,
Allison Lin, M.D., M.Sc.,
Maureen Walton, Ph.D., M.P.H., and
Andria Eisman, M.P.H., M.S., Ph.D. are among the awardees. The grants will allow the teams to carry out innovative projects that will test new ways of understanding, preventing, and treating addiction, and addressing pain through new approaches.
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While telehealth applications have been around for decades, advancements in technology are spurring a resurgence of interest in telehealth among patients, healthcare providers, policymakers, and health system leaders.
Chad Ellimoottil, M.D., M.S., director of the U-M
Telehealth Research Incubator, explains telehealth's potential to bring greater value, quality, and access to healthcare delivery, and the important questions to consider in evaluating telehealth policies and implementation.
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Emergency Medicine
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Internal Medicine
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Surgery
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Connect to
EDUCATION & RESOURCES
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Registration Deadline: January 15, 2020
IHPI is partnering with the Michigan Institute for Clinical & Health Research (MICHR) to offer a tailored K Writing Workshop. The IHPI sections of MICHR's K Writing Workshop are open to all early career faculty IHPI members preparing a competitive career development grant application. For questions, please contact
Stephanie Jared.
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The U-M Center for Bioethics and Social Sciences in Medicine (CBSSM) is accepting applications for postdoctoral research fellows in the areas of (a) Bioethics, and (b) Decision Sciences. They are also partnering with the U-M School of Public Health to recruit postdoctoral fellows in the Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications (ELSI) of Genomics.
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Two AcademyHealth fellowship opportunities
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Date: November 5, 2019
Time: 2:30
--- 3:30 p.m.
Join a free Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) webinar to hear from experts on best practices for engaging payers and providers as research partners to help ensure your work reaches and influences the people who can drive the needed change.
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HIGHLIGHTED RESOURCE
Launched by healthcare journalist Dan Gorenstein and his health policy researcher collaborators, this podcast features a mix of data and storytelling. Each episode will unpack the potential benefits and drawbacks of policies related to major healthcare controversies like drug pricing, Medicare for All, high-deductible health plans, and more.
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THUR
11/21
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James Dupree, M.D., M.P.H.
Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Urology,
U-M Medical School
4:00
--- 5:00 p.m.
NCRC Building 10 Research Auditorium
2800 Plymouth Road
Ann Arbor, MI 48109
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TUE
11/7
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9:00
--- 10:00 a.m.
300 N. Ingalls 6D15
Ann Arbor, MI 48109
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TUE
11/18
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5:00
---7:30 p.m.
Robert H. Lurie Engineering Center, 3rd and 4th Floors
1221 Beal Ave
Ann Arbor, MI 48109
Learn how the Center for Healthcare Engineering and Patient Safety (CHEPS) is improving the safety and quality of healthcare delivery by identifying, fostering, and promoting collaborative projects across the University.
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TUE
11/19
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1:00
--- 4:30 p.m.
Radisson Hotel Lansing
111 N Grand Ave
Lansing, MI 48933
A panel of experts, including
Jeffrey Kullgren, M.D., M.P.H., M.S., assistant professor of internal medicine, will describe how an aging Michigan will create new stresses on healthcare delivery systems, and will discuss innovations that are emerging to meet the growing need.
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A story in the
Washington Post took a look at the evidence to date on the impact of the Affordable Care Act on the health of individuals
---- and shone the spotlight on a range of research published by IHPI teams.
Veteran health policy reporter Amy Goldstein wrote: "Michigan has emerged as a hub for understanding the ACA's effects on health because University of Michigan researchers have been rigorously evaluating the Healthy Michigan Plan, as the state calls its Medicaid expansion covering about 650,000 people."
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The technology is there. The funding is nearly there. The health providers are getting there.
But according to
a new report from the National Poll on Healthy Aging, people over 50 may not be quite ready to fully embrace virtual health visits, also known as telehealth, with their doctors and other providers.
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New U-M studies published on firearm injury and death
In the first of two new studies led by senior author
Rebecca Cunningham, M.D., professor of emergency medicine, CDC data to document a 14% rise in firearm deaths across the nation from 2015 to 2017, after more than a decade of rates staying about the same. Cunningham and the research team also mapped state-by-state variations in overall trends, and in trends among members of different demographic groups.
The second study, also led by Cunningham and
Patrick Carter, M.D., assistant professor of emergency medicine, reviewed federal research funding for studies on different causes of death among children and teens, and finds that research on the second-leading cause of death (firearms) gets far less funding on a per-death basis than other causes.
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Opportunities for
FUNDING
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About IHPI
The Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation is committed to improving the quality, safety, equity, and affordability of healthcare services.
To carry out our ambitious mission, our efforts are focused in four areas:
- Evaluating the impact of healthcare reforms
- Improving the health of communities
- Promoting greater value in healthcare
- Innovating in IT and healthcare delivery
Support IHPI
If you are interested in supporting health services and health policy research at the University of Michigan,
click here.
Inside IHPI is published monthly by the University of Michigan Institute for Healthcare Policy & Innovation.
Follow IHPI
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Contact Us
U-M Institute for Healthcare Policy & Innovation
North Campus Research Complex (NCRC)
2800 Plymouth Road, Building 16
Ann Arbor, MI 48109
Christina Camilli-Whisenhunt
Kara Gavin
Research & Policy Media Relations Manager
Lauren Hutchens
Senior Communications Specialist
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