Next Week in SHARP (December 22nd to December 28th)

 

UPCOMING PRESENTATIONS

December 25th – No Meeting

January 1st – No Meeting

January 8th – SHARP Works In Progress presented by Courtney Collins, MD

January 8th – SHARP Works In Progress presented by Clara Lee, MD

 

NEWS

  • Congratulations to Dr. Jordan Cloyd

SHARP Core faculty member Dr. Jordan Cloyd was appointed as the next Ward Family Surgical Oncology Designated Professor.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • WE HAVE THE NASS!

This month, SHARP received a download of the 2016 NASS dataset. Sampled from the State Ambulatory Surgery and Services Databases (SASD), HCUP’s NASS can be used to create national estimates of major ambulatory surgery encounters performed in hospital-owned facilities. Major ambulatory surgeries are defined as selected invasive, therapeutic surgical procedures that typically require the use of an operating room and require regional anesthesia, general anesthesia, or sedation (i.e., surgeries flagged as “narrow” in the HCUP Surgery Flag Software).

Key features of the 2016 NASS include:
• Data from 2,718 hospital-owned facilities located in 33 States and the District of Columbia, approximating a 59-percent stratified sample of U.S. hospital-owned facilities performing selected ambulatory surgeries
• Data on clinical procedures and diagnoses, disposition of the patient, expected source of payment, and total charges, as well as geographic, hospital-owned facility, and patient characteristics
• A focus on encounters with at least one “in-scope” ambulatory surgery: an invasive, therapeutic procedure with relatively high procedure volume, a substantial share of procedures in the hospital outpatient setting, and reliable reporting from hospital-owned facilities
• A supplemental file that provides information on out-of-scope procedures performed during these encounters

 

 

 

 

 

  • Save-the-Date: 2020 Health Disparities Research Institute

The National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD) will host the Health Disparities Research Institute (HDRI) from August 3-7, 2020, in Bethesda, MD. The online application system will open in early February 2020! The HDRI aims to support the research career development of promising early-career minority health and health disparities research scientists and to stimulate research in disciplines supported by health disparities science.

The program will feature:

  • lectures on minority health and health disparities research
  • mock grant review
  • seminars and small group discussions

Institute participants will also have the opportunity to engage in sessions with NIH scientific staff involved in health disparities research across the various NIH institutes and centers.

Please note that applications will only be accepted from extramural scientists who meet NIH’s Early Stage Investigator (ESI) eligibility criteria. NIH and HHS staff, including persons doing fellowships/training at NIH or an HHS agency, are not eligible to apply.

Visit the HDRI webpage to learn more about the target audience, eligibility, selection criteria, and how to apply.

For questions or more information, email HDRI@nih.gov.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PUBLICATIONS AND OTHER SCHOLARLY SUCCESSES

We pull publication data from Scopus, based on our ORCID list.  If you have other publications (i.e. book chapters), or invited lectures, patents, etc. please send to Scott Chaffee (scott.chaffee@osumc.edu) for inclusion on this list!

 

ABSTRACT DEADLINES

Send us the names of your favorite meetings!  Email to Scott Chaffee (scott.chaffee@osumc.edu).  

 

DIRECTOR’S OFFICE HOURS

Dr. Strassels’ office hours are every Wednesday from 8:00AM-11:00AM. Contact Scott Chaffee (scott.chaffee@osumc.edu) to schedule a 30 minute block of one on one time with the SHARP Scientific Director.

Next Week in SHARP (December 8th to December 14th)

 

UPCOMING PRESENTATIONS

December 11th – No Meeting

NEWS

  • WE HAVE THE NASS!

This month, SHARP received a download of the 2016 NASS dataset. Sampled from the State Ambulatory Surgery and Services Databases (SASD), HCUP’s NASS can be used to create national estimates of major ambulatory surgery encounters performed in hospital-owned facilities. Major ambulatory surgeries are defined as selected invasive, therapeutic surgical procedures that typically require the use of an operating room and require regional anesthesia, general anesthesia, or sedation (i.e., surgeries flagged as “narrow” in the HCUP Surgery Flag Software).

Key features of the 2016 NASS include:
• Data from 2,718 hospital-owned facilities located in 33 States and the District of Columbia, approximating a 59-percent stratified sample of U.S. hospital-owned facilities performing selected ambulatory surgeries
• Data on clinical procedures and diagnoses, disposition of the patient, expected source of payment, and total charges, as well as geographic, hospital-owned facility, and patient characteristics
• A focus on encounters with at least one “in-scope” ambulatory surgery: an invasive, therapeutic procedure with relatively high procedure volume, a substantial share of procedures in the hospital outpatient setting, and reliable reporting from hospital-owned facilities
• A supplemental file that provides information on out-of-scope procedures performed during these encounters

 

  • Dr. Carmen Quatman, MD, PhD will be speaking at the TEDxColumbus Women’s event on December 8th
    • TEDxColumbus aims to bring the Columbus community a series of talks featuring the area’s most intelligent, clever, and creative individuals. This year, the theme is Bold + Brilliant, and the aim of the event is to empower girls and women and celebrate those who support them.
    • The event will take place from 1:00pm to 4:00pm on 12/08, and livestream will take place from 4:30pm to 6:00pm.
    • Find more information out about the event here.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Research NIMHD Supports Research on Biopsychosocial Factors of Social Connectedness and Isolation

NIMHD is supporting two new funding opportunities, PAR-19-373 (R01 Clinical Trials Not Allowed) and PAR-19-384 (R01 Basic Experimental Studies with Humans Required), to understand the interrelation between social connectedness and social isolation on health disparity populations and health disparities. This work includes the impact of interpersonal and systemic discrimination and microaggressions on social connectedness and isolation. This research aims to identify unique challenges and intervention targets for health disparity populations.

NIMHD encourages investigators to participate in this important public health activity and welcomes inquiries concerning these  FOAs. Review the funding opportunities for more information on eligibility and application submissions.

Open Date (Earliest Submission Date): February 17, 2020

Application Due Date: March 17, 2020, by 5:00pm local time of application organization.

View the FOAs here.

 

 

 

PUBLICATIONS AND OTHER SCHOLARLY SUCCESSES

We pull publication data from Scopus, based on our ORCID list.  If you have other publications (i.e. book chapters), or invited lectures, patents, etc. please send to Scott Chaffee (scott.chaffee@osumc.edu) for inclusion on this list!

 

ABSTRACT DEADLINES

Send us the names of your favorite meetings!  Email to Scott Chaffee (scott.chaffee@osumc.edu).  

 

DIRECTOR’S OFFICE HOURS

Dr. Strassels’ office hours are every Wednesday from 8:00AM-11:00AM. Contact Scott Chaffee (scott.chaffee@osumc.edu) to schedule a 30 minute block of one on one time with the SHARP Scientific Director.