CCM

Clinical Program

Members of the Division of Critical Care Medicine perform patient care, teaching and research in critical care in several ICUs: the Surgical Intensive Care Unit (SICU) at Duke University Medical Center (DUMC), the SICU at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center (VAMC), and the Neuroscience ICU at Duke. Divisional faculty also provides medical care in the Hyperbaric Center and the Pediatric ICU.

SICU Attending Staff

Patient care is provided in the SICUs at DUMC and the VAMC under the co-directorship of faculty within the department. The Duke University Hospital SICU is a 16-bed, level-one trauma unit. In addition, it serves as a site for care of a variety of postoperative general and subspecialty surgical patients. Attending staff from the Departments of Medicine, Surgery, and Anesthesiology provide 24-hour a day, seven days per week coverage. Dr. Alison Clay (Medicine), Dr. Kelli Brooks, Dr. John Scarborough, Dr. Mark Shapiro, Dr. Betsy Tuttle-Newhall, Dr. Steven Vaslef (Surgery), Dr. Nancy Knudsen, Dr. Eugene Moretti and Dr. Christopher Young (Anesthesiology) share attending responsibilities.

The VAMC’s 8-bed unit serves as step-down and ICU. Open-heart patients, as well as post-operative general surgical, orthopedic, urologic, plastic, and other subspecialty surgical patients are treated in this unit. Attending staff coverage is provided by Dr. Attilio Barbeito, Dr. Raquel Bartz, Dr. Scott Brudney and Dr. Shahar Bar-Yosef.

Training Program

Fellows

This is the fifteenth year (April 7, 2009) the ACGME-accredited Fellowship in Critical Care Medicine has been offered by the department. The Fellowship program underwent ACGME review in 2006 as part of the review of the Residency Program in Anesthesiology. In addition to retaining full accreditation status, the program was awarded a special commendation recognizing the development and implementation of innovative web-based modules for the education and evaluation of Critical Care Fellows. The fellowship continues to attract a number of strong applicants. Additional training in Transesophageal Echocardiography (TEE) is now offered to Critical Care Fellows in collaboration with the Fellowship Program in Cardiothoracic Anesthesia.

Past graduates currently in practice include Daniel Amitie (Rex Hospital, Raleigh, NC), Larry Field (MUSC, Charleston, SC), Duane Funk (University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada), Eugene Lujan (U.S. Naval Medical Center, San Diego, CA), Mihai Podgoreanu (DUMC), Marcella Lanzinger (Technische Universität München, Germany), Maher Albaharani (The Royal Hospital Ministry of Health, Sultanate of Oman), David Coy (Flagstaff, AZ), Patrick Neligan (University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA), Chiedozie Udeh (University of Iowa School of Medicine, Iowa City, IA), Angela Joseph (Huron Medical Center, Bad Axe, MI), Kevin Patrick (Piedmont Hendersonville Anesthesia, Hendersonville, NC), Albert Hasson (Arizona Anesthesia Consultant, Glendale, AZ), Eugene Moretti (DUMC), Faisal Masud (Methodist Hospital – Houston, Houston, TX), Elliott Bennett-Guerrero (DUMC), Nancy Knudsen (DUMC), and Tony Huggins (Critical Health Systems Inc, Raleigh, NC).

Residents

First-year residents in anesthesiology are introduced to critical care medicine at the VAMC SICU. Here they have an opportunity to learn the skills needed to care for critically ill post-operative patients and those patients requiring intermediate levels of care.

Additional training in critical care medicine for CA-2 residents in Anesthesiology is provided in the 16-bed SICU at Duke University Medical Center (DN 2200). Residents gain additional experience in managing complex patients in this busy trauma/post surgical unit. One of the unique features that distinguish the Duke Critical Care experience for the residents in 2200 is the presence of attending staff from the Departments of Anesthesia, Medicine, and Surgery. The varied backgrounds and training of the attending physicians allows the residents to gain multiple perspectives in the treatment of critical illness. The clinical and didactic components of this rotation are maintained at high levels with the input of the Critical Care Fellows and attending staff.

CA-3 residents can choose to spend additional time in the DUMC SICU during their final year of training. During this time, senior residents have gained additional experience in managing complex ICU patients while acquiring more responsibility for daily rounds, decision-making, and education of junior members of the SICU team. Opportunities for training in TEE are also offered to senior residents during this elective rotation.

Medical Students
Instruction to medical students in Intensive Care Medicine is offered through the Duke University School of Medicine. A month-long rotation in SICU is available to fourth-year medical students from Duke and other institutions (both national and international) Students enrolled in this course join in daily rounding in the SICU at Duke University Medical Center. After an initial introduction to Critical Care Medicine, they participate in the care of critically ill patients by evaluating and presenting patients on SICU rounds, and taking in-house call with the residents. The students frequently cite the experience in managing complex medical problems and enthusiastic teaching by residents, fellows, and attendings as strong positives of this course.

With the recent re-structuring of the curriculum at the School of Medicine, a new Critical Care intersession (“Clinical Core”) has been instituted. This course is designed to give medical students a brief introduction to acute, in-hospital care early in their medical education. One-hundred, second-year Duke medical students are instructed by members of the Critical Care Division in the methods of critical care during the Clinical Core. Day one of this seminar is devoted to the presentation of a case to the students, followed by small group discussion of critical care issues raised by the case presentation. During the next two days, the students are given the opportunity to make rounds in the Duke SICU with Critical Care Medicine Attendings and explore related technologies such as invasive hemodynamic monitoring and mechanical ventilation.  A month-long elective in Critical Care Medicine is available for those students who wish to further advance their knowledge.

The division’s mission, excellence in patient care, education, and research, continue to be well served.  Monitoring 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, attending physician coverage in the Duke SICU continues to provide the highest level of care for our critically ill patients.  Education of medical students, residents (both junior and senior), and fellows remains an integral part of our practice. Multidisciplinary critical care rounds are scheduled weekly under the direction of Dr. Young and Dr. Alison Clay.  Duke University School of Medicine, Office of Continuing Medical Education (CME) has granted these conferences CME accreditation.  They provide the opportunity for health care professionals from various backgrounds to meet and discuss critical care topics of mutual interest while earning needed educational credits for re-licensing purposes.

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Christopher C. Young, MD

Christopher Young, MD, FCCM

Chief, Division of Critical Care Medicine
Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Assistant Professor of Surgery
Office: (919) 668-3400

Faculty

Attilio Barbeito, MD
Raquel Bartz, MD
Shahar Bar-Yosef, MD
Cecil O. Borel, MD
Charles S. Brudney, MB, ChB, FRCA
Guy deLisle Dear, MB, FRCA
Nancy W. Knudsen, MD
Richard E. Moon, MD, CM, MSc, FRCP(C), FACP, FCCP
Eugene W. Moretti, MD, MHSc
Mihai Podgoreanu, MD
Scott R. Schulman, MD
Bryant W. Stolp, MD, PhD
C. Bruce Weldon, MD
Ian J. Welsby, BSc, MBBS, FRCA

Fellows

Jordan Cuthbert
Brendan Howes
Robert Preston
Charles Murphy (Surgical CC fellow)

Incoming Fellows

Matthew Atkins, MD

Support Staff

Victoria Grossman (Program Coordinator)





This article comes from Department of Anesthesiology   http://anesthesiology.duke.edu
The URL for this story is:   http://anesthesiology.duke.edu/modules/anes_div_ccm/index.php?id=1