In This Month's Issue

While strengthening a team can take on a variety of meanings, it is apt in the demanding and dynamic clinical and educational settings of multidisciplinary general internal medicine healthcare professionals.

From an individual’s perspective, strengthening the care team might mean bringing a unique expertise to their team. Orozco, et al., explore these issues and the potential for a community health worker or patient navigator to facilitate care coordination and community engagement in individual patients’ health. Myong and Newman offer a medical student perspective on the visible value of multidisciplinary team care in patients’ communities. For a team looking to adapt to changing healthcare environments and optimize the applications of their team members’ skills, Sakumoto, et al., offer a look into an all-virtual primary care team model.

General internal medicine physicians, or generalists, can identify with a variety of roles based on their clinical setting: hospitalists in hospital settings, ambulists in ambulatory settings, and now virtualists in virtual or remote settings. For leaders and organizations looking to bring on talent from diverse professional and personal backgrounds, strategic planning and intentionality are needed to foster innovation and synergy within and between care teams across different settings. Alkhaiw and Torres-Deas explore the long view of primary care physicians in interdisciplinary team leadership roles.

SGIM also has its role to play throughout each of these settings with regards to promoting interdisciplinary collaboration and team-based care. Lypson, SGIM President, provides an update on behalf of SGIM Council and highlights from the winter leadership retreat. If you are a current or recent general internal medicine fellow, or a general internal medicine fellowship program director, please read an important call for survey responses from the SGIM Fellows Survey Sub-Committee, a subcommittee of the SGIM Research Committee, by Marathur, et al. The survey provides the Sub-Committee with information on the career outcomes of current and former general medicine research fellows and helps to identify barriers and facilitators to developing and maintaining a GIM research career. Also, Bass, SGIM CEO, and O’Malley, Director of the National Center for Excellence in Primary Care Research (NCEPCR), provide an update on NCEPCR goals for primary care researchers and how SGIM is engaged in advancing primary care research workforce development.

From the Editor

Burning Our Books and Data: Fahrenheit 451 Mirrors Today’s Scientific World

Michael Landry, MD, MSc, FACP Editor in Chief, SGIM Forum
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Featured Column

The Keys to SGIM’s Success Over the Past 50 Years

David Karlson, PhD
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The Medical Educator Portfolio Puzzle: Putting Together the Pieces of Your Teaching Career

Craig Noronha, MD, FACP; Katie Twist, MD, FACP; Athina Vassilakis, MD, MPH; D. Rani Nandiwada, MD, MSEd; Meghan Kiefer, MD, MPH
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Highlights of the SGIM 2025 Annual Meeting: Celebrating Our Transformational Ideas and Enacting Meaningful Change

Thomas Radomski, MD, MS; Dominique Cosco, MD
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Other Articles

ASYNCHRONOUS CARE: THE RISING THREAT TO PRIMARY CARE SUSTAINABILITY

Nathaniel Gleason, MD; R. Jeffrey Kohlwes, MD, MPH
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ALL ABOUT THE LYSIS: GLUCOSE- 6-PHOSPHATE DEHYDROGENASE (G6PD) DEFICIENCY AND HEPATITIS B VIRUS INFECTION

Chloe N. Hundman, MD; Christopher D. Jackson, MD
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ACNE IN THE PROSTATE: A CASE OF AN EMPHYSEMATOUS PROSTATIC ABSCESS

Anna Conner, BBA; Christopher D. Jackson, MD
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WHAT MATTERS MOST: CONNECTING VALUES WITH CARE PREFERENCES FOR OLDER ADULTS

Mary L. Thomas, MD, MPH; Laura J. Morrison, MD
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SCREENING AND DIAGNOSIS OF DEMENTIA IN PRIMARY CARE

Stephanie Nothelle, MD
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