In This Month's Issue

This issue of SGIM Forum offers a continuation of content from last month’s theme issue on Team and Interprofessional Care. Throughout this issue, the authors highlight the importance of interdisciplinary care in the outpatient and inpatient setting. Reading this issue of SGIM Forum reminds us all as general internists why interdisciplinary care is vital for effective patient care in general medicine setting.

Monica Lypson, SGIM president, highlights SGIM’s role in advocacy through their support of COVID-19 testing, PPE for front-line clinicians, equitable and fair telehealth reimbursement, and loan forgiveness for COVID-19 frontline workers. Eric Bass, SGIM CEO, and Martha Gerrity detail the successes of the “Forging Our Future” Program through the generosity of SGIM members and donors. Tiffany Leung, SGIM Forum Editor-in-Chief, discusses the unspoken personal and emotional impact on business owners forced to close during COVID-19 lockdowns in the Netherlands.

Interprofessional collaboration (IPC) is a core part of general internal medicine practice. Temple Ratcliffe and colleagues share lessons learned from implementing IPC in the inpatient clinical learning environment. Specifically, IPC in the hospital requires system reorganization, and inpatient clinicians and personnel require additional training to make IPC optimal for patient care. Moving to the outpatient setting, Rebecca Shafer and colleagues explore best practices and barriers to collaborating with medical social work in the primary care clinic. Additionally, Jason Ehrlich gives reflections from being medical director of the IMPACcT clinic at Northwell Long Island Jewish Hospital, giving thoughts on engaging senior leadership and the need for IPC in primary care. Rachel Levine and Carole Warde highlight the impact of the Horn Scholars program on facilitating scholarship and advocacy with other important responsibilities. Danielle Admunsen and colleagues discuss missed opportunities for cancer survivorship management in primary care, with a particular attention to the need for more research in survivorship and fostering interdisciplinary collaboration.

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
Learn More

Featured Column

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

David Karlson, PhD
Learn More

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
Learn More

Highlights of the SGIM 2025 Annual Meeting: Celebrating Our Transformational Ideas and Enacting Meaningful Change

Thomas Radomski, MD, MS; Dominique Cosco, MD
Learn More

Other Articles

Perioperative Medicine as An Unanticipated Front-Row Seat to the COVID-19 Pandemic

Avital O’Glasser, MD, FACP, FHM
Learn More

Strategies in Supporting Deployment during the COVID-19 Pandemic

Mariecel Pilapil, MD, MPH; Cheryl Taurassi, MD; Sophia Jan, MD, MSHP
Learn More

The 2022 SGIM Annual Meeting Will Impact the Dimensions of Your Career

Matthew Tuck, MD, MEd; Nicole Redmond, MD, PhD, MPH; Corrine Melissari, CMP; Jasmine Russell
Learn More

The Decision

Monica L. Lypson, MD, MHPE, FACP, President, SGIM
Learn More

Warming Up on the Sidelines Until I Am on the Front Lines

Abha Kulkarni, MPH
Learn More

The COVID-19 Pandemic and Graduate Medical Education Silver Linings

Attila Nemeth, MD; Maggie Salinger, MD, MPP; Tracey L. Henry, MD, MPH, MS, FACP; Milad Memari, MD, MS; Daniella A. Zipkin, MD
Learn More

Download the Full Issue