A Crisis in Scope: Recruitment and Retention Challenges Reported by VA Gastroenterology Section Chiefs.
von Rosenvinge E, Vela S, Paine E, Chang M, Hanson B, Taddei T, Smalley W, Dunbar K, Khan N, Kahng L, Anwar J, Zing R, Gawron A, Dominitz J, Baffy G. A Crisis in Scope: Recruitment and Retention Challenges Reported by VA Gastroenterology Section Chiefs. Federal Practitioner 2024, 41: 256-260. PMID: 39410921, PMCID: PMC11473028, DOI: 10.12788/fp.0504.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchBarriers to recruitmentHuman resource challengesVeterans AffairsUS Department of Veterans AffairsDepartment of Veterans AffairsAdministrative burdenBarriers to retentionHealth of veteransVA Medical CenterSection chiefsLow salariesResource challengesRetention challengesMedical specialtiesSupport staffReducing administrative burdensMedical CenterStaffing supportUS DepartmentBurdenDigestive healthCurrent vacanciesSecond-mostRecruitmentSalarySevere Acute Liver Injury After Hepatotoxic Medication Initiation in Real-World Data
Torgersen J, Mezochow A, Newcomb C, Carbonari D, Hennessy S, Rentsch C, Park L, Tate J, Bräu N, Bhattacharya D, Lim J, Mezzacappa C, Njei B, Roy J, Taddei T, Justice A, Re V. Severe Acute Liver Injury After Hepatotoxic Medication Initiation in Real-World Data. JAMA Internal Medicine 2024, 184: 943-952. PMID: 38913369, PMCID: PMC11197444, DOI: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2024.1836.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchIncidence rateUS Department of Veterans AffairsMedication initiationDepartment of Veterans AffairsInitiation of medicationVeterans AffairsMain OutcomesPotential of medicationsOutpatient settingDischarge diagnosisCohort studyDay of admissionCase reportReal World DataReport countsMedicationMedical cohortSevere acute liver injuryUS DepartmentFollow-upAcute liver injuryHospitalCohortHepatotoxic medicationsIncidence