May 19, 2015

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The Department of Surgery recently presented Judy Swanson, assistant vice president of Perioperative Services, with a Distinguished Service Award for her 14 years of work with Texas Children’s.

Swanson has helped the Department of Surgery to develop its surgical community through her true understanding of the department’s clinical needs and goals combined with her ability to provide the resources required to advance the program. She also has been the nursing voice and conscience within the Department of Surgery and across the hospital.

Swanson is providing a foundation upon which the next phase of surgery at Texas Children’s will be built. She is active in the department’s CareFirst project, is working with the Heart Center, and is involved with the building of the new operating rooms and procedure suites.

May 12, 2015

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It’s hard to contain the celebration of nursing at a place like Texas Children’s to just one week. Every day there is a story of a nurse who’s going above and beyond to impact patient care, experience and outcomes. A nurse who is holding the hands of a parent who’s received tough news about their child. A nurse who’s by the bedside of a patient whose own family can’t be there during treatments. A nurse who leaves behind his own family on holidays and weekends to be with families in the hospital. A nurse who calms the fears of a mom-to-be as she prepares to give birth to her first child. Nurses leave a lasting impression on every patient and they’re at the core of the experience patients have while in our care.
Each year, as the nation celebrates nurses across the country, Texas Children’s takes a moment to join in and praise the hard work being done across our own community by the Texas Children’s family nurses.

This year’s Nurses Week celebrations included town halls held by Senior Vice President and Chief Nursing Officer Lori Armstrong, poster presentations, cookie deliveries, blessing of the hands, a webinar, an education fair, a Fiesta Bar Friday and massages.

Nurses highlighted this week for their dedication to nursing include Nursing Excellence Award winners and Houston Chronicle Salute to Nurses honorees. The nine Nursing Excellence Award Recipients included:
Staff Nurse of the year: Natalie McBain
Preceptor of the year: Lauren Mayer
Rookie of the year: Megan Riordan
Certified nurse of the year: Shannon Frost
Leader of the year: Tarra Kerr
Teams of the Year: Texas Children’s Health Plan – Nurse Family Partnership Program and Texas Children’s System Hospital Acquired Pressure Ulcer Skin Champions
APRN of the year: Jessica Geer
Friend of Nursing: Hasti Taghi

Click here to view the photo gallery of the luncheon

Perhaps the most special moment of the Nursing Excellence award luncheon came as a surprise for Armstrong. The nursing leadership team presented the chief nursing office with a plaque recognizing a new award named in Armstrong’s honor. The Lori Armstrong Patient Experience Award will be given to one worthy nurse annually beginning next year as an acknowledgment of Armstrong’s own dedication to patient experience.

The Houston Chronicle Salute to Nurses included Vicki Wiest from the Meyer Center for Developmental Pediatrics and Donna Daigle Tinsley from Texas Children’s Cancer Center who were both among the top 10 award recipients.

Click here for more on the Houston Chronicle Salute to Nurses honorees

In addition to the two nurses honored in the top 10, 20 other Texas Children’s nurses were recognized as being among the top 150 in the Greater Houston area.

Heidi Aghajani
Denise Allen
Toronda Baker
Emily Garrie
Chelci Gray
Melody Hellsten
Joy Hesselgrave
Amy Jeppesen
Patsy Jones
Michael Jordan
Melanie Knapp
Erica McMillian
Joellan Mullen
Jada Randall
Melissa Silvera
Tammy Stanford
Katharine Tittle
Amy Turner
Elizabeth Wuestner
Nicole Zola

April 28, 2015

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Dr. Akash Patel will be presented with the 2015-2016 Christopher R. Getch Fellowship Award from the Congress of Neurological Surgeons Fellowships Committee during its annual meeting in September.

This prestigious award provides $100,000 for advanced training and is given to a neurosurgeon or fellow engaged in clinical research that promises to significantly impact the field of neurosurgery.

Patel is an assistant professor of neurosurgery at Baylor College of Medicine and a neurosurgeon who specializes in the treatment of malignant and benign tumors of the brain and skull mass.

As a scientist at the Jan and Dan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children’s, Patel’s research focuses on determining the molecular underpinnings of inherited and sporadic forms of various brain tumors to develop targeted therapies to treat common and aggressive cases.

April 14, 2015

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Dr. Wesley Lee, co-director of Texas Children’s Fetal Center and section chief for women’s and fetal imaging at Baylor College of Medicine, recently received the William J. Fry Memorial Lecture Award from the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine (AIUM).

The award recognizes a current or retired AIUM member who has significantly contributed in his or her particular field to the scientific progress of medical ultrasound.

Lee’s lecture titled, “Great Expectations: The Way Forward in Fetal Imaging,” was presented during the opening session of the 2015 AIUM/WFUMB Annual Convention in Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

Among his many accomplishments, Lee has authored 148 peer-reviewed articles and 20 book chapters pertaining to maternal-fetal medicine, prenatal detection of congenital anomalies, 3-/4-dimensional fetal sonography and fetal magnetic resonance imaging.

April 7, 2015

4815crcaward175The Clinical Research Center will present the Clinical Research Award for First Quarter 2015 to Dr. Poyyapakkam Srivaths, Department of Pediatrics-Renal, Baylor College of Medicine.

The award was established by the Clinical Research Center in collaboration with the Research Resources Office to recognize and honor individual contributions to protecting the best interest of the research subjects and compliance with applicable rules and regulations.

Dr. Srivaths’ research activities in the CRC focus on investigating cardiovascular morbidity associated with end stage renal disease (ESRD) in children.

Congratulations to Dr. Srivaths.

March 31, 2015

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The Department of Pediatrics has been selected to edit the 23rd edition of the classic textbook Rudolph’s Pediatrics. First written in 1897 as Disease of Infancy and Childhood by L. Emmett Holt, M.D., the book is today one of two principal textbooks of pediatrics used around the world.

“This is a major milestone in the transition of editorial responsibilities for an iconic 119-year-old pediatric text- the first such editorial transition in more than 30 years, Said Physician-in-Chief Dr. Mark W. Kline. “It is also a potentially transformative event in the history of Texas Children’s Hospital and Baylor Pediatrics.”

The most recent, 22nd edition published in 2011 by McGraw-Hill Professional includes 2,488 pages and a companion DVD featuring more than 1,700 figures, 1,100 tables and 30,000 references.

Abraham M. Rudolph, M.D., now professor of pediatrics emeritus at the University of California San Francisco, assumed the editorial reins in 1977 with the 16th edition of the book, then known simply as Pediatrics. In 1991, with the 19th edition, it was renamed Rudolph’s Pediatrics in his honor. Editor-in-chief for the 22nd edition was Abraham Rudolph’s son, Colin, Rudolph, M.D., Ph. D., vice chair of Clinical Affairs of the Department of Pediatrics at the Medical College of Wisconsin.

“It’s a huge honor to be selected for editorial responsibility for such a high profile textbook,” said Physician-in-Chief Dr. Mark W. Kline. “It takes a big, diverse department like this one to pull this off.”

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Dr. Huda Zoghbi received the 2015 Mortimer D. Sackler, M.D. Prize for Distinguished Achievement in Developmental Psychobiology, awarded by Weill Cornell Medical College and Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons.

Zoghbi is the director of the Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children’s, a professor of molecular and human genetics, pediatrics, neuroscience and neurology at Baylor College of Medicine, and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.

As a member of the National Academy of Sciences, Zoghbi has pioneered research on Rett syndrome and other rare brain disorders, and has advanced research of more common conditions including autism and adult neurodegenerative diseases.

In one of her most well-known achievements, Zoghbi provided a definitive genetic diagnosis for Rett syndrome and opened the door to a biological understanding and a search for treatment. Rett syndrome is a genetic neurological disease that usually affects young girls. Girls born with the disease develop normally for one or two years, but then begin to show progressive loss of motor skills, speech and other cognitive abilities.

Zoghbi has also found other genes, including Math1, an essential gene governing the development of cells critical for hearing, balance, and breathing, and the genes for spinocerebellar ataxia 1 and 6. Her work has led to a better understanding of neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative disorders.

“We’re thrilled that Dr. Zoghbi is this year’s recipient,” said Dr. B.J. Casey, director of the Sackler Institute and the Sackler Professor of Developmental Psychobiology at Weill Cornell Medical College. “She’s dedicated herself to this field for decades and has made remarkable achievements. But we’re also recognizing her leadership in the field of neuroscience and her track record of mentoring young scientists as they embark on their own careers.”

The prize is named for the Dr. Mortimer D. Sackler, one of the most creative scientists in the field of developmental psychobiology. The Mortimer D. Sackler Foundation, Inc. endowed the prize in a gift in 2009.

“To have a prize bearing the name of someone who’s made such remarkable achievements in this field is a great honor,” Zoghbi said. “There are so many deserving scientists and physician-scientists out there who have done fantastic work. I feel truly honored to have been selected.”

Zoghbi plans to donate the $100,000 prize money to a mentorship fund that she established to help young female scientists get their work – specifically research on “bold, new ideas” – off the ground.