ATS 2020 Advance Program

2:15 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. Target Audience Critical care clinicians (fellows, attending physicians, NPs/PAs/CRNAs, nurses, allied health professionals), critical care researchers, ICU administrators. Objectives At the conclusion of this session, the participant will be able to: • identify practices within critical care where our current practice is at risk of being unbalanced; • understand consequences of continuing particular; • understand the data (for and against) our current practices, and the data that suggests that we may need to change. Critical care has long been a bastion of innovation in medicine, incorporating new technologies and evidence into patient care. However, do new advances always represent a step in the correct direction? When we adopt new practices, what are the consequences of moving too far away from prior ones? Speakers will explore the upsides/downsides of our current approach to a heterogeneous array of ICU topics - long-term outcomes, ethics, big data, empiric antibiotic therapy, ultrasound, telemedicine, and personalized medicine - to understand if today’s practice is where it should be or if, perhaps, the pendulum has swung too far. Chairing: H.B. Gershengorn, MD, ATSF, Miami, FL K. Hibbert, MD, Boston, MA M. Hua, MD, MSci, New York, NY 2:15 Telemedicine: At Every Hospital? J.M. Kahn, MD, MSc, Pittsburgh, PA 2:28 Empiric Antibiotics: Do They Need to Cover Everything? B.E. Jones, MD, MSc, Salt Lake City, UT 2:41 Ultrasound: The Answer to All Diagnostic Questions? M.J. Lanspa, MD, MSCR, ATSF, Salt Lake City, UT 2:54 90-day Mortality: The Best Outcome for Critical Care Trials? B. Rochwerg, MD, MSCE, Hamilton, Canada 3:07 Patient Autonomy: Is Its Preeminence Appropriate? A.E. Turnbull, DVM, MPH, PhD, Baltimore, MD 3:20 Personalized Medicine: Can Anything be One-Size Fits All? C.S. Calfee, MD, San Francisco, CA 3:33 Big Data and the Electronic Health Record: Will it Cure What Ails Us? G.E. Weissman, MD, MS, Philadelphia, PA 3:46 Technology: Have the Humans Become Too Robotic? J.B. Hall, MD, Chicago, IL 3:59 Panel Discussion K. Hibbert, MD, Boston, MA BASIC • CLINICAL • TRANSLATIONAL SCIENTIFIC SYMPOSIUM C85 SCIENTIFIC BREAKTHROUGHS: NEW VIEWS OF TISSUE REGENERATION Assemblies on Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology; Allergy, Immunology and Inflammation; Pediatrics; Respiratory Structure and Function 2:15 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. Target Audience Basic and translational scientists, physicians and trainees. Objectives At the conclusion of this session, the participant will be able to: • describe the latest scientific advances in basic and Translational; • utilize novel techniques and approaches to the study of lung development and disease; • apply knowledge from basic and translational research towards development of novel therapeutic strategies. This session will focus on recent high impact discoveries and novel approaches to study of lung development and diseases. Speakers will cover areas ranging from discovery biology to cutting edge ATS 2020 • Philadelphia, PA 116 TUESDAY • MAY 19

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