Final-Program-ATS-2023-AP.vp

SUNDAY • MAY 21

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9:07 Crisis Standards of Care Protocols in Low-Resource Settings: Ensuring Equity Amidst Scarcity T. Twagirumugabe, MD, MMed, FCCM, PhD, Butare, Rwanda 9:15 Sepsis Treatment Around the World: Challenges and Innovations J.C. Ferreira, MD, PhD, ATSF, Sao Paulo, Brazil 9:30 Oxygen Delivery: Overcoming Supply Chain Problems During the COVID-19 Pandemic E. Vanderwal, PA, Sidvokodvo, Swaziland 9:45 Innovations in Critical Care Education: Lessons from Kenya B.W. Lee, MD, Bethesda, MD 10:00 Decolonizing Global Critical Care R. Haniffa, MD, Edinburgh, United Kingdom 10:15 Essential Emergency and Critical Care K.Khalid, MD, Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania

9:54

Everything, Everywhere All in the Lungs J. Pryor, MD, Aurora, CO

10:04

Expert Radiologist B. Elicker, MD, San Francisco, CA

10:12

A 79-year-old Woman with Bilateral Exudative Effusions R. Nair, MD, Bronx, NY

10:22

Expert Pathologist J.L. Myers, MD, Ann Arbor, MI

CLINICAL CRITICAL CARE TRACK CME Credits Available: 1.5

A4 ACHIEVING HEALTH EQUITY IN GLOBAL CRITICAL CARE: CHALLENGES AND INNOVATIONS Assembly on Critical Care; Africa Interest Group 9:00 AM - 10:30 AM Walter E. Washington Convention Center Room 145 A-B (Street Level) Target Audience All critical care physicians, advance practice providers, nurses and allied health providers with an interest in healthcare equity and diversity on a global level Objectives At the conclusion of this session, the participant will be able to: • better understand challenges and nuances of critical care delivery in diverse practice settings globally • incorporate innovative solutions to best practices in critical care in lower-resourced settings around the world • describe innovations in critical care research, education and practice in lower-resourced settings The practice of critical care around the world varies considerably based on environment, geography, and human and material resource availability. Consequently, effective critical care delivery often requires nuance and adaptation. With an emphasis on global equity and diversity, this session provides perspective on innovations that improve outcomes in lower-resourced settings. This multidisciplinary session will cover a diversity of essential topics relevant to attendees interested in critical care delivery in strained settings around the world. Chairing: A. Papali, MD,CM, Charlotte, NC D.O. Obaseki, MD, ATSF, Ile-Ife, Nigeria 9:00 Crisis Standard of Care Protocols in Low-Resource Settings: Ensuring Equity Amidst Scarcity E.D. Riviello, MD, MPH, Boston, MA

BASIC • TRANSLATIONAL BASIC SCIENCE CORE CME Credits Available: 1.5

A5

QUANTIFICATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL EXPOSURES USING STATE-OF-THE-ART METHODS

9:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m.

Marriott Marquis Washington Independence Ballroom, Salons E-H

Target Audience Clinicians and researchers Objectives

At the conclusion of this session, the participant will be able to: • identify opportunities for novel investigation into understudied aspects of exposure assessment, (patho)physiological mechanisms, and cellular and molecular biology. • apply new technologies such as functional imaging and in vitro translational models for detecting onset and progression of lung function changes to environmental exposures • learn how advances in lung biology are revealing new mechanisms of lung homeostasis and therapeutic targets to reduce/ reverse the deleterious impacts of environmental exposures. This is part 1 of a 2-part symposium Part 1 focuses on quantification of environmental exposures using state-of-the-art methods. Part 2 on Sunday, May 21, 2:15 p.m.-3:45p.m. focuses on the physiological and cellular impact of environmental exposures.

ATS 2023 • Washington, DC

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