Editors



Current Editors: Jane Onyemachi and Madelyn Schmidt

(Please email editors if there is blog-worthy news that you would like to see shared)

Past Editors: Fareen Momin, Andrea Francis, Renat Ahatov, Michael Phan, Elise Weisert, Michael Ryan, Keith Wagner, Tim Allen, Kristyna Gleghorn, Dung Mac, Alex Acosta, William Tausend, Sheila Jalalat, Rebecca Philips, Chelsea Altinger, Lindsey Hunter, Alison Wiesenthal, Leslie Scroggins, Mara Dacso, Ashley Group, Fadi Constantine, Emily Fridlington, Joslyn Witherspoon, Tasneem Poonawalla.

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

AIM for the Cure Melanoma 5K Walk and Fun Run 2016

The UTMB Dermatology Interest Group is hosting the annual AIM for the Cure Melanoma 5K Walk and Fun Run to take place on Saturday May 21th at 7:30AM at the UTMB Alumni Field House. To register to run/walk or to donate, visit https://walk.aimatmelanoma.org/Galveston2016/Static/Event-InfoIf you would like to register with the DIG team, choose the “UTMB Dermatology Interest Group” team when prompted.
If you would like to participate as a volunteer at this event, email Dung Mac at dhmac@utmb.edu. Don't miss out on this opportunity to help raise funds for the AIM at Melanoma Foundation, which aims to lead the battle against melanoma through research, education, and caregiver support!
If you have any additional questions, contact Dung Mac (dhmac@utmb.edu) or Paige Hoyer (pehoyer@utmb.edu).

Sunday, April 24, 2016

Dermatology Resident Evaluation of Quality Improvement (QI) Curriculum

University of Colorado were generally positive about their QI curriculum according to a recent article in Dermatology Online Journal  (see http://escholarship.org/uc/item/78q2r5j7#page-1 ). Residents worked in groups on different projects. They thought that QI project participation related to the ACGME categories of practice-based learning and improvement, systems-based practice, 
patient care, and medical knowledge.

Friday, April 22, 2016

UTMB Selects Dates for 2017 Dermatology Residency Applicant Interviews

The UTMB Dermatology Department has already selected dates for its 2017 interviews of dermatology applicants. 
 
UTMB internal applicants will be interviewed on Friday morning, January 27, 2017. Please keep this interview date in mind when scheduling interviews at other programs. If outside programs are only offering January 27 to interview, you will be able to make other arrangements to meet with all of the UTMB dermatology faculty and residents at mutually convenient times.
 
Outside applicants will be offered Thursday/Friday morning interviews that are scheduled for February 2nd and 3rd. 
 
Invitations to interview are usually sent in December.

Dr. Sharon Raimer Stepping Down from UTMB Dermatology Chair Position

UTMB Dean Danny Jacobs notified the UTMB community that UTMB Dermatology Chair, Dr. Sharon Raimer, will be stepping down from the chair position on June 1, 2016. We are all very grateful for the leadership and vision that she provided for UTMB dermatology, especially following the retirement of our previous Chair, Dr. Edgar B. Smith in 1999 and during department recovery and expansion following Hurricane Ike in 2008. Fortunately for UTMB and our department, Dr. Raimer will continue to educate medical students and dermatology residents and care for patients at UTMB as a dermatology faculty member.

UTMB DIG Announces 2016 Dermatology Resident and Faculty Teaching Awards

Congratulations to Drs. Helen Malone (PGY4 dermatology resident) and Brent Kelly (dermatology faculty) for receiving the annual teaching award from the UTMB Dermatology Interest Group (DIG). Each year the current MS4 members of the DIG vote to recognize their best dermatology teachers at the resident and the faculty level. Thanks to all of UTMB’s dermatology residents and faculty for their excellent teaching throughout the academic year!
 
left to right: Dung Mac (UTMB DIG President 2015-2016), Dr. Brent Kelly (UTMB Faculty Award recipient), Dr. Helen Malone (UTMB Resident Award recipient) and Kristyna Gleghorn (UTMB DIG President 2016-2017)

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Dermatology Alumnae Returns to Galveston for a Brief Visit

Dr. Mika Yamazaki (photo), a UTMB Department of Dermatology Resident graduate in 2011, returned to Galveston recently to visit with Dr. Erica Kelly, one of our UTMB dermatology faculty. She is currently in dermatology private practice at Straub Clinic & Hospital in Aiea, Hawaii.

Monday, April 18, 2016

UTMB Dermatology Residents and Faculty Teach Medical Students Procedural Skills

The annual dermatologic procedures workshop sponsored by the UTMB DIG was a huge success again this year. 6 UTMB medical students (MS2s and MS3s) learned injection techniques, superficial biopsy techniques, punch biopsies and suturing on a tomato and pig’s foot. Thank you Dr. Janice Wilson (PGY-4 Dermatology resident), Dr. Adrian Subrt (PGY-2 Dermatology resident), and Dr. Richard Wagner (our DIG faculty advisor) for volunteering to teach dermatology procedure skills, and thank you Kristyna Gleghorn (MS3) for organizing this educational event! 

Image 1: Left- Janice Wilson (PGY-4 Dermatology Resident), Middle- Drew Decrescenzo (MSIII), Right- Lauren Williams (MSIII)
Image 2: Left- Tara Akunna (MSII), Right- Adrian Subrt (PGY-2 Dermatology resident)
Image 3: Left- Dr. Richard Wagner (UTMB DIG Advisor and Dermatology Director), Middle- Paige Hoyer (MSII), Right- Kristyna Gleghorn (MSIII)

UTMB Dermatology Poster Presentations at 2016 Spring Texas Dermatological Society Meeting

UTMB was once again well-represented by its medical students, residents, and faculty at the fall TDS meeting in Houston, Texas last weekend. 12 out of the 34 posters at the meeting were from UTMB. Congratulations to Dr. Janice Wilson (UTMB PGY4 dermatology resident), Kristyna Gleghorn (UTMB MSIII), and faculty supervisor Dr. Brent Kelly for winning 2nd place in the poster competition at this meeting! 

Authors of the 12 UTMB poster presentstions were: 

Janice M Wilson MD, Kristyna L Gleghorn BS, Brent C Kelly MD
Title: Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis: A Retrospective Study

Dung Mac BS, Paige Hoyer BS, Karl E Anderson MD
Title: Erytheropoietin Therapy for Porphyria Cutanea Tarda in Renal Disease

Andrew DeCrescenzo BS, Elizabeth Schepp MD, Michael Wilkerson MS MD
Title: Atypical mycobacterial infection arising after sclerotherapy

Seena Monjazeb BBA (UTMB MSIII), Rebecca Philips MD, Michael Wilkerson MD
Title: Leukocytoclastic Vasculitis Following Influenza Vaccination. 

William Tausend MD, Kristyna Gleghorn MD, Richard Wagner MD
Title: ... And the Award Goes to: A Review of Academy Award Winning Best Pictures Featuring Skin Conditions

Kevin G Sharghi MD, Rebecca C Philips MD, Ashley R Group MD
Title: Adult-Onset Parry-Romberg Syndrome 

Emily Grimshaw MD, Michael Wilkerson MS,MD 
Title: Hailey-Hailey complicated by secondary herpes simplex viral infection 

Skyler White BS, Rebecca Philips MD, Erica Kelly MD
Title: Pityriasis Rubra Pilaris-Like Eruption During Ponatinib Treatment 

Lindy Ross MD, Richard Wagner MD, K Alexandra Acosta MD
Title: Perception and Influence of Jersey Shore Tanning Behaviors: A model for media influence on tanning behavior

Lauren William s BA BS, Chinelo Ikpeama MD MBA, Meredith Revell, MPAS PA-C, Bernard Gibson MD
Title: A 5-month-old female with hypoplastic nails

Ashley Davis, Chinelo Ikpeama MD MDA, Michael G Wilkerson MD
Title: EGFR-Induced Trichomegaly and Xeroxis 

Alison Lowe MD, Barrett Riddle MS, Helen Malone MD
Title: Painful Purple Palmar Plaques: A Unique Presentation of Kaposi Sarcoma


Image 1: Left: Kristyna Gleghorn (UTMB MSIII), Right: William Tausend (UTMB PGY2 Dermatology Resident)


Image 2: Kristyna Gleghorn (UTMB MSIII)
Image 3: Left: Paige Hoyer (UTMB MSII), Right: Dung Mac (UTMB MSIV)

Image 4: Seena Monjanezeb (UTMB MSIII)

Sunday, April 17, 2016

Utility and Cost of Dermatology Certification Examination Questioned

A resident podium presentation by Texas A&M Scott &White at the Texas Dermatological Society 2016 spring meeting in Houston explored the costs and value of the annual certification examination given by the American Board of Dermatology (Mansouri B, Walker GD, Fiala K. The estimated cost and overall value of the American Board of Dermatology Certification Exam, April 15, 2016). In recent years, the failure rate for first time test takers has been low (below 2%).  The authors reported that that cost of failing the exam ranged from $204,000 to $1.6 million. Cost cutting measures were suggested, including use of the ITE examination offered by the American Board of Dermatology throughout all three years of residency training instead of the certification examination that is given each summer following completion of residency. Perhaps certification could be more efficiently achieved by receiving a certain “cutoff” score (20th percentile?) on each of three ITE tests during the three years of residency. That strategy would limit expensive testing with a low failure rate to “at risk” candidates who have not consistently performed well on the ITE examination throughout dermatology residency.  

Saturday, April 16, 2016

University of New Mexico Dermatology Residency Program News

The UTMB DIG was sad to learn that the University of New Mexico Dermatology Residency Program is closing soon. We hope that their current dermatology residents there are able to transfer to other programs so that their dermatology training can be completed. UTMB has a strong historic connection to the New Mexico program because our former chairman, the late Dr. Edgar B. Smith was the Chairman of the Dermatology Department in New Mexico prior to his Chair appointment at UTMB. Following retirement from UTMB, he returned to New Mexico to be their dermatology program director.

UTMB ITE Scores Back

The American Board of Dermatology administers an annual voluntary ITE exam (“mock boards”) annually to give individual dermatology residents and dermatology residency programs information about their educational progress. Areas tested are general dermatology, pediatric dermatology, dermatopathology, basic science, surgery, visual recognition and applied knowledge. This year the highest individual scores were achieved in surgery  and pediatric dermatology.

New GME Policies for UTMB House Staff on Drug Screening and Rehabilitation

As of April 8, 2016 UTMB has new institutional policies for house staff regarding institutional drug screening procedures for probable cause and post rehabilitation. Details may be found in UTMB's GME Institutional Handbook.

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Sharp Injuries to Dermatology Residents

Dermatology residents continue to suffer sharp injuries during training. A survey on this topic was recently published by Nambudiri VE, et al (Sharp injuries among US dermatology trainees: A cross-sectional study, J Am Acad Dermatol 74:756-758, 2016). 76% of surveyed dermatology residents reported a sharps injury. Injury during suturing was most common. Recapping needles and “cleaning up” accounted for 12% of reported injuries. The authors advised more safety training for dermatology residents as well as reducing “rushing” during procedures.

Costs of Dermatology Residency Application

According to a recently published analysis by Mansouri B et al (The cost of applying to dermatology residency: 2014 data estimates, J Am Acad Dermatol 74:754-758, 2016), the average matched dermatology applicant spent $11,324 and unmatched applicants spent $9058. Suggestions to decrease application costs were to limit the number of programs where applicants could apply, regional interviews by multiple residency programs within a close geographic region within a narrow timeframe, video-conference interviews, capping the number of interviewees at programs based on the number of available residency positions, and increasing program transparency about selection criteria for applicant selection. Interviews were estimated to cost $500 each, and away rotations for one month were estimated to cost $2142.

Sunday, April 10, 2016

Annual Dermatological Procedure Workshop

DIG will be hosting its annual dermatological procedure workshop on April 18th at 5:30 pm in the Dermatology Conference Room (4.130 McCullough). Dr. Wagner and UTMB Dermatology Residents will be teaching injection techniques, superficial and punch biopsies, and suturing. Please email Kristyna Gleghorn (klglegho@utmb.edu) if interested in participating in this educational workshop. 

Mui Awarded 2016 UTMB Dermatology Research Graduation Honors

The UTMB DIG congratulates UTMB MS4 Uyen Ngoc Mui on the presentation of her thesis, “An evaluation of patients’ habits and knowledge regarding sunscreen and factors that influence their choice,” on April 1, 2016. She was awarded Magna Cum Laude research honors for her original work. Her ad hoc committee members were Drs. A. Group (faculty advisor), B. Kelly, and M.K. Peek (Chair of UTMB Honors Committee). This year marks 15 years of UTMB medical students participating in the UTMB Dermatology Honors Research Program.

Wednesday, April 06, 2016

DIG Presents Stay Shady at Satori Elementary and Crenshaw Elementary School

On Tuesday, March 8th, and Friday, March 11th, UTMB DIG members Paige Hoyer (MSII), Tara Akuna (MSII), and Tim Allen (MSII) presented "Stay Shady!" to the students at Satori and Crenshaw Elementary School. This fun, interactive presentation is aimed at making kids aware that the sun can damage their skin and inform them how to protect themselves. The students gave the presentation and answered questions for 100 kids in total as well as a couple teaachers! They also helped them make UV bracelets out of beads that change color in the sun to raise awareness of sun damage and remind the kids to wear sunscreen. A special appreciation goes out to the students of both Satori and Crenshaw Elementary School for being such a great audience and to our DIG volunteers!

Monday, April 04, 2016

DIG Meeting Summary April 4, 2016 (Featuring Advice for applications and interviews from MS4s preparing for Dermatology Residency)

1. Advice from MS4s preparing for Dermatology Residency
a.     It is important to set yourself up for success during your rotations at home and during aways. Do as many away rotations as will fit in your schedule, even if they are later in the year. Consider doing away rotations at a variety of programs. Ideas to consider include location variety and programs that have previously accepted UTMB or Texas students.
b.     Research is an important part of your application. Dermatology looks highly at research projects specifically focused in dermatology. Make sure to keep your CV updated with all posters, oral presentations, case reports, abstracts, and pending manuscripts. Each poster presentation, even if it is the same poster at a different conference, should be included. All awards from conferences should be noted in your application as well.
c.     Apply to as many dermatology programs as possible.
d.     Interview questions:
                                              i.     Standard interview questions/mainly want to get to know you
                                            ii.     Strengths & Weaknesses
                                          iii.     Why do you want to be a dermatologist
                                            iv.     Favorite movie/book
                                              v.     Know your application well and be able to talk about each event/experience on it
                                            vi.     Situational questions
e.     A unique personal statement can help you stand out.
f.      With dermatology becoming increasingly competitive, it is important to consider a back up plan.  For someone who doesn’t match major decisions will be made in a very short amount of time so some forethought on what you would do in this situation could be beneficial. Options for someone who does not match into dermatology include completing an internal medicine or surgery prelim year and reapplying, taking a year for research, or dual applying initially.
2AAD Summary from Kristyna Gleghorn and Julie Croley
AAD is a great way for medical students interested in dermatology to learn about new innovations in dermatology, explore specific dermatology interests, and to get a better idea of what life as a dermatologist is like. One of the sessions they highly recommended is the Hot Topics Sessions where the forefront of dermatology research and pharmaceutical developments were discussed. An abundance of other informative topic specific presentations were held. Another benefit of attending AAD is presenting research in a poster format or oral presentation in the Gross and Microscopic Symposium. 
 TDS Spring Meeting 2016
a.     April 15-16 at The Omni Hotel in Houston, Texas
b.     To register as a student email Sylvia Hall (Sylvia.hall@texmed.org)
Dermatology Night at St. Vincent’s 4/7/16
a             Sign up at http://www.stvsc.org/index.php/students/
5Stay Shady presentation at Holy Family Catholic School coming up in April- details TBA


Congratulations to the 2016-2017 DIG Officers

DIG recently had an officer election for the 2016-2017 school year. Congratulations to the following officers:

President: Kristyna Gleghorn
Vice President: Tim Allen
Fundraising/AIM Melanoma Walk Chairs: Dung Mac, Paige Hoyer
Sun Protection Chairs: Tara Akunna, Barrett Riddle
Psoriasis Awareness Chairs: Seena Monjazeb

Dermatology Night at St. Vincent’s Clinic on April 7th, 2016

Join UTMB Dermatology residents and faculty for the upcoming dermatology night at St. Vincent’s Clinic. Please see the calendar link below to reserve your volunteering spot:

When: Thursday, Apr 7th, 5:30-9PM (volunteers should arrive at 5:15)
Where: St. Vincent's House, 2817 Post Office Street, Galveston, Texas 77550
Volunteer link: http://www.stvsc.org/index.php/students/

Sunday, April 03, 2016

Sun Safety at the Senior Care Health Fair

DIG members volunteered at the Senior Care Health Fair in Galveston, TX on April 2, 2016 as part of UTMB’s United to Serve initiative. We provided education on sun safety, answered numerous questions regarding sunscreen use, and handed out sunscreen samples to senior participants at the fair. Thanks to our volunteers for a job well done! 


Photo: DIG members, Seena Monjazeb (Left, MS3) and Dung Mac (Right, MS3) at the Sun Safety table.