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Page 1: Curriculum Vitae - medschool.umaryland.edu€¦  · Web viewAdvisor: Peter J. Pronovost, MD, PhD. Thesis: Optimizing Clinician Practices to Prevent Central . ... World Health Organization,

Curriculum Vitae

Lewis Rubinson, M.D., Ph.D., FCCPProfessor of Medicine

University of Maryland School of Medicine

Date: October 26, 2017

Contact Information:Business Address: 22 South Greene Street, Baltimore, MD 21201Business Phone Number: 410-328-1201E-mail Address: [email protected] Language: Spanish (working knowledge)

Education1987-1991 Bachelor of Science in Chemistry

University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI1993-1997 Doctor of Medicine

Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, IL2000-2004 Doctor of Philosophy in Clinical Investigation

Advisor: Peter J. Pronovost, MD, PhDThesis: Optimizing Clinician Practices to Prevent Central

Venous Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infectionsin Intensive Care Units

Graduate Training Program in Clinical InvestigationJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD

Post-Graduate Education and Training1997-2000 Residency, Internal Medicine

University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA2000-2005 Fellowship, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine

Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD2003 Fellowship, Center for Civilian Biodefense Strategies

Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD(the Center transitioned from Johns Hopkins to UPMC in 2003)

2003-2005 Fellowship, Center for Biosecurity of UPMCUniversity of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA

Certifications2000 Internal Medicine Certification Amer Board of Int Medicine (did not recertify 2010)2005 Pulmonary Certification Amer Board of Int Med (recertified 2015)2006 Critical Care Certification Amer Board of Int Med (recertified 2016)

Medical Licensures1997 Inactive California2000 Active Maryland2005 Inactive Oregon2006 Inactive Washington

Uniformed Service2009-July 2013 Commander (O-5), Active Duty Commissioned Corps Officer

United States Public Health ServiceSecurity Clearance: Top Secret/SCIBillets: Seattle, WA (2009-2010) and Washington, DC (2010-2013)

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Curriculum Vitae Page # Rubinson, Lewis

EMPLOYMENT HISTORYAcademic Appointments2007, Clinical Assistant Professor, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine2009-2010 Department of Medicine, University of Washington2007-2009 Assistant Professor, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department

of Medicine, University of Washington2011-2013 Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Medicine, University of Maryland School of

Medicine2011-Present Member, Program in Trauma, University of Maryland School of Medicine2013-2017 Associate Professor, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of

Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine2015-Present Center Associate, Center for Refugee and Disaster Response, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health2017-Present Affiliate Member, Institute for Global Health, University of Maryland School of Medicine2017-Present Professor, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine

Professional Society Memberships1999-Present Active Member, American Thoracic Society 2001-Present Active Member, Society of Critical Care Medicine2008-Present Fellow, American College of Chest Physicians2010-2012 Commissioned Officers of America2010-2013 Association of Military Surgeons of the United States

HONORS AND AWARDSUndergraduate1991 Summa Cum Laude, B.S. in Chemistry1991 Phi Beta Kappa Induction

Medical School1997 Alpha Omega Alpha Induction

Fellowship2004, 2005 Society of Critical Care Medicine Presidential Citation2004 Delta Omega Induction2002 Washington Area Critical Care Society Clinical Research Award2002 Henry Christian Award, Most outstanding abstract in category for 2002 AFMR Clinical

Research Meeting

United States Public Health Service2010 Commissioned Corps Training Ribbon2010 Office of the Secretary of Health and Human Services Badge2011 Commendation Medal2012 Unit Commendation X 22012 Regular Corps Ribbon2013 Outstanding Service Medal

Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response2011 ASPR Spotlight Award (May 2011 Employee of the month)

CLINICAL ACTIVITIESAcademic or Federal

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Curriculum Vitae Page # Rubinson, Lewis

2003-2009 Senior Medical Officer, National Disaster Medical System, Disaster Medical Assistance2013-Present Teams PHS-1 (2003-2005), OR-2 (2005-2009), NDMS 1 (2013-2016), IMSuRT South (2016-

Present)2007-2010 Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Attending, Harborview Medical Center, Seattle, WA

(inpatient Pulmonary consult service, Medical, Neurosurgical and Trauma ICUs)2011-2013 Volunteer Critical Care Attending, R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center, Multi-trauma ICU2010-2012 Deputy Chief Medical Officer, National Disaster Medical System, Office of Preparedness

and Emergency Operations, Office of Assistant Secretary for Preparedness & Response,Washington, DC

2012-2013 Chief Medical Officer (Acting), National Disaster Medical System, Office of Preparedness and Emergency Operations, Office of Assistant Secretary for Preparedness & Response,Washington, DC

2013-Present Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Attending, R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center and University of Maryland Medical Center. Directed Critical Care Resuscitation Unit (CCRU) until July 2016. Currently CCRU attending.

2014 Consultant Clinician, World Health Organization, Clinical Lead (September 2014) at KenemaGovernment Hospital Ebola Treatment Unit, Kenema, Sierra Leone

Non- Academic Clinical Activities1999-2000 Moonlighting Intensivist (full-service community ICU), St. Luke’s Medical Center, San

Francisco, CA2000-2002 Moonlighting Intensivist (full-service community ICU), Franklin Square Medical Center2002-2005 Moonlighting Intensivist (full-service community ICU), Upper Chesapeake Medical Center2005-2006 Pulmonary and Critical Care Attending (full-service inpatient Pulmonary inpatient consultation

and critical care, regional referral center), Bend Memorial Clinic and St. Charles Medical Center, Bend, OR

2005-2008 Assistant Medical Director (regional rotor and fixed wing aero-medical service provider),Air Life of Oregon, Bend, OR

2010-2011 Moonlighting Attending Intensivist, Electronic Intensive Care Unit (EICU), Swedish Medical Center Physician Division, Seattle, WA

2011-2013 Moonlighting Attending Intensivist, Adult Intensive Care Unit, St. Agnes Hospital

ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICEInstitutional Service2002-2003 Leadership Group Member, Operations Group Member, Johns Hopkins University

Office of Critical Event Preparedness and Response 2005-2006 Core Member, Critical Care Committee, St. Charles Medical Center, Bend, OR2008-2009 Co-chairperson, Code Committee, Harborview Medical Center, Seattle, WA2008-2010 Associate Medical Director, Respiratory Care Department, Harborview Medical Center,2013-2016 Director, Critical Care Resuscitation Unit, R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center and

University of Maryland Medical Center2013-Present Member, Critical Care Operations Committee, University of Maryland Medical Center2013-Present Member, Emergency Management Committee, University of Maryland Medical Center 2013-Present Member, Critical Care Committee, R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center2013-Present Member, Helipad Safety Committee, R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center2013-Present Director of Clinical Investigation, CCRU, R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center and

University of Maryland Medical Center2014-Present Executive Steering Committee Member and Medical Director, Biocontainment Unit and

Ebola Preparedness activities, University of Maryland Medical Center2014-Present Member, Resuscitation Committee, University of Maryland Medical Center2016-Present Steering Committee Member, Patient Throughput Steering Committee, University of Maryland

Medical Center2016-Present Member, Perioperative Efficiency Working Group, University of Maryland Medical Center2016-Present Member, Patient Throughput Working Group, University of Maryland Medical Center2016-Present Assistant Chief Medical Officer for Critical Care, University of Maryland Medical Center

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Curriculum Vitae Page # Rubinson, Lewis

2016-Present Co-Director, Critical Care Patient Access and Flow, University of Maryland Medical Center 2017-Present Chairperson, Resuscitation Committee, University of Maryland Medical Center 2017-Present Co-chairperson, Infusion Therapeutics Subcommittee

Local (City, County or State) Service2005-2006 County Health Officer, Deschutes County Health Department, Bend, OR2006 Committee Member, Integrated HRSA (Hospital Preparedness) Oversight Committee, State of

Oregon Department of Human Services2006 Consultant, Mass casualty mechanical ventilation, New York City Department of Mental Health

& Hygiene, Communicable Diseases Division 2006-2007 Workgroup Member, Allocating Ventilators in an Influenza Pandemic, New York State

Department of Health. Participated as outside subject matter expert

2006-2007 Disaster Medicine Director, Public Health- Seattle and King County, Seattle, WA2007-2008 Working Group Member, Altered Standards of Care Working Group State of Washington,

Department of Health2007-2010 Chairperson, Alternate Care Facilities Clinical Committee, Seattle-King County2008-2009 Steering Committee Member, Public Health Seattle-King County, Public Engagement

Project on Altered Standards of Care

National (including federal) and International Service2003-2004 Participant, Expert Meeting on Mass Casualty Medical Care Standards, United States

Department of Health and Human Services2003-2005 Associate Editor, Biosecurity and Bioterrorism: Biodefense Strategy, Practice and Science2003-2008 Member, Subcommittee on Fundamentals of Disaster Management(FDM), Society of Critical

Care MedicineFDM was the first disaster course developed for the critical care community.

2004 Chairperson, Working Group on Emergency Mass Critical CareCollaboration between the Center for Biosecurity of UPMC and the Society of Critical Care Medicine.

2004 Co-Chairperson, Study Group on Mass Casualty Mechanical VentilationCollaboration between the US CDC’s Strategic National Stockpile Program, the Center for Biosecurity of UPMC and the Society of Critical Care Medicine

2004-2007 Member, Subcommittee on Hospital Mass Casualty Disaster Management, Society of Critical Care Medicine

2005-2006 Co-Chair Elect, Section on Terrorism and Inhalation Disasters, American Thoracic Society2005-2006 Vice-Chairperson, Subcommittee on Fundamentals of Disaster Management, Society of Critical

Care Medicine2005-2006 Society of Critical Care Medicine Representative, External Advisory Committee – Project

Xtreme, Agency for Healthcare Research and QualityHHS government led novel construct for increasing respiratory therapy capability during a disaster.

2006 Principal Consultant, sub-contractor to Lockheed Martin, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Contracted to prepare : “Operational Recommendations for Definitive and Safe Mass Casualty Mechanical Ventilation Outside of Intensive Care Units”. This background work set the foundation for the ACCP consensus Task Force for Mass Critical Care effort.

2006 Member, Hospital/ Acute Care Writing Group, Providing Mass Medical Care with Scarce Resources: A Planning Guide, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

2006 Co-Chairperson, Mass Casualty Respiratory Failure Panel, Department of Health and Human Services, Homeland Security Council Action ID 6.1.6.2. Provided recommendations for federal, state, local and tribal mechanical ventilator stockpiles for disasters including the CDC’s Strategic National Stockpile

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Curriculum Vitae Page # Rubinson, Lewis

2006-2008 Society of Critical Care Medicine Representative, National Disaster Life Support Educational Consortium

2006-2008 Member, Disaster Task Force, Society of Critical Care Medicine2006-2008 Chairperson, Subcommittee on Fundamentals of Disaster Management, Society of Critical Care

Medicine2006-2009 Project Lead and Steering Committee Member, Task Force for Mass Critical Care,

Representative for Society of Critical Care Medicine, American College of Chest Physicians Critical Care, Collaborative InitiativeCulminated in a consensus conference in 2007 with 5 manuscripts published in Chest

2006-2010 Co-Chairperson, Section on Terrorism and Inhalation Disasters, American Thoracic Society2006-2010 Council member and Preparedness Sub-council member, Advisory Council on First

Aid, Safety and Preparedness, American Red Cross2006-2012 Associate Editor, Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness: A journal of the

American Medical Association2007 Panel Member, Next Generation Mass Casualty Mechanical Ventilator Blue Ribbon Panel

DHHS Office of Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response 2007 Respiratory and Critical Care Lead, Gap Analyses for Mechanical Ventilators and

Additional Essential Materiel For a Spectrum of Influenza Pandemic Scenarios, DHHS Office of Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response. Preparation of department briefing by Secretary of Health to the President of the United States.

2007 Conference Co-Chair, Respiratory Care journal conference “Mechanical Ventilation in Mass Casualty Scenarios”, American Association for Respiratory Care

2007-2009 Senior Medical Consultant for Healthcare Preparedness and Response, Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, NCPDCID, CCID, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention. 1.0 FTE Interagency Position Agreement with University of Washington

2007-2009 Representative for CDC on Interagency Panel Team and Technical Evaluation PanelNext Generation Mass Casualty Mechanical Ventilator Integrated Program TeamOffice of Assistant Secretary for Preparedness & Response

2007-2009 Society Representative, American Thoracic SocietyMulti-society collaboration on ethical guidance for an Influenza pandemic.

2007-2009 Co-Chairperson, Evaluation Committee for Procurement of Additional Mechanical Ventilators in the CDC’s Strategic National Stockpile, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention

2008 Study Section Member, Scientific Review Group, FOA RFA TP08-001 P01: “Preparedness and Emergency Response Research Centers: A Public Health Systems Approach”, Coordinating Office for Terrorism Preparedness & Emergency Response, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention

2008 Panel Member, Hospital Readiness Expert Panel, Johns Hopkins University2008-2009 Filoviruses Team Member, NIH/ NIAID Integrated Research Facility at Fort Detrick Sponsored

Activity2008-2010 Committee Member, Environmental and Occupational Health Assembly, Conference Planning

Committee, American Thoracic Society2009 Expert Reviewer Panel Member, National Center for the Study of Preparedness and

Catastrophic Event Response2009 Scientific Expert Review Panel Member, Rapid Altitude and Hypoxia Acclimatization

Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, Defense Sciences Office 2009 Technical Evaluation Panel Member, Next Generation Mass Casualty Mechanical Ventilator

Request for Proposals, DHHS Office of Assistant Secretary for Preparedness & Response 2009 Guest Co-Editor, 2009 H1N1 Supplement, Disaster Medicine and Public Health

Preparedness2009 Activity Co-Lead, Clinician Outreach and Communication Activity: 2009 H1N1 Critical Care

Guidance National Calls, DHHS Office of Assistant Secretary for Preparedness & Response2009-2010 Senior Medical Advisor, Emergency Care Coordinating Center, Office of Preparedness

and Emergency Operations, Office of Assistant Secretary for Preparedness & ResponseSeattle, WA and US Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, DC

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Curriculum Vitae Page # Rubinson, Lewis

1.0 FTE USPHS billet2009-2010 Executive Steering Committee Member, Allocation of Scarce Resources Following and Attack

Using an Improvised Nuclear Device, Office of Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR), DHHS/ASPR/Office of Preparedness and Emergency Operations (OPEO)

2009-2010 Project Lead, Critical Care Cross-Training Course for 2009 H1N1, DHHS Office of Assistant Secretary for Preparedness & Response

2009-2010 Working Group Member, Interagency 2009 H1N1 Antiviral Clinical Working Group,Department of Health and Human Services

2009-2010 HHS Steering Committee Co-Lead, HHS 2009 H1N1 Critical Care Registry, US Department of Health and Human Services. Working with NHLBI’s ARDSnet and PALISI, collected, analyzed and reported comprehensive ICU data on ~1900 adult and pediatric patients with 2009 H1N1 associated critical illness.

2009-2012 Guidelines Committee Member, Critical Care Delivery in the Intensive Care Unit DefiningClinical Roles and the Best Practice Model, Society of Critical Care Medicine

2010-2013 HHS Agency Representative, United State Critical Illness and Injury Trials Group2012-2013 Chairperson, Cache Management Working Group HHS/OS/ASPR/ Office of Preparedness and

Emergency Operations. Oversaw development and review of clinical requirements to inform federal response team medical caches. Also, led evaluation of all medical equipment.

2013 European Commission Study Section Expert Review Panel MemberDirectorate for General Research and Innovation, FP7-Health Innovation

2013-2015 Working Group Member, Public Health Emergency Medical Countermeasures Working Group on Mechanical Ventilation, Department of Health and Human Services

2013-2015 Core Member, Medical Countermeasures and Triage Working Groups Clinical Utilization Plan for Anthrax Medical Countermeasure Use in a Mass Casualty Event (CUPAC), US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

2014 Healthcare Task Force Member, National Health Security Preparedness Index (NHSPI), Association of State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO)

2014-2015 Co-Chairperson, Sub-Working Group on Ventilator Procurement CharacteristicsStrategic National Stockpile, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

2015-2016 Working Group Member, Botulism Clinical Guidelines Treatment Work Group, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2016-2017 Standing Committee Member, Standing Committee for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Division of the Strategic National Stockpile, National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine (Health and Medicine Division)

2016-2017 Subject Matter Expert and Consultant, Ebola Treatment and Resource Requirements Pyramid Project, US HHS Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response, Technical Resources Assistance Center and Information Exchange

2017 Meeting Participant, Consideration of the National Biodefense Strategy, Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, Washington, DC

Leadership Roles During Significant Emergency Responses2005-2006 County Health Officer, Deschutes County, Oregon

Outbreak of Staphylococcus aureus in high school sports teamHantavirus fatality in young constituent

2006 Seattle-King County Disaster Medicine DirectorResponse to prolonged power outage from a severe windstorm. Hundreds of cases of carbon monoxide poisoning and need to provide significant support for acute and chronic healthcare facilities.

2011-2012 Health and Human Services Incident Response Coordination Team Chief Medical Officer (IRCT CMO)Tsunami anticipation on US Pacific coast 2011Hurricane Irene (IRCT CMO for New England response)Period of Heightened Domestic Vigilance (10th anniversary of September 11, 2001 events;

IRCT CMO at undisclosed site)

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Curriculum Vitae Page # Rubinson, Lewis

Peace Officers’ Memorial 2012IRCT is HHS’s deployable field leadership team to support HHS field elements (e.g. DMAT)

2012-2013 Health and Human Services Secretary’s Emergency Operations Center Chief Medical Officer (CMO)July 4, 2012 medical coverage of National Mall in Washington, DCRepublican National ConventionHurricane IsaacDemocratic National ConventionUnited Nations General Assembly contingency medical supportSuperstorm Sandy

(CMO for several thousand federal medical responders for large-scale response)Inauguration 2013State of the Union 2013Peace Officers’ Memorial 2013I served as the CMO for all activities coordinated by the Emergency Management Group (senior leadership for HHS operations) in the Secretary’s Operation Center

2014 World Health Organization Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network Consultant ClinicianAs the clinical leader in Sept 2014 at Kenema Government Hospital in Sierra Leone I oversaw and provided direct clinical care to several hundred persons with Ebola Virus Disease.

Teaching ServiceSociety of Critical Care Medicine2004-2014 Fundamentals of Disaster Medicine (FDM)

I have taught numerous FDM courses annually across the world. I was one of the developers of FDM.

Air Life of Oregon2005-2008 Associate Medical Director

Monthly 4 hour clinical review of important cases, procedural skills instruction every 6 months, and lectures of key aero-medical topics

Harborview Medical Center2007-2010 Attending Physician, Medical, Trauma and Neuro-Critical Care Services and

Pulmonary Medicine Consult Service Typically 1 fFellow, 8 Residents, 1 Student for ICU service1 Fellow, 1-2 Residents, 1 Student for Pulmonary inpatient consult service

R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center/ University of Maryland Medical Center2011-2013 Voluntary Attending Physician, Multi-Trauma Intensive Care Unit

Typically 3 fellows and 1-2 4th year medical students2013-Present Director, Critical Care Resuscitation Unit

Oversaw development of the CCRU critical care Fellow’s elective and mandatory rotations, facilitated the CCRU case conference and provided strategic guidance and lectures for CCRU nurse education events.

2017-Present Medical Director, Rapid Response TeamFacilitate monthly case conference didactics.

University of Maryland School of Medicine2013-2014 Instructor, Introduction to Clinical Medicine II

Together with a faculty member from the Division of Infectious Diseases, I was an instructor to 4 MSIIs.

Mentorship2005-2010 Advisor, Elizabeth Daugherty, MD, MPH (Pulmonary and Critical Care

junior faculty member at Johns Hopkins University)2007-2009 Principal Mentor, David Hotchkin, MD (Pulmonary and Critical Care fellow, University of

Washington Affiliated Hospitals)

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Curriculum Vitae Page # Rubinson, Lewis

2007-2010 Mentor, Mary King, MD, MPH (Pediatric critical care physician at Seattle Children’s Hospital, University of Washington School of Medicine)

2013-2016 Advisor, Liat Gutin (University of Maryland School of Medical medical student). After teaching Ms. Gutin in Introduction to Clinical Medicine II in 2013-2014, I provided ongoing career guidance. Ms. Gutin graduated as the top student at University of Maryland School of Medicine and is now an internal medicine Resident at the University of California, San Francisco.

2015-Present Advisor, Carl Erikkson, MD, MPH (Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Oregon Health Sciences University)

2016-Present Mentor, Jack Mather MD,MPH (Clinical Instructor, Program in Trauma, University of Maryland School of Medicine, R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center)

Grant SupportActive Research Support10/6/15-09/30/18Rubinson (PI) 4%(Influenza Study) IRC005, A Randomized Double-Blind, Phase 3 Study Comparing the Efficacy of high-titer Anti-Influenza Immune Plasma vs Low titer Plasma for the treatment of Severe InfluenzaCRB-SSS-S-15-004656 NIAID’s Division of Clinical Research initiated study with use of a CRO (SSS) that contracts with enrolling academic sitesDirect cost $148,600I

10/01/2015-09/30/2019Rubinson (PI) 10%Advancing Regulatory Science and Innovation: Facilitating Development of Medical Counter Measures to Protect Against Threats BAA-12-00118Subcontract to University of Southern California (Contract funded through US FDA and BARDA) Direct cost $30,164.93

Pending10/01/2016-03/31/2018Rubinson (PI) 15%Distributed Genomic Surveillance for Low Resource Environment in Combating Zika and Future Threats Subcontract to Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics LaboratoryUSAIDDirect cost $46,793.28

Previous Support09/30/2013-06/30/2015Iwashyna/ Rubinson (PD/PI) 5%Long-term Impact of Natural Disasters on Disability and Health in Older Americans IR21AG044752-01A1 University of Michigan-ANN ARBOR/NIHDirect cost $20,249

09/15/2014-07/31/2015BAA-12-00118 Cobb/Rubinson (PD/PI) 10%Advancing Regulatory Science and Innovation: Facilitating Development of Medical Counter Measures to Protect Against Threats Subcontract to Harvard University (Contract funded through US FDA and BARDA) Direct cost $38,961

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07/01/14-06/30/2016Rubinson (PI) 1%EPVent 2- A Phase II study of Mechanical Ventilation Directed by Transpulmonary PressuresNIHBeth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (coordinating center(Direct cost $51,099.20

PublicationsPeer-Reviewed Journal Articles1. Prochaska HJ, Rubinson L, Yeh Y, Baron P, Polsky B. Elevation of glutathione levels by phase II

enzyme inducers: lack of inhibition of human immunodeficiency virus type I replication in chronically infected monocytoid cells. Molecular Pharmacology 1994; 45: 91621.

2. Brock MV, Gou M, Akiyama Y, Muller A, Wu TT, Montgomery E, Deasel M, Germonpre P, Rubinson L, Heitmiller RF, Yang SC, Forastiere AA, Baylin SB, Herman JG. Prognostic importance of promoter hypermethylation of multiple genes in esophageal adenocarcinoma. Clinical Cancer Research 2003; 9: 2912-9.

3. Grow R, Rubinson L. The challenges of hospital infection control in response to bioterrorist attacks. Biosecurity and Bioterrorism 2003; 1: 215-220.

4. Rubinson L, Wu AW, Haponik EF Diette GB. Internists’ adherence to guidelines for prevention of intravascular catheter infections. JAMA 2003; 290: 2802.

5. Rubinson L, Diette GB. Clinician best practices to prevent central venous catheter-related bloodstream infections. Journal of Laboratory and Clinical Medicine 2004; 143: 5-13.

6. Rubinson L, Diette GB, Song X, Brower RG, Krishnan JA. Low caloric intake is associated with nosocomial bloodstream infections in patients in the medical intensive care unit. Critical Care Medicine 2004; 32: 350-357.

7. Rubinson L, Wu AW, Haponik EF Diette GB. Why don’t internists follow guidelines for preventing intravascular catheter infections? Infection Control Hospital Epidemiology 2005; 26: 525-533.

8. Rubinson L, O’Toole T. Critical care during outbreaks. Critical Care 2005; 9: 311-313.9. Rubinson L, Nuzzo JB, Talmor D, O’Toole T, Kramer BR, Inglesby TV. Augmentation of hospital

critical care capacity after bioterrorist attacks or epidemics: recommendations of the Working Group on Emergency Mass Critical Care. Critical Care Medicine 2005; 33: 2393-2403.

10. Rubinson L, Branson R, Pesik N, Talmor D. Positive pressure ventilation equipment for mass casualty respiratory failure. Biosecurity and Bioterrorism 2006; 4: 1-12.

11. Daugherty E, Branson R, Rubinson L. Mass Casualty Respiratory Failure. Current Opinions in Critical Care 2007; 13: 51-56.

12. Talmor D, Jones AE, Rubinson L, Howell MD, Shapiro N. A simple triage scoring system predicting death and need for critical care resources for use during epidemics. Critical Care Medicine 2007; 35: 1251-1256.

13. Hick JL, Rubinson L, O’Laughlin DT, Farmer JC. Allocating ventilators in disaster situations: Problem, Planning and Process. Critical Care 2007; 11: 217.

14. Rubenfeld G, McNamara-Asin E, Rubinson L. The pulmonary artery catheter 1967-2007. Rest in peace? JAMA 2007; 298: 458-461.

15. Burkle FM, Hsu EB, Loehr M, Christian MD, Markenson D, Rubinson L, Archer FL. Definition and functions of health unified command and emergency operations centers for large-scale bioevent disasters within the existing ICS. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness 2007; 1: 135-141.

16. Hotchkin DL, Rubinson L. Modified critical care and treatment space considerations For Mass Casualty Critical Illness and Injury. Respiratory Care 2008; 67-77.

17. Branson R, Johnannigman J, Daugherty E, Rubinson L. Surge Mechanical Ventilation. Respiratory Care 2008; 53: 78-90.

18. Subbarao I, Lyznicki J, Hsu E, Gebbie K, Markenson D, Barzansky B, Burkle F, Cassimatis M, Coule P, Dallas C, King R, Lillibridge S, Rice C, Rubinson L, Mitchell G, Armstrong J, Mitas J, Swienton R, Schwartz R, James J. A Consensus-based educational framework for disaster medicine and public health preparedness. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness 2008; 2: 57-68.

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19. Rubinson L, Christian MD. Allocating mechanical ventilators during mass respiratory failure: Kudos to New York State but more work to be done. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness 2008; 2: 7-10.

20. Devereaux A, Christian MD, Dichter JR, Geiling JA, Rubinson L. Summary of suggestions from the Task Force for Mass Critical Care Summit, January 26–27, 2007. Chest 2008; 133: 1S-7S.

21. Christian MD, Devereaux AV, Dichter JR, Geiling JA, Rubinson L. Definitive care for the critically ill during a disaster: Current capabilities and limitations : From a Task Force for Mass Critical Care Summit Meeting, January 26–27, 2007, Chicago, IL. Chest 2008; 133: 8S-17S.

22. Rubinson L, Hick J, Hanfling D, Devereaux A, Dichter J, Christian M, Talmor D, Curtis JR, Geiling J. Definitive care for the critically ill during a disaster: A framework for optimizing critical care surge capacity: From a Task Force for Mass Critical Care Summit Meeting, January 26–27, 2007, Chicago, IL. Chest 2008; 133: 18S-31S

23. Rubinson L, Hick J, Curtis JR, Branson R, Burns S, Christian M, Devereaux A, Dichter J , Talmor D, Erstad B, Medina J, Geiling J. Definitive care for the critically ill during a disaster: Medical resources for surge capacity: From a Task Force for Mass Critical Care Summit Meeting, January 26–27, 2007, Chicago, IL. Chest 2008; 133: 32S-50S.

24. Devereaux AV, Dichter JR, Christian MD, Dubler NN, Sandrock CE, Hick JL, Powell T, Geiling JA, Amundson DE, Baudendistel TE, Braner DA, Klein MA, Berkowitz KA, Curtis JR, and Rubinson L. Definitive care for the critically ill during a disaster: A framework for allocation of scarce resources in mass critical care: From a Task Force for Mass Critical Care Summit Meeting, January 26–27, 2007 Chest 2008; 133: 51S-66S.

25. Daugherty EL, Perl TM, Needham DM, Rubinson L, Bilderbock A, Rand CS. The use of personal protective equipment for control of influenza among critical care clinicians. Critical Care Medicine 2009; 37: 1210-1216.

26. Daugherty EL and Rubinson L. Infection Control in Mass Respiratory Failure. Research needs and future directions. Respiratory Care 2009; 54: 841-843.

27. Daugherty EL, Perl TM, Rubinson L, Bilderbock A, Rand CS. Survey study of the knowledge, attitudes, and expected behaviors of critical care physicians regarding an influenza pandemic. Infection Control Hospital Epidemiology 2009; 30:1143-1149.

28. Daugherty EL, Branson RD, Devereaux A, and Rubinson L. Infection control in mass respiratory failure: Preparing to respond to H1N1. Critical Care Medicine 2010; 38 (4 suppl): e1 103-109.

29. Fowler, R., S. Webb, K. Rowan, C. Sprung, B. Thompson, A. Randolph, P. Jouvet, S. Lapinsky, Rubinson L, Rello J, Cobb J, Rice T, Uyeki T, Marshall J. Early observational research and registries during the 2009 influenza A pandemic. Critical Care Medicine 2010; 38 (4 suppl): e1 20-32.

30. Cooke CR, Hotckin DL, Engelberg RA, Rubinson L, Curtis JR. Predictors of time to death after terminal withdrawal of mechanical ventilation in the ICU. Chest 2010; 138: 289-297.

31. King MA, Koelemay K, Zimmerman J, Rubinson L. Mal-distribution of pediatric medical resources in Seattle-King County: Implications for Disaster Preparedness and Response. Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 2010; 25: 326-332.

32. Rubinson L, Vaughn F, Nelson S, Giordano S, Kallstrom T, Buckley T, Burney T, Hupert N, Mutter R, Handrigan M, Yeskey K, Lurie N, Branson R. Mechanical ventilators in US acute care hospitals. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness 2010; 4: 199-206.

33. Rubinson L, Knebel A, Hick J. MSOFA- An important step forward, but are we spending too much time on the SOFA? Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness 2010; 4: 270-272.

34. Dickson RP, Hotchkin DL, Lamm WJE, Hinkson C, Pierson DJ, Glenny RW, Rubinson L. A porcine model for initial surge mechanical ventilator assessment and evaluation of two limited function ventilators. Critical Care Medicine 2010; 39: 527-532.

35. Ellington SR, Hartman LK, Acosta M, Martinez-Romo M, Rubinson L, Jamieson D, Louie J. Pandemic 2009 Influenza A (H1N1) in 71 critically ill pregnant women in California. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 2011; 204: S21-S30.

36. Daugherty E and Rubinson L. Preparing your ICU to respond in crisis. Considerations for critical care clinicians. Critical Care Medicine 2011; 39: 2534-2539.

37. Randolph AG, Vaughn F, Sullivan R, Rubinson L, Thompson BT, Yoon G, Smoot E, Rice TW, Loftis LL, Helfaer M, Doctor A, Paden M, Flori H, Babbitt C, Graciano AL, Gedeit R, Sander RC, Giuliano JS,

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Zimmerman J, Uyeki TM. Critically ill children during the 2009-2010 influenza pandemic in the United States. Pediatrics 2011; 128: e1450-1458.

38. Rice TW, Rubinson L, Uyeki TM, Vaughn FL, John BB, Miller III RR, Higgs E, Randolph AG, Smoot BE, Thompson BT for the NHLBI ARDS Network.  Critical illness from 2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1) and bacterial co-infection in the United States.  Critical Care Medicine 2012; 40: 1487-1498.

39. Rubinson L, Mutter R, Viboud C, Hupert N, Uyeki T, Creanga A, Fineli L, Iwashyna T, Carr B, Merchant R, Katikineni, Vaughn F, Clancy C, Lurie N. Impact of the Fall 2009 Influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 Pandemic on US Hospitals. Medical Care 2013; 51: 259-265.

40. Helminiak C, Lord G, Barillo D, Cairns BA, Goodwin C, Lamana J, Manning RG, Rubinson L, Soloff L, Wang SC, Yurt R, Jeng JC. Proceedings of the national burn surge strategy meeting, Atlanta, Georgia, march, 2012. Journal of Burn Care and Research 2014; 35: e54-65.

41. Christian MD, Devereaux AV, Dichter JR, Rubinson L, Kissoon N; Task Force for Mass Critical Care; Task Force for Mass Critical Care. Introduction and Executive Summary: Care of the Critically Ill and Injured During Pandemics and Disasters: CHEST Consensus Statement. Chest. 2014; 146(4 Suppl):8S-34S.

42. King MA, Niven AS, Beninati W, Fang R, Einav S, Rubinson L, Kissoon N, Devereaux AV, Christian MD, Grissom CK. Evacuation of the ICU: Care of the Critically Ill and Injured During Pandemics and Disasters: CHEST Consensus Statement. Chest. 2014; 146(4 Suppl):44S-60S.

43. Rubinson L. From Clinician to Suspect Case: My Experience After a Needle Stick in an Ebola Treatment Unit in Sierra Leone. The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 2014; 92: 225-226.

44. Epstein JM, Sauer LM, Chelen J, Hatna E, Parker J, Rothman RE, Rubinson L. Infectious disease: Mobilizing Ebola survivors to curb the epidemic. Nature. 2014; 516: 323-5.

45. Brett-Major DM, Jacob ST, Jacquerioz FA, Risi GF, Fischer WA 2nd, Kato Y, Houlihan CF, Crozier I, Bosa HK, Lawler JV, Adachi T, Hurley SK, Berry LE, Carlson JC, Button TC, McClellan SL, Shea BJ, Kuniyoshi GG, Ferri M, Murthy SG, Petrosillo N, Lamontagne F, Porembka DT, Schieffelin J, Rubinson L, O'Dempsey T, Donovan SM, Bausch DG, Fowler RA, Fletcher TE. Being Ready to Treat Ebola Virus Disease Patients. The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 2015; 92: 233-237.

46. Lai L, Davey R, Beck A, Xu Y, Suffredini AF, Palmore T, Kabbani S, Rogers S, Kobinger G, Alimonti J, Link CJ Jr, Rubinson L, Ströher U, Wolcott M, Dorman W, Uyeki TM, Feldmann H, Lane HC, Mulligan MJ. Emergency Postexposure Vaccination With Vesicular Stomatitis Virus-Vectored Ebola Vaccine After Needlestick. JAMA. 2015; 313: 1249-1255.

47. Murphy DJ, Rubinson L, Blum J, Isakov A, Bhagwanjee S, Cairns CB, Cobb JP, Sevransky J on behalf of the United States Critical Illness and Injury Trials Group – Program for Emergency Preparedness. Development of a core clinical dataset to characterize serious illness, injuries, and resource requirements for acute medical responses to public health emergencies. Critical Care Medicine. 2015; 43: 2403-2408.

48. Scalea TM, Rubinson L, Tran Q, Jones KM, Rea JH, Stein DM, Bartlett ST, O’Connor JV. Critical Care Resuscitation Unit: An innovative solution to expedite transfer of patients with time-sensitive critical illness. Journal of American College of Surgeons. 2016; 222: 614-621.

49. Epperly H, Vaughn FL, Mosholder AD, Maloney EM, Rubinson L. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, aspirin, and mortality among critically ill pandemic H1N1 influenza patients: An exploratory analysis. Japanese Journal of Infectious Diseases. 2016; 69: 248-251.

50. Leligdowicz A, Fischer WA 2nd, Uyeki TM, Fletcher TE, Adhikari NK, Portella G, Lamontagne F, Clement C, Jacob ST, Rubinson L, Vanderschuren A, Hajek J, Murthy S, Ferri M, Crozier I, Ibrahima E, Lamah MC, Schieffelin JS, Brett-Major D, Bausch DG, Shindo N, Chan AK, O'Dempsey T, Mishra S, Jacobs M, Dickson S, Lyon GM, Fowler RA. Ebola virus disease and critical illness. Critical Care. 2016; 20: 217-241.

51. Brilleman SL, Wolfe R, Moreno-Betancur M, Sales AE, Langa KM, Li Y, Daugherty Biddison EL, Rubinson L, Iwashyna TJ. Associations between community-level disaster exposure and individual-level changes in disability and risk of death for older Americans. Soc Sci Med. 2017; 173: 116-125.

52. Kearns RD, Marcozzi DE, Barry N, Rubinson L, Hultman CS, Rich PB. Disaster Preparedness and Response for the Burn Mass Casualty Incident in the Twenty-first Century. Clin Plast Surg. 2017; 44: 441-449.

53. Rubinson L, Hanfling D, Corey A. Estimation of time period for effective human inhalational anthrax treatment including antitoxin therapy. PLOS Currents Outbreaks (accepted for publication).

Submitted Peer-reviewed journal articles:

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Book Chapters1. Stephens RS, Wiener CM, Rubinson L: Bioterrorism and the intensive care unit. In: Albert RA,

Slutsky A, Ranieri VM, Takala J, Torres A, eds. Clinical Critical Care Medicine. Mosby, 2006.

Published Books1. Fundamentals of Disaster Management 2nd edition. eds. Farmer JC, Jimenez EJ, Rubinson L, Talmor

DS 2004.2. First Aid for the Boards eds. Le T, Chin-Hong P, Rubinson L, Baudendistel T. 2005. Letters to the Editor   and Forewords 1. Branson RD and Rubinson L. A single ventilator for multiple patients: Understanding the multiple

limitations. Academic Emergency Medicine 2006; 13: 1352-1353.2. Branson RD and Rubinson L. Mechanical ventilation in mass casualty scenarios. Respiratory Care

2008; 53: 38-39.3. Branson RD and Rubinson L. The author responds. Respiratory Care 2008; 53: 917-920.4. Branson RD and Rubinson L. One ventilator multiple patients - What the data really supports.

Resuscitation 2008; 79: 171-172. 5. Rubinson L, Miller H, Jui J. Gustav strikes the Louisiana Bayou. Leonard J. Chabert Medical Center

staff and OR-2 DMAT team up to provide acute care for Houma. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness 2008; 2: 205.

6. Christian MD, Sandrock CE, Devereaux A, Geiling J, Amundson DE, Rubinson L. Ethical issues and allocation of scarce resources during a public health emergency. Annals of Intern Med 2009; 150: 890-891.

7. Rubinson L, Amundson D, Christian MD, Geiling J, Devereaux AV. Response to "Re-envisioning Mass Critical Care Triage as a systemic multi-Tiered process.” Chest 2009; 135: 1108-1109.

8. Subbarao I, Rubinson L, James JJ. H1N1: Revealing the collective resolve of medicine and public health. Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness 2009; 3 Suppl 2: S93-94.

Major Invited Lectures1. Johns Hopkins Center for Civilian Biodefense Strategies Summer Course, Hospital Preparedness for a

Mass Casualty Bioterrorism Event, Baltimore, MD, June 20032. US Department of State Anti-Terrorism Assistance Program, Hospital Preparedness for Mass Casualty

Events, Baltimore, MD, October 2003 3. Fundamental of Disaster Management, Society of Critical Care Medicine Annual Congress, Overview of

Disaster Management, Orlando, FL, February 20044. International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine Overview of Disaster Management

Bioterrorism and Lectures for Fundamental of Disaster Management, Brussels, Belgium, March 20045. Baltimore City Health Department, 2004 Hospital Forum, Medical Surge Capacity: Principles for

Preparedness and Response, Baltimore, MD, April 20046. Boston Academic Hospital Collaboration on Emergency Preparedness Management for Hospitals,

Hospitals Response to Catastrophic Bioterrorism: Essential Elements of Critical Care, Boston, MA, May 2004

7. Taiwan Society of Critical Care Medicine, Bioterrorism and the ICU, Taipei, Taiwan, October 20048. Fundamental of Disaster Management, Society of Critical Care Medicine Annual Congress, Biologic

Agents and ICU in a Disaster, Phoenix, AZ, January 20059. US Army Medical Research Institute of Chemical Defense, Conventional Blast Incidents, Edgewood,

MD, February 200510. Fundamental of Disaster Management, Society of Critical Care Medicine, SCCM National Liaison to

Local Course, Kansas City, MO, March 200511. Hospital Mass Casualty Disaster Management, Society of Critical Care Medicine and Texas Department

of State Health Services, Co-Course Director, Bioterrorism Triage in a Disaster and Critical Care During a Disaster, Austin, TX, April 2005

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12. New York City Department of Health, Emergency Mass Critical Care for Pandemic Influenza, New York, NY, November 2005

13. Fundamental of Disaster Management, Society of Critical Care Medicine Congress, Biologic Agents and ICU in a Disaster, San Francisco, CA, January 2006

14. New York State Task Force on Life and the Law, Ethical Issues in Ventilator Allocation in an Influenza Pandemic, Emergency Mass Critical Care, New York, March 2006

15. National Disaster Medical System Annual Conference, Emergency Mass Critical Care, Reno, NV, April 2006

16. American Thoracic Society, Post-Graduate Course Co-Chair, Symposium Co-Chair, Natural Catastrophes: When the Health Care System Is Overwhelmed, Medical Response: Putting it all Together in a Hypothetical Real World, Mass Casualty Critical Care, San Diego, CA, May 2006

17. Middle East Medical Association, Emergency Mass Critical Care, Preventing Central Venous Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infections, Beirut, Lebanon, May 2006

18. Infectious Disease Society of America, Infectious Diseases and Medical Surge Capacity, Toronto, Canada, October 2006

19. Oregon Department of Health, Medical Advisory Group, Allocation of Scarce Resources, Portland, OR, October 2006

20. US Department of Homeland Security, Office of Grants & Training National Conference, Medical Surge Panel 1 Chairperson, Medical Surge: Defining the Clinical Specifics, Washington, DC, November 2006

21. Northwest Pediatric Critical Care Consortium, Emergency Mass Critical Care, Seattle, WA, November 2006

22. Washington Thoracic Society, Emergency Mass Critical Care, Leavenworth, WA, January 200723. Respiratory Care Society of Washington, Mass Casualty Respiratory Failure, Seattle, WA, February

200724. Fundamental of Disaster Management, Society of Critical Care Medicine Congress, Postgraduate

Course FDM Course Chair, Orlando, FL, February 200725. Legacy Good Samaritan Hospital, When Some is not Enough, Portland, OR, February 200726. Oregon Society of Respiratory Care, Mass Casualty Respiratory Failure, Eugene, OR, February 200727. Lane County Medical Society, When Some is not Enough, Eugene, OR, February 200728. Society of Critical Care Medicine Asian Forum, FDM Course Chair and gave multiple lectures,

Augmenting Critical Care Capability during Pandemics (conference session). Participant on expert panel regarding disaster triage, Singapore, March 2007

29. Emergency Preparedness and Response for Health Professionals Course, University of Washington School of Public Health, Seattle, WA, March 2007

30. University of Washington-Harborview Medical Center, Seattle Resuscitation Rounds, Augmenting Critical Care Capability during Disasters, Seattle, WA, April 2007

31. Harborview Medical Center Ethics Forum, The Case for Regional Recommendations for Starting and Stopping Life-Sustaining Interventions During a Catastrophe, Seattle, WA, April 2007

32. American Association for Respiratory Care, Respiratory Care Journal Conference, Mechanical Ventilation in Mass Casualty Scenarios, Conference co-Chair, Emergency Mass Critical Care, Reno, NV, July 2007

33. Harborview Department of Medicine, House staff Noon Lecture Series, Sepsis, Seattle, WA, September 2007

34. University of Washington, Department of Medicine Grand Rounds, Advances in Healthcare System Preparedness and Response Concepts, Seattle, WA, September 2007

35. American College of Chest Physicians, Emergency Mass Critical Care (postgraduate course), “Emergency Mass Critical Care (conference session), Surge Positive Pressure Ventilation (conference session), Chicago, IL, October 2007

36. American Academy of Pediatrics, Augmenting Critical Care for a Serious Influenza Pandemic, San Francisco, CA, October 2007

37. European Society of Intensive Care Medicine, Special Populations: Caring for Critically Ill Children and Chronically Critically Ill People During Disasters (postgraduate course), Emerging Infectious Diseases: Avian Influenza (postgraduate course), Can We Learn Collectively During A Pandemic? (conference session), Berlin, Germany, October 2007

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38. University of Washington Department of Occupational and Environmental Health Grand Rounds, National Infection Control Guidelines for Respiratory Protection: Policy considerations and Real-Life Consequences, Seattle, WA, October 2007

39. American Association of Critical Care Nurses, 34th Annual Regional Critical Care Symposium, Emergency Mass Critical Care, Portland, OR, November 2007

40. American Association for Respiratory Care, H5N1: Potential for an Influenza Pandemic or Just Chicken Little’s Disease? Emergency Mass Critical Care, Tampa, FL, December 2007

41. Fundamentals of Disaster Medicine, Gave multiple lectures for several FDM courses, Hong Kong, January 2008

42. University of Washington, Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery AM Lecture Series, Basics of Mechanical Ventilation, Seattle, WA, February 2008

43. University of Washington School of Nursing, Acute Nurse Practitioner Training Program, MRSA & Influenza: Issues to Keep You Up at Night, Seattle, WA. February 2008.

44. Society of Critical Care Medicine Postgraduate Course FDM Course Director, Overview of FDM, Mass Casualty Burn Care and Critical Care Management of Conventional Explosions. Congress lecture, Critical Care and Pandemics, Honolulu, HI, February 2008

45. University of Washington, Harborview Medical Center, Advanced ICU Nursing Workshop, Intravascular Catheter Related Bloodstream Infections: Prevention, Diagnosis, and Treatment, Seattle, WA, April 2008

46. Washington State Department of Health, Altered Standards of Care Working Group, Allocation of Mechanical Ventilators for Mass Respiratory Failure, Seattle, WA, April 2008

47. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Grand Rounds, Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, Mass Critical Care: What Will Happen to Seriously Ill Community Members, Atlanta, GA, May 2008

48. University of Washington, Harborview Medical Center, Trauma Noon Conference Series, High Frequency Oscillatory Ventilation- Coming Soon to an ICU Near You?, Seattle, WA, June 2008

49. Washington Thoracic Society, Summer Lung Day, Popular Ventilation Strategies to Improve Gas Exchange in Severe ARDS, Seattle, WA, June 2008

50. University of Washington, Harborview Medical Center, Pulmonary Weekly Conference Series, High Frequency Oscillatory Ventilation: Coming to an ICU Near You? Seattle, WA, June 2008

51. American College of Chest Physicians, Pandemic Influenza Awareness and Preparedness: Meet-the-Professor, Emerging Mass Critical Care: Space, Philadelphia, PA, October 2008

52. University of Washington, Harborview Medical Center, Surgical Critical Care Fellows Lecture Series, Rescue Therapies for Refractory ARDS, Seattle, WA, November 2008

53. American Thoracic Society, Late-breaking H1N1 S-OIV Session Chairperson, Swine Influenza- What if the Critical Care Need Increased? San Diego, CA, May 2009

54. National Academies of Sciences Institute of Medicine, Alternate Care Capabilities, Washington, DC, June 2009

55. American Medical Association/ Infectious Diseases Society of America, Medical Surge Capability, Seattle, WA, September 2009

56. American Association of Respiratory Care, Mechanical Ventilator Inventory: US Acute Care Hospitals, San Antonio, TX, December 2009

57. Roundtable on Critical Care Policy, OASPR H1N1 Critical Care Activities, Washington, DC, December 2009

58. Third National Congress on Health System Readiness: Disaster, Medicine and Public Health Preparedness in the 21st Century, The Third National Congress, H1N1 Associate Critical Illness, Washington, DC, December 2009

59. Society of Critical Care Medicine, Augmenting Critical Care Capability, Miami, FL, January 201060. Air Life Northwest, Respiratory Failure and Transport Ventilators, Seattle, WA, April/May 201061. American Thoracic Society, H1N1 Symposium Co-chairperson, Learning at the Pace of Pandemics,

Respiratory Infection Poster Session Co-Chairperson, New Orleans, LA, May 201062. American Association of Critical Care Nurses, National Teaching Institute, Critical Care, Disasters and

You, Washington, DC, May 201063. Society of Critical Care Medicine, Session Chair Pandemics, Ventilators and Rationing, Alternative

Equipment for Surge Positive Pressure Ventilation, SCCM’s Disaster Response Efforts: How You Can

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Help, 2009 H1N1 Associated Critical Illness, Sustained Mechanical Ventilation Outside of Traditional ICUs, San Diego, CA, January 2011

64. National Biodefense Science Board, Coordinating and Managing Science during Pandemic H1N1, National Disaster Medical System Science Initiatives, Washington, DC, March 2011.

65. US HHS National Disaster Medical System Advanced Mobile Acute Care-Strike Team Training, Course Medical Director and Faculty Lecturer, April 2011.

66. International Forum for Acute Care Trialists, Science for Emergency Preparedness and Response, Toronto, Canada, June 2011

67. American Association for Respiratory Care, Respiratory Care Professionals and Disasters, Mobile Acute Care Strike Team, Tampa, FL, November 2011.

68. United States Critical Illness and Injury Trials Group, Rapid Assessment of Serious Illness and Injury during Disasters, Washington, DC, November 2011.

69. Society of Critical Care Medicine, ARDS & Refractory Hypoxemia: The legacy of influenza A(H1N1) pdm09, Houston, TX, January 2012.

70. National Burn Strategy Meeting, NDMS Multi-Specialty Enhancement Team (MSET), Atlanta, GA, March 2012.

71. Health and Human Services Integrated Training Summit, Numerous lectures, Nashville, TN May 2012.72. Seattle Children’s Hospital Ron Lemire Symposium, Visiting Professorship and Keynote Lecture, Mass

Mechanical Ventilation for Pediatrics, Seattle, WA, July 2012. 73. Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, MPH Symposium, Emergency Support Function

8, Bethesda, MD, Dec 2012.74. US HHS National Disaster Medical System Advanced Mobile Acute Care-Strike Team Training Faculty

Lecturer (multiple lectures and hands-on training), August 2013.75. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Critical Care Fellows Lecture Series: Basics of Mechanical

Ventilation, Baltimore, MD, September 2013.76. American Association for Respiratory Care, Mass Respiratory Failure, Anaheim, CA, November 2013.77. Society of Critical Care Medicine, Augmenting Critical Care during Disasters, San Francisco, CA, Jan

2014.78. University of Maryland Medical Center Surgical Boot Camp. Cardiac Arrest: The Basics to Being a

Useful Code Team Member. Baltimore, MD, February 2014.79. University of North Carolina Chapel Hill Surgical Grand Rounds, The Critical Care Resuscitation Unit,

Chapel Hill, NC, March 2014.80. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Critical Care Fellows Lecture Series: Advanced Mechanical

Ventilation, Baltimore, MD, May 2014.81. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Critical Care Fellows Lecture Series: How to Set Up the

Mechanical Ventilator, Baltimore, MD, May 2014.82. University of Maryland Department of Emergency Medicine 3rd Annual Symposium on Critical Care:

Status Asthmaticus, Baltimore, MD, May 2014.83. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Critical Care Fellows Lecture Series: Basics of Mechanical

Ventilation, Baltimore, MD, August 2014.84. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Critical Care Fellows Lecture Series: How to Set Up the

Mechanical Ventilator, Baltimore, MD, August 2014.85. US HHS National Disaster Medical System Basic Mobile Acute Care-Strike Team Training, Course

Medical Director and Faculty Lecturer, September 2014.86. American College of Chest Physicians, Late Breaker Session: Clinical Care of Persons with Ebola Virus

Disease in Sierra Leone, Austin, TX, October 2014.87. American Association for Respiratory Care Webinar, Ebola Virus Disease and Implications for

Respiratory Care, November 2014.88. National Institutes of Health Critical Care Fellowship Grand Rounds, Providing Clinical Care for Persons

with Ebola Virus Disease in Sierra Leone and Being a Suspect Patient Myself, Bethesda, MD, November 2014.

89. Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Departments of Anesthesia and Surgery Grand Rounds, Ebola Virus Disease and Implications for Resource-Rich Countries, Boston, MA, November 2014.

90. US Food and Drug Administration Medical Countermeasures Initiative Lecture Series. Ebola Virus Disease and Implications for Resource-Rich Countries, Silver Spring, MD, December 2014.

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91. University of Maryland Multi-disciplinary Critical Care Fellows Conference Series. Emergency Preparedness: Lessons Learned from the Ebola Outbreak, Baltimore, MD, December 2014.

92. American Association for Respiratory Care, Mass Respiratory Failure, Las Vegas, NV, December 2014.93. American Association for Respiratory Care, Ethics: An Interactive Case-Based Discussion, Las Vegas,

NV, December 2014.94. American Association for Respiratory Care, Kittredge Plenary Lecture: Ebola Virus Disease from Sierra

Leone to Sin City, Las Vegas, NV, December 2014.95. Breath is Life Annual Emergency Medicine Critical Care Conference: Refractory Hypoxemic Respiratory

Failure Due to ARDS: Approach of Shock Trauma Center’s Critical Care Resuscitation Unit, New York City, NY, January 2015.

96. Emerging Leaders in Biosecurity Initiative Workshop: Ebola and Implications for Resource Rich Countries, Arlington, VA, March 2015.

97. Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Disaster Medicine Seminar for 1st Year Medical Students: Providing Clinical Care for Persons with Ebola Virus Disease in Sierra Leone, Baltimore, MD, March 2015.

98. Center for the Sustainment of Trauma and Readiness, US Air Force and R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center: Ebola Virus Disease and Staying Safe During Deployment, Baltimore, MD, March 2015.

99. US Centers for Disease Control and Prevision Clinician Outreach and Communication Activity (COCA): Lessons Learned from the 2013-2015 EVD Outbreak, Implications for Hospital/ Critical Care Preparedness, US-wide webinar, March 2015.

100. Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania Department of Emergency Medicine & Trauma Medicine Grand Rounds: John Pryor Lecture, Regionalization of Time-Sensitive Non-Trauma Critical Care in Maryland- Shock Trauma’s Critical Care Resuscitation Unit, Philadelphia, PA, April 2015.

101. University of Maryland Respiratory Care Conference: Refractory Hypoxemic, Hypercapnic Respiratory Failure, Baltimore, MD, April 2015.

102. National Association of County and City Health Officials Annual Conference Plenary Session: Ebola Clinician, Person Under Investigation and Research Subject, Atlanta, GA, April 2015.

103. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Critical Care Fellows Lecture Series: Refractory Hypoxemic, Hypercapnic Respiratory Failure, Baltimore, MD, April 2015.

104. United States Food and Drug Administration Course “Achieving Data and Integrity in Maximum Containment Laboratories” Keynote Presentation: Bedside Considerations And Challenges For Evaluating Novel Therapeutics During An Evolving Epidemic, Bethesda, MD, May 2015.

105. Washington State Hospital Association Disaster Conference: Ebola Virus Disease: Perspectives from a Clinician and a Suspect Case, Wenatchee, WA, May 2015.

106. Illinois Department of Public Health Crisis Standards of Care Conference Plenary Lecture: Lessons from Ebola, Schaumberg, IL, June 2015.

107. Rush University Clinical Grand Rounds: A Long Way From My U.S. ICU: Caring For Persons With Ebola In Sierra Leone, Chicago, IL, June 2015.

108. Radiation Injury Treatment Network Conference on Medical and Organizational Challenges Resulting from a Radiological/Nuclear Emergency: Crisis Standards of Care, Lessons From the Recent Ebola Outbreak in West Africa, Rockville, MD, July 2015.

109. Defense Threat Reduction Agency Expert Lecture Series: Challenges for Crucial Learning During an Evolving Epidemic, Fort Belvoir, VA, July 2015.

110. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Critical Care Fellows Lecture Series: Mechanical Ventilation Basics, Baltimore, MD, August 2015.

111. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Critical Care Fellows Lecture Series: Refractory Hypoxemic, Hypercapnic Respiratory Failure, Baltimore, MD, August 2015.

112. National Academies of Sciences Institute of Medicine Global Health Risk Framework, A Workshop on Resilient and Sustainable Health Systems to Respond to Global Infectious Disease Outbreaks: Human Clinical Resources for Global Outbreak Response, Lessons re-experienced require a paradigm shift, Accra, Ghana, August 2015.

113. Maryland Committee on Trauma: Ebola Virus Disease, Down and dirty about screening, isolating, staff protection and early care, Baltimore, MD, September 2015.

114. East Coast Helicopter Operations Conference: Mechanical Ventilation and Aeromedical Transport, Bringing a referral ICU to a hospital near you, Virginia Beach, VA, September 2015.

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115. American College of Chest Physicians, Treating Ebola Virus Disease at Kenema Government Hospital Fall 2014, Montreal, Canada, October 2015.

116. American College of Chest Physicians, Emerging Outbreaks In ICUs, Elusive Data on Transmission in Real Clinical Settings, We Must Demand a New Paradigm to Steer the Rudderless Ship, Montreal, Canada, October 2015.

117. Doernbecher Children’s Hospital, Oregon Health Sciences University, Department of Pediatrics Grand Rounds, Ebola Virus Disease, Perspective of Both a Clinician and a Suspect Case, Portland, OR, October 2015.

118. Oregon Health Sciences University, Critical Care Resuscitation Unit, University of Maryland Medical Center’s Innovation to Optimize Outcomes for Inter-facility Transfers with Non-Trauma Time-Sensitive Critical Illness, Portland, OR, October 2015.

119. Eastern Shore Emergency and Critical Care Symposium: Mechanical Ventilation Pearls, Wye Mills, MD, November 2015.

120. University of Maryland Medical Center Nurse Practitioner and Physician Assistant Clinical Conference: Ebola Virus Disease: Perspective of Both a Clinician and Suspect Case, Baltimore, MD, December 2015.

121. Undisclosed United States Government Agency, Lessons Learned from Ebola, December 2015.122. Society of Critical Care Medicine’s Peter Safar Memorial Plenary Lecture, Critically Ill Patients With

Contagious Diseases Which Can Directly Harm of Kill Us, Orlando, FL, February 2016.123. Society of Critical Care Medicine Abstract Moderator, CPR/ Resuscitation, Orlando, FL, February 2016.124. Society of Critical Care Medicine Session/ Panel Moderator, Preparing for a Deadly Infectious Disease in

my Unit, Orlando, FL, February 2016.125. Society of Critical Care Medicine, Session Moderator and Speaker, What We Learned of Should Learn

from Research Efforts During the Ebola Response, Orlando, FL, February 2016. 126. Western Trauma Association Paint the Ceiling Plenary Lecture, Tahoe, CA, March 2016.127. Health Research and Education Trust of New Jersey, Perspectives on Emerging Viral Threats,

Perspectives of a Clinician and a Suspect Patient During the Peak of the Ebola Outbreak in Sierra Leone, Princeton, NJ, May 2016.

128. US HHS Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response, Technical Resources Assistance Center and Information Exchange Special Webinar, Lessons Learned on Crisis Standards of Care in Kenema, Washington, DC, June 2016 (video distributed over internet by HHS).

129. Special Pathogens Conference, Perspectives of a Clinician and a Suspect Patient During the Peak of the Ebola Outbreak in Sierra Leone, Grand Rapids, MI, June 2016.

130. Mexico Conference on Mechanical Ventilation, H1N1 An Update, Still a Cause of Severe Respiratory Failure, Mexico City, Mexico, July 2016.

131. Mexico Conference on Mechanical Ventilation, Status Asthmaticus, Treat the Patient and Not the Blood Gas, Mexico City, Mexico, July 2016.

132. Mexico Conference on Mechanical Ventilation, Refractory Hypoxemia in ARDS, Mexico City, Mexico, July 2016.

133. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Fellows Core Lecture Series, Basics of Mechanical Ventilation, Baltimore, MD, August 2016.

134. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Fellows Core Lecture Series, Additional Principles of Mechanical Ventilation, Baltimore, MD, August 2016.

135. Game Changers and New Innovations in Critical Care Conference, Ebola Virus Disease and Implications for the Next Novel Outbreak, Baltimore, MD, September 2016.

136. University of Maryland Medical Center Department of Respiratory Care, Respiratory Care Month Lecture, Mechanical Ventilation of Status Asthmaticus, Baltimore, MD, October 2016.

137. University of Maryland Express Care Eastern Shore Emergency and Critical Care Symposium Plenary Lecture, Mechanical Ventilation of Status Asthmaticus, Wye Mills, MD, November 2016.

138. University of Maryland Internal Medicine Morning Report, Inpatient Cardiac Arrest, Baltimore, MD, March 2017.

139. University of Maryland Internal Medicine Morning Report, Inpatient Cardiac Arrest Part 2: ECPR and REBOA , Baltimore, MD, April 2017.

140. Mexico Conference on Mechanical Ventilation, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation, Mexico City, Mexico, July 2017.

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141. Mexico Conference on Mechanical Ventilation, Disaster Medicine, Mexico City, Mexico, July 2017.142. Mexico Conference on Mechanical Ventilation, Protecting Your ICU From Outbreaks Which May Harm or

Even Kill Your Staff, Mexico City, Mexico, July 2017.143. Mexico Conference on Mechanical Ventilation, Protecting Your ICU From Outbreaks Which May Harm or

Even Kill Your Staff, Merida, Mexico, July 2017.144. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Critical Care Fellows Lecture Series:Mechanical Ventilation Part

1, Baltimore, MD, August 2017.145. University of Maryland Internal Medicine Morning Report, Inpatient Cardiac Arrest, Baltimore, MD,

August 2017.146. R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center Critical Care Fellows Lecture Series:Mechanical Ventilation Part

II, Baltimore, MD, September 2017.147. New Jersey Hospital Association Critical Care Symposium, The Critical Care Resuscitation Unit,

University of Maryland Medical Center’s Innovation to Optimize Outcomes for Inter-facility Transfer with Non-Trauma Time Sensitive Critical Illness, Princeton, NJ, October 2017.