Susrutha Kotwal Profile
Susrutha Kotwal

@KotwalSusrutha

Followers
153
Following
339
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4
Statuses
49

Baltimore, MD
Joined November 2018
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@JonathanEdlow
Jonathan Edlow
8 months
Up your game in treating patients with neurological emergencies and join our top notch faculty in Dubrovnik!
@Emerg_Quality
The Institute for ED Clinical Quality Improvement
8 months
NEW NEURO EMERGENCIES COURSE WORKSHOP FORMAT - Croatia May 2025! HINTS, dizziness and NIHSS workshops & Workshops on brain and spine imaging reads. https://t.co/GqioGIOTRH @JoshGoldsteinMD @JonathanEdlow @BIDMCEM , @EuropSocEM , @EANeurology , @ESOstroke @MassGeneralEM
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@dromron
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8 months
I'm excited to announce that our dizzy education paper was published! Truely a labor of love. Virtual patient and feedback intervention to improve clinical reasoning for dizziness in the emergency department- Academic Emergency Medicine https://t.co/9Kn7vdTBBW @KotwalSusrutha
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onlinelibrary.wiley.com
Click on the article title to read more.
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@marishaburden
Marisha Burden, MD, MBA
9 months
@JAMANetworkOpen
JAMA Network Open
9 months
High secure messaging volume among inpatient clinicians was associated with increased odds of wrong-patient ordering errors. https://t.co/qFPzb9fL47 @tkannampallil @sunnylouMD @drdaphnelew @washumedicine
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@dromron
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10 months
I need four more users (16/20) to release my ANDROID Version of the VertiGuide app. Even if you are not an Android user, Please REPOST! I'm so close!
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@KotwalSusrutha
Susrutha Kotwal
11 months
Do hospitalists welcome electronic feedback after patient care escalations? Yes, and our results show valuable insights on workplace learning and clinical reasoning. Thank you @JournalGIM @Gurpreet2015 @GIMMedEdDoc @ImproveDX https://t.co/0DFBOoquRr
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pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
E-feedback was well received by hospitalists. Their perspectives offer useful insights for enhancing electronic feedback interventions.
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@KotwalSusrutha
Susrutha Kotwal
11 months
Thank you @PapersPodcast for discussing our paper about learning from diagnostic errors and successes. I learned a lot from the feedback and hope to continue to do better #GrowthMindset https://t.co/pNsM1UFxcm
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paperspodcast.ki.se
Do we learn from mistakes? Explore insights on how errors shape our growth, decision-making, and intelligence in this engaging podcast discussion.
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@DivvyKant
Divvy K. Upadhyay
11 months
"I Had No Idea This Happened": #Feedback on Clinical Reasoning for Hospitalists. #PatientSafety By @KotwalSusrutha @Gurpreet2015 et al @JournalGIM #hospitals @HopkinsMedicine https://t.co/sTlqAsgsMG
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@DrMaryDahm
Dr Mary Dahm
1 year
Every diagnosis starts with a conversation. Let's improve patient safety by studying interpersonal communication in healthcare. #ImprovingDiagnosis #PatientInvolvement #WorldPatientSafetyDay #WPSD
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@ABMSCert
ABMS
1 year
Are you an early-career physician or research specialist looking to advance your career? Apply for the 2024-25 ABMS Visiting Scholars Program and take a step forward with this unique board certification grant program. Apply here: https://t.co/LyWWQpefDR #HigherStandardsBetterCare
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@DivvyKant
Divvy K. Upadhyay
1 year
Fantastic piece by Dr Dhaliwal @Gurpreet2015, a classic so attributable to a classic like him - "do not worry about machine learning; worry more about how you can become a learning machine". Deeply resonates wth othr gr8 editorial on big/small data #AI https://t.co/4cL6p2WjQy
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@CaseyMcQuadeMD
Casey McQuade, MD, MS Ed.
1 year
Why we wrote this paper: 1⃣ Problem representation is 🗝️ to sound clinical reasoning 2⃣ Everybody knows a good PR when they see/hear one, but there's no consensus on what makes "good" good 3⃣ We wanted to know how to tell expert PR apart from novice PR https://t.co/aYxB5bO0cL
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pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Compared with novices, expert PRs include less irrelevant data and synthesize information into higher-order concepts. Future studies should determine whether targeted educational interventions for...
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@KotwalSusrutha
Susrutha Kotwal
2 years
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@KotwalSusrutha
Susrutha Kotwal
2 years
5/5 Prioritize self-care · Find a hobby · Do things outside of medicine to make you genuinely happy · Maintaining a healthy balance is key to preventing burn out
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@KotwalSusrutha
Susrutha Kotwal
2 years
4/5 Commit to growth · Actively seek feedback, find a clinical coach · Embrace mistakes as opportunities to learn
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@KotwalSusrutha
Susrutha Kotwal
2 years
3/5 Reflect deeply on the diagnostic process · Reflect regularly to learn from mistakes & successes · Ask questions repeatedly to learn
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@KotwalSusrutha
Susrutha Kotwal
2 years
2/5 Connect with patients and other team members to tap into their insights · Form genuine and deep connections to make accurate Dx · Engage in deep conversations with colleagues
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@KotwalSusrutha
Susrutha Kotwal
2 years
1/5 Recognize excellence in clinical reasoning as a core skill in need of perpetual refinement · Develop foundational clinical skills · Focus on humility, navigating uncertainty · Seek a breadth of clinical experience
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@KotwalSusrutha
Susrutha Kotwal
2 years
We tried to characterize clinical lessons learned by experienced hospitalists from diagnostic errors and successes. https://t.co/sdweyQ0aXs Here are the 5 themes:
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