This webinar is designed to bridge the knowledge gap for surgeons regarding the critical role of pharmaceutical expertise in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and the management of multidrug-resistant (MDR) infections. We will address key practice and patient care problems by helping participants to:
Join us to enhance your understanding of how pharmacy collaboration can improve patient outcomes and optimize care in the most critical settings.
Panelists
Cindy Kang, PharmD | SICU Pharmacist
Wilma Chan Highland Hospital | Level 1 Trauma Center | Oakland, CA
Cindy Kang is a clinical pharmacist specialist in the Trauma and Surgical services at Highland Hospital in Oakland, CA. She is from Honolulu, HI and received her Doctorate of Pharmacy degree from the University of Washington in Seattle. She completed her PGY-1 Pharmacy Residency at Santa Clara Valley Medical Center and PGY-2 Cardiology Pharmacy Residency at UC Davis Medical Center. Her interests include being a part of the Pain & Addiction Committee and integrated in the UCSF East Bay General Surgery Residency education and didactic curriculum.
Eugene Liu, MD
Loma Linda University
Nicholas Namias, MD
DeWitt Daughtry Family Department of Surgery
Nicholas Namias received his medical degree from Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey in Piscataway, New Jersey. He completed his General Surgery training at the University of Miami Jackson Memorial Hospital and stayed on for fellowships in surgical critical care and trauma at Jackson Memorial Hospital’s Ryder Trauma Center. After a short stint as an Assistant Professor of Surgery at Emory University, he was recruited here to the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine in 1998 as an Assistant Professor of Surgery and Co-Director of the UM/JM Burn Center. Moving through the ranks, Nick became the Chief of Burns in 2004 and was appointed Chief of Trauma in 2010. Dr. Namias is the holder of the Robert Zeppa Chair in Surgery and is an MBA graduate of the University of Miami. He is also the Director of the Ryder Trauma Center and holds a secondary appointment as Professor of Anesthesiology at the Miller School of Medicine.
Sara Parli, PharmD, BCCCP
University of Kentucky
Dr. Parli graduated from the University of Kentucky College of Pharmacy, earning her Doctor of Pharmacy degree. She completed her PGY1 pharmacy residency in Savannah, Ga at Memorial University Medical Center before returning to UK HealthCare to complete her PGY2 Critical Care pharmacy residency. Dr. Parli is active in clinical practice as a surgical critical care pharmacist on the Trauma and Emergency General Surgery service at UK HealthCare. She serves on several enterprise and department committees including Antimicrobial P&T Subcommittee, vaccine task force, and Committee for Pharmacy Community. Dr. Parli is engaged in the education of pharmacy students, pharmacy residents, as well as general surgery residents and surgical critical care fellows. Her current clinical research interests include surgical infectious diseases, infections and nutrition support, and VTE prophylaxis in obese trauma patients.
Moderator
Michael Cobler-Lichter, MD
University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Hospital
Dr. Michael Cobler-Lichter grew up in Buffalo, New York, and earned his undergraduate degree in Biochemistry with a concentration in Bioinformatics from Boston College. Before medical school he worked at a health-tech startup, applying AI/ML and natural language processing to develop automated risk-adjustment solutions. He received his MD from the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at the University at Buffalo and matched into General Surgery at the University of Miami/Jackson Memorial Hospital. Dr. Cobler-Lichter is currently a PGY-5/R3 general surgery resident, having completed a two-year research fellowship under Dr. Kenneth Proctor at the Ryder Trauma Center, during which he also earned a master’s degree in Data Science. His academic interests center on integrating advanced statistical methods and machine learning into surgical research to improve outcomes and build robust clinical decision-support tools. He will be applying to fellowships in Trauma and Surgical Critical Care.