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On line Case Submissions: What are They and How to Submit

On line Case Submissions: What are They and How to Submit. Thea Moran, MD Asst Professor Louisiana State University New Orleans, Louisiana. Why do online case submissions. Relatively easy, fast If you can read and have computer support, you can electronically submit

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On line Case Submissions: What are They and How to Submit

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  1. On line Case Submissions: What are They and How to Submit Thea Moran, MD Asst Professor Louisiana State University New Orleans, Louisiana

  2. Why do online case submissions • Relatively easy, fast • If you can read and have computer support, you can electronically submit • Anybody can submit cases: medical student, resident, fellow or staff • Everybody wins • ACGME credits academic effort to both participating staff and residents • Medical students can place on CV • Patients like contributing • Caters to a large audience • Long leash for all contributors

  3. Case in Point (CiP) • A section of the ACR website where members of the radiology community can submit interesting cases and readers can review the cases for CME credit. • $200 honorarium per case

  4. How to submit a case • Find an interesting case • Go to ACR CiP website and click on “Want to Submit a Case?” • File in the blanks • CiP staff will email you back whether idea was accepted or rejected (usually <1 mo) • Case acceptance doesn’t necessarily = case posting

  5. What to include in the write up • Section/subsection • 2-3 “take home points” • History/pertinent data • 2 copies of each image • Findings • Questions • DDx • Discussion • References • Keywords

  6. Miscellaneous info • Case content should be in a Word document • Images must be in JPEG format • Once case is subjected to peer review, case is CONSIDERED for posting • Can submit pictures of co-contributors • Payment processed once issued a “go live” date • Donate to LSU Foundation vs self • Will need to fill out individual agreement forms, W-9 Tax forms and Conflict of Interest form

  7. Aunt Minnie Case of the Day (COTD) • Section of the AuntMinnie.com radiology interest website • COTD managed by Mark Frank, MD from Indiana University • Academic liason to Aunt Minnie • Direct communication, fast turnaround

  8. How to submit • Find an interesting case • Directly email Dr. Frank at marfrank@iupui.edu with the case idea • He’ll get back <1 wk at latest

  9. What to include in the write up • Case contributor and institution • ACR Code • History, findings and diagnosis • DDX • Pathologic correlation • Disease • Radiologic w/u and typical findings • 3-4 pearls • References

  10. Miscellaneous • Write up should be in Microsoft Word • Images need to be in JPEG (800x600 at largest) • Attach write up and all images in 1 email • Formatting preferences: http://education.auntminnie.com/auntminnie/qmachine.asp?UID=AMWU0001

  11. Thea’s suggestions for case submissions • Once you think you have found an interesting case, submit to CiP FIRST • Honorarium • If not accepted by CiP, submit to COTD • Keep list of cases accepted to CiP and COTD • LSUHSC requires signatures from patients/representatives before releasing info for publication

  12. Finding “co-contributors” • Resident research day • Resident’s fair • LSU, Tulane each have fairs • Radiology interest group • Resident radiology rotations • Word of mouth

  13. Turning your co-contributors loose • Start with COTD case first • Less of a “process” • Quicker turnaround • Gets feet wet • Next, CiP • Process is more “involved” • Longer turnaround

  14. Keeping your co-contributors on a “long leash” • Excellent forum for medical students, residents and fellows to express themselves • Minimal supervision needed • Value received NOT proportionate to attending involvement • Gives them a feeling of ownership and responsibility • Frees up your own time and energy while still getting academic credit • Don’t confuse long leash with no leash • Be available for questions • Check in with them at least once a week • Read what they write

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