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t m c » p u l s e | m a r c h 2 0 1 7 9 INTENSIVE BIOETHICS COURSE events.houstonmethodist.org/bioethics Houston Methodist Hospital 6565 Fannin St. n Houston, TX 77030 HOUSTON METHODIST and BAYLOR COLLEGE OF MEDICINE CENTER FOR MEDICAL ETHICS & HEALTH POLICY This live activity has been approved for AMA PRA Category 1 Credits ™ and education in medical ethics and/or professional responsibility. CENTER FOR MEDICAL ETHICS & HEALTH POLICY • Fundamentals of medical ethics • Communication strategies for facilitating family meetings • The value and importance of clinical ethics services This unique course focuses on the following topics: • How to: conduct a consult, write a chart note, run an ethics committee, write effective hospital policy and conduct advance care planning conversations Early registration discount applies through Feb. 1, 2016. APRIL 11-15, 2016 CENTER FOR MEDICAL ETHICS & HEALTH POLICY APRIL 18-21, 2017 Manish Shah, M.D., poses with his sitar. The stringed instrument measures about 4 feet in length. generally have music that I have decided I really like." Jack Dawson, M.D., is the chief of orthopedic surgery at Ben Taub Hospital and an assistant professor of orthopedic trauma surgery at Baylor College of Medicine. JOSEPH LOVE, D.O., F.A.C.S. "While I routinely listen to music in the OR, I rarely choose. I tend to let the resident I am working with or the nurse decide. Otherwise, I go with the Pandora classic rock station (heavy on the Rolling Stones and Zeppelin). Streaming music services have really changed the way we all consume music and listen in the OR." Joseph Love, D.O., F.A.C.S., is the medical director of Memorial Hermann Life Flight and a trauma surgeon at Memorial Hermann Red Duke Trauma Institute and McGovern Medical School at UTHealth. MILTON ROUTT, M.D. "I always listen to music in the oper- ating room. It started with a portable boom box and multiple briefcase satch- els that held about 30 cassette tapes each. We would rotate satchels each day. It has evolved to Bluetooth music via my phone or iPod. I keep a portable speaker with me so we always have some tunes. I still have the cassettes in their satchels! Music keeps us calm, focused and progressing. And some- times we dance—very briefly and poorly. Some preferred artists you can choose from: Little Feat, Alice Cooper, Foghat, ABBA, The Beatles, Bad Company, The Beach Boys, Lyle Lovett, Elton John, Nazareth, Chad and Jeremy, The 5th Dimension, KC and The Sunshine Band, Gary Puckett & The Union Gap, Queen, Pink Floyd, The Moody Blues, Dwight Yoakam, ZZ Top, France Joli, Ohio Players, War, Rufus, Pure Prairie League, The Allman Brothers Band, The Marshall Tucker Band, Andrea Bocelli, Garth Brooks, Kenny Rogers, Joe Satriani, Jeff Beck, anything disco, Clint Black, The Judds, Collective Soul, Wings, Michael Jackson, Eagles, Earth Wind & Fire, Jerry Jeff Walker, Bee Gees, Chicago, Jethro Tull, Eminem, Barry Manilow, Stevie Wonder, Johnny Cash, Ted Nugent, Rod Stewart, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Donna Summer, Ronnie Milsap and Talking Heads." Milton Routt, M.D., is an orthope- dic trauma specialist with Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center and McGovern Medical School at UTHealth. MANISH SHAH, M.D. "I am proud of the fact that two of my residents follow me on Spotify. I have made more than a few custom playlists for the operating room. I love all kinds of music. I play the sitar, an Indian classical instrument. My heart is really in 1990s-2000s hip hop. I have an awesome radio-edited playlist that the entire OR sings along to. I add songs per request. However, I love classic rock, mash ups, funk, jazz and most other kinds of music. I find that the music keeps the residents, staff and anesthesia teams mellow, stress-free and focused on the child on the OR table. Surgical cases go much more efficiently when everyone is in tune." Manish Shah, M.D., is a UTHealth pediatric neurosurgeon with Memorial Hermann Mischer Neuroscience Institute at the Texas Medical Center and Children's Memorial Hermann Hospital.