CHEST awards grants to shorten time to diagnosis in ILD
Drs. Kavitha Selvan and Amirahwaty Abdullah will receive funding to implement quality improvement projects in 2024
October 18, 2023
Glenview, Illinois – The American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST)
announces Kavitha Selvan, MD, and Amirahwaty Abdullah, MBBS, as the
recipients for quality improvement grants to shorten time to diagnosis
for interstitial lung disease (ILD). The announcement was made during
the CHEST Annual Meeting 2023 in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi.
The grants will support demonstration projects that implement the
educational toolkit
created by the pulmonary and primary care experts serving on the
steering committee for the initiative
Bridging Specialties™: Timely Diagnosis for ILD. Launched in collaboration with Three Lakes Foundation, the Bridging Specialties initiative was created to bring together pulmonary and primary care experts with the shared goal of shortening the time to diagnosis.
“With research showing that Black patients develop ILD at a younger age
than White patients and experience higher rates of hospitalization and
increased mortality, the diverse population of Chicago serves as the
inspiration for my team's project and will be a central factor,” said Dr.
Selvan, Pulmonary and Critical Care Fellow at the University of Chicago
School of Medicine. “This project is outlined to work closely with the
Medical Director of the Primary Care Group within the University of
Chicago to implement the Bridging Specialties patient questionnaire that
assesses risk factors for ILD to identify potential concerns earlier,
which is imperative to improving outcomes.”
Affecting 400,000 people in the U.S., ILDs are often overlooked as a
potential diagnosis given their rarity. A proper diagnosis for this
disease is further complicated by ubiquitous presenting symptoms that
are common in many other diseases, including asthma, COPD and cardiac
conditions, and often leads to a misdiagnosis. This delay in diagnosis,
or an outright misdiagnosis, leads to additional delays in receiving
proper treatment and, subsequently, a degradation in the patient’s
quality of life.
“While ILD is a rare disease, the state of West Virginia has a
disproportionately increased prevalence due to a variety of societal
factors,” said Dr. Abdullah, Assistant Professor and Critical Care
Medicine Associate Program Director at the West Virginia University
School of Medicine. “Despite this prevalence, there is one ILD clinic in
the state of West Virginia in comparison to 1,253 primary care providers
throughout the state. To address this gap, the project will focus on
expanding telemedicine capabilities in order to reach these patients
virtually through their primary care physicians who would help us to
facilitate the video-assisted visits.”
About the American College of Chest Physicians
The American College of Chest Physicians® (CHEST) is the global leader
in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of chest diseases. Its
mission is to champion advanced clinical practice, education,
communication and research in chest medicine. It serves as an essential
connection to clinical knowledge and resources for its 22,000+ members
from around the world who provide patient care in pulmonary, critical
care and sleep medicine. For information about the American College of
Chest Physicians, and its flagship journal CHEST®,
visit chestnet.org.