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Daniel G. McMurtrie, M.D., Obstetrics & Gynecology
As a teaching hospital at an independent academic medical center, St. Joseph Mercy Hospital strives to maintain an environment of continuous learning. An integral part of that environment includes continuous quality improvement initiatives designed to apply scientific principles to improve patient safety and outcomes. Evidence-based learning, quality patient care, and clinical research combine to create an environment that trains high-quality physicians as providers of healthcare for women.
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Michael Mikhail, M.D., Emergency Medicine
Being able to take the best scientific evidence to date and apply it at the bedside and see that it can visibly improve the care of our patients is, to me, the greatest reward of doing clinical research as a physician. St. Joseph Mercy Hospital has had the long-standing and proud tradition of leading the way in clinical research. As a teaching hospital, our physicians and staff continue to strive every day to improve care for patients through research.
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Jeffrey Sanfield, M.D., Internal Medicine
As a physician, one of the greatest rewards of participating in clinical research is being able to evaluate new treatments and, based on scientific evidence, apply those treatments at the bedside. I often have the opportunity to witness, first hand, that clinical research can improve the care of our patients.
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Walter M. Whitehouse, Jr., M.D., Surgery
The presence of an institutional research program is critical to continue to attract and retain excellent staff surgeons as well as surgical residents. It stimulates the critical appraisal of the best clinical practices for our patients and encourages innovative changes based on scientific methods.
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