A teaching faculty member of the University of Minnesota Medical School, he is highly regarded by residents and medical students, and has been instrumental in developing curricula in perioperative medicine for residents to improve the systems of surgical care through education.
Dr. Frost is a frequent lecturer on topics ranging from perioperative medicine to venous thromboembolism and has been published in: Annals of Internal Medicine, JAMA, Medical Clinics of North America, Mayo Clinic Proceedings, Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine, and The Hospitalist. He currently is lead investigator for a trial on preoperative medication administration.
Dr. Frost has demonstrated consistent leadership within SHM. He is regarded as the definitive resource in local chapter development due to his work in the SHM Lake Erie Chapter, where he was founder and president. He also is credited with establishing the very first formal chapter of SHM. His vision for the future of chapter activities – including community service and a national recognition program – resulted in a Membership Committee task force on chapter development. As a leader in the Midwest SHM region, Dr. Frost was named a Councilor to the SHM Midwest Council. His outstanding performance led to his assuming the chair of the Council in 2004. Dr. Frost is also recognized as a subject matter expert in biomedical ethics, serving consecutive terms on the Ethics Committee as well.
Dr. Frost earned his MD at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School in Dallas as an AOA graduate, and completed his residency in Internal Medicine there. From 1998 through 2004, as a hospitalist at Cleveland Clinic Foundation, he was a contributor to the development, maturation, and operation of its hospital medicine model of care.
Dr. Li was the first hospitalist at the Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital Medicine Program in 1998. There he helped define the role of an academic hospitalist through clinical work, teaching, and service on countless committees and hospital initiatives. He quickly distinguished himself and was made associate chief of the HCA/ACOVE medical teaching
firm and, more recently, director of the BIDMC Hospital Medicine Program. A key focus for Dr. Li was broadening the Hospital Medicine Program at BIDMC. Under his guidance, the program grew to eleven hospitalists that account for over 50% of all general medicine admissions and over 50% of teaching attending months on the medical service. He also developed a system that allowed staff to provide 24/7 seamless coverage and created a website of referring physicians. He initiated new clinical programs and working arrangements for the hospitalist team, and helped institute a program to staff a local hospital with Beth Israel Deaconess hospitalists.
Dr. Li’s advocacy for Hospital Medicine did not stop at the doors of BIDMC, however. He was a co-developer of the first Harvard Medical School CME course on the emerging role of hospital medicine, and was the cofounder of the Boston Area Hospitalists and the SHM Northeast Regional Chapter of hospitalists. A charter member of SHM, he co-directed the first SHM annual northeastern regional meeting in 2001. He currently is a member of the SHM Education Committee, Annual Meeting Committee, and Membership Committee Task Force.
A nationally recognized expert in hospital medicine, Dr. Li lectures extensively and has testified on hearings dealing with mandatory hospitalist programs. He has published numerous articles in Critical Pathways in Cardiology, WebMD, Infectious Diseases in Clinical Practice, Current Opinion in Pulmonary Medicine, and Medscape.com, to name a few.
After earning his MD from the University of Oklahoma in Oklahoma City in 1994, Dr. Li did his residency at New England Deaconess Hospital before becoming chief medical resident at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.