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The interview is 13 minutes long and available to watch on your schedule.
Dr. Ki Shin, a primary care physician in a rural part of Washington State with 27 years of experience, wanted to do more for his patients, and decided to learn point-of-care ultrasound on his own time.
With Kosmos, he began learning how to scan the heart, lungs, and abdomen. Particularly daunting was the heart. With Kosmos's AI-guided cardiac scanning, as well as freely available online resources, Dr. Shin has been independently learning various POCUS exams, such as how scan for AAA and gall and kidney stones, and assess heart function.
Register for the webinar to watch Dr. Shin's interview by Dr. Adaira Landry, an ultrasound educator interested in how physicians are using modern technology to learn POCUS independently, and how AI-guided ultrasound is changing the future of medicine.
Dr. Yong Ki Shin completed his medical training at University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, in 1993. He completed his residency in Internal Medicine in 1996 also at University of Washington, and then completed a year as Chief Resident at the Boise Veteran's Administration, Boise, Idaho, in 1997. Dr. Shin has been in a private practice in Montesano, Washington, for 24 years. He has taught medical students and Residents during their internal medicine rotations since 1999. He was promoted to Professor Medicine in 2018. Dr. Shin served as the Assistant Dean for Clinical Medical Education, Western Washington WWAMI, University of Washington School of Medicine, from 2012 2019. He is the Medical Director for the Grays Harbor County Jail since 2009.
Dr. Yong Ki Shin, MD
Dr. Adaira Landry completed her medical school training at David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California, Los Angeles in 2011 before starting her Emergency Medicine Residency at New York University. In 2017, she completed a fellowship in Ultrasound at the Department of Emergency Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and a Master’s Degree in Education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education program. In 2019, she was promoted to Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at the Harvard Medical School. That year she also became the Ultrasound Fellowship Director, Harvard Medical School Society Advisor and Chair for the Diversity and Inclusion committee for the Department of Emergency Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. She is interested in mentorship, technology, education and innovation.
Dr. Adaira Landry, MD, MEd
Dr. Ki Shin decided to level up his practice with POCUS — and Kosmos AI technology made that possible
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