Dear Friends and Colleagues,
In the UAB Department of Pediatrics, we have one mission: to improve the health of the children of Alabama, the region and beyond. In order to do this, we focus on the four pillars of: 1) clinical care and service to the profession, 2) teaching and training the next generation of providers and leaders, 3) research and new knowledge discovery and 4) advocacy.
The clinical advances and research breakthroughs we describe throughout this Annual Report have a direct impact on children’s lives. That impact will be our legacy. We present evidence of this impact as measured by major research accomplishments, grants, publications and awards. In 2022, the Department of Pediatrics faculty had 526 publications. In FY 2022, we had funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) totaling $22.1 million and total research funding of $38.4 million. This puts us in the top 19 departments of pediatrics in the country. Since FY 2013, we have had a 3.9-fold increase in NIH funding, and we have grown the number of NIH-funded investigators from 8 to 30 (a 3.75-fold increase). Many of these new investigators have been supported by the department’s investments in their research programs, by pilot and feasibility awards from the Children’s of Alabama Kaul Pediatric Research Institute and by the combined investments from the department and Children’s of Alabama in research infrastructure.
The department aims to build on these successes, expand the size and, importantly, the impact of our research in the coming years. We anticipate continued growth not only in our core areas of significant accomplishment—virology, therapeutic drug development, cancer, sickle cell disease, neonatology, acute kidney injury and outcomes research—but also in newer areas, where the recruitment of talented young researchers will ensure continued and expanded success.
In addition to our research accomplishments, our focus on safety and quality is always paramount. For the thirteenth consecutive year, U.S. News & World Report ranked Children’s of Alabama’s pediatric specialty services among the top 50 in the nation, and we ranked best in the Southeast (tied for first). All 10 specialties were ranked: Cancer, Cardiology & Heart Surgery, Endocrinology and Diabetes, Gastroenterology & GI Surgery, Neonatology, Nephrology, Neurology & Neurosurgery, Orthopedics, Pulmonology and Urology. We are proud to be one of only 22 children’s hospitals in the country ranked in all 10 specialties.
Our clinical mission is to deliver exceptional, safe and accessible care in order to improve the outcomes for children in Alabama and elsewhere. This year we responded to the “tripledemic” of influenza, respiratory syncytial virus and COVID-19. We know there are more challenges to come, and we are preparing for the next pandemic by leading a group of 10 children’s hospitals in the Health Resources and Services Administration–funded Pediatric Pandemic Network. Our care and our academic achievements simply would not be possible without the physicians, nurses and staff who bring their talents and passion to the care of children every day from everywhere in the state, the region and the nation. This coming year, we will continue to grow our subspecialty expertise, our research strength and our advocacy efforts. We have also strengthened our resident scholar programs for those interested in pediatric education, rural health, global health and health equity. We have begun a second cohort of our a mini-medical school, a curriculum for middle school students to increase the pipeline for those traditionally underrepresented in medicine and STEM careers. And, in 2022 we launched several new efforts in global health, which we plan to expand in 2023
I am very hopeful that 2023 will be the best year ever. Please know that one thing always remains in focus: our commitment to serving the patients and families who look to us for healing and hope. Thank you for being part of that most worthy endeavor.
Mitchell B. Cohen, M.D.
Katharine Reynolds Ireland Chair of Pediatrics
University of Alabama at Birmingham
Physician in Chief, Children’s of Alabama