SREMI Inaugural Research Chair in Geriatric Emergency Medicine announced

Dec. 9, 2019
Dr. Jacques Lee
A leading researcher in recognizing and preventing delirium in older patients is joining Sinai Health as its inaugural SREMI Research Chair in Geriatric Emergency Medicine.
Dr. Jacques Lee, an emergency physician and scientist formerly at the Sunnybrook Research Institute in Toronto, will hold the chair over a five-year term through Sinai Health, with the option to renew.
“For the past 17 years, I’ve dedicated my career to improving the care of older people in the emergency department,” Lee said. “To have a research chair with Geriatric Emergency Medicine as the title is unbelievable.”
Lee says his initial focus will be to help physicians better diagnose and even predict delirium in elderly patients. He’s currently developing a game similar to whack-a-mole to determine whether a patient is at risk of delirium. He also hopes to develop a blood or urine test to help physicians rapidly identify delirium.
“It’s a particular challenge when you have a clinical setting like the emergency department where patients and staff move around quickly in response to the demands of the sickest patient,” Lee said. “So it’s not that surprising that we’re missing delirium.”
Lee said he’s also supervising a project to examine reasons why delirium is missed so often. Research shows it’s missed in up to 80 per cent of cases in emergency departments. Delirium, or acute brain failure, often results in confused thinking and reduced awareness, and if not identified, can be deadly.
SREMI, or the Schwartz/Reisman Emergency Medicine Institute, is a not-for-profit research, education and health policy institute based at Mount Sinai Hospital. Established in 2013, SREMI’s mission is to improve emergency care in Canada and around the world.
The SREMI Inaugural Research Chair in Geriatric Emergency Medicine was established thanks to a generous $1.5 million donation from The Gerald Schwartz & Heather Reisman Foundation. Sinai Health Foundation has committed to matching that gift by raising an additional $1.5 million over five years.
“A huge risk in the emergency department is sending someone home with unrecognized delirium,” said SREMI Director Dr. Bjug Borgundvaag. “This generous gift is an investment in helping seniors when they are at their most vulnerable and will lead to further innovation in geriatric emergency medicine.”
In the coming year, Lee will kick off an international search for scientists who’d like to train in geriatric emergency medicine research and help shape this emerging field.