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Clinical Care

Physicians in the Division of Pulmonary Medicine at IU School of Medicine care for patients in state-of-the-art facilities alongside highly trained staff. Faculty physicians in this specialty area provide general pulmonary and critical care services across the Indianapolis campus in primarily closed ICU settings, including 24/7 in-house critical care services at IU Health University and Methodist hospitals.

Focus Areas

The division has developed certain focus areas in patient care, blending clinical skills with cutting-edge research and education of future clinicians and scientists. As a result of its commitment to patient care and ability to provide disease-focused programs, this division was recognized by U.S. News and World Report as the 14th best pulmonary and critical care program in the United States.

Faculty in the News

Alan Hyslop, MD, was recently interviewed by CNN in relation to the pope's respiratory illness and ICU admission.

"Anybody who comes into the hospital, whether they're old or young, they're at certainly higher risk of death if they're coming in with respiratory failure. And certainly as you get older, become more frail, it certainly becomes harder for you to even be supported with a ventilator and make it out OK unscathed. When someone has pneumonia or respiratory infection, when you come into the hospital or are placed on any sort of oxygen delivery device, whether it be a nasocannula or some sort of heated high flow device or even a non-invasive mechanical ventilating device such as an oxygen mask or BiPAP, we treat you with oxygen, we treat you with antibiotics. And certainly if you fail those supportive measures, then we turn to mechanical ventilation, which it sounds like the pope has been placed upon. When someone has a buildup of secretions or mucus in their airways, sometimes the antibiotics and even the ventilator are not enough to help clear the airway so that we can provide enough oxygen and ventilate efficiently enough for the body to get rid of the carbon dioxide. And when that happens, sometimes the physician or the provider who's taking care of the patient may have to perform procedure called a bronchoscopy in which they place a tube with a camera and a light source at the end of it. And they go down, look into the lungs and remove as much mucus or phlegm that is down there to help the patient breathe better. In any case in which someone who is able to come off the breathing machine or able to transition down from having invasive ventilator support to a non-invasive, that's always a step in the right direction in the case of respiratory failure. However, in the pope's case, for instance, you know, having vomiting or emesis into a mask certainly puts you at higher risk of aspiration or, you know, contents that are coming from the stomach into your lower airways, which causes further inflammation and further risk of infection. And certainly that's not a good direction to head in." —Alan Hyslop, MD

Watch Dr. Hyslop on CNN

Looking for Patient Services?

Patients looking for a physician referral can search the IU Health provider directory by specialty or disease—or phone the IU Health on-call service at 317-916-3525 or 800-265-3220.