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Calvin C.J. Sia

Calvin C.J. Sia (born Calvin Chia Jung Sia, June 3, 1927 - August 19, 2020) was a primary care pediatrician from Hawaii who developed innovative programs to improve the quality of medical care for children in the United States and Asia. Two particular programs have been implemented throughout America: the Medical Home concept for primary care that has been promoted by the American Academy of Pediatrics[1][2] and the federal Emergency Medical Services for Children program administered by the U.S. Department of Health and Human ServicesHealth Resources and Services Administration, Maternal and Child Health Bureau.[3] His Medical Home model for pediatric care and early childhood development began to take root in several Asian countries in 2003.[4]

Calvin C.J. Sia
Born(1927-06-03)June 3, 1927
DiedAugust 19, 2020(2020-08-19) (aged 93)
EducationDartmouth College (BA), Western Reserve University (MD)
Occupation(s)Pediatrician, child health advocate

Sia also created the Hawaii Healthy Start Home Visiting Program to prevent child abuse and neglect[5] and co-founded Hawaii's Zero to Three program and Healthy and Ready to Learn Center. The Hawaii Healthy Start program, which targets expecting and new parents who may be at risk of abusing or neglecting their children, became the model for the Healthy Families America home visiting program that the United States Department of Justice's Office of Justice Programs identified in 2010 as a "promising" approach to child abuse prevention.[6] The Healthy and Ready to Learn Center was a three-year pilot project to initiate training and health delivery services in an integrated system of care, with pediatric residents and graduate students in social work and early childhood education working as a team.[7]

In addition, Sia spearheaded the creation of the Variety School for learning disabled children, a Honolulu-based educational institution for children ages 5 through 13.[8]

Education edit

Sia was a 1945 graduate of Punahou School in Honolulu and a graduate of Dartmouth College in 1950. He received his medical degree at Western Reserve University School of Medicine in 1955 and did a general rotating internship as a lieutenant in the U.S. Army Medical Corps at William Beaumont Army Hospital in El Paso, Texas from 1955 to 1956. Sia then served his pediatric residency under Dr. Irvine McQuarrie at Kauikeolani Children's Hospital in Honolulu,[9] and obtained his license to practice medicine in Hawaii in 1958. He was certified by the American Board of Pediatrics in 1960 and recertified in 1987. The University of Hawaii awarded Sia an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree in 1992.[10]

Public service edit

Early years edit

As a young practicing pediatrician, Sia joined the early cadre of American Academy of Pediatrics consultants for Head Start and Parent Child Centers in Hawaii in the 1960s and developed a strong interest in prenatal, neonatal, and postnatal causes of physical and mental disabilities in children. In a paper he presented in 1964 to the Hawaii Academy of Sciences on advances in neonatology, Sia cited progress in the care of premature babies but also noted that "completeness" of the first physical exam and the education of nurses to be on the alert for early signs of disabilities were possible ways to save newborns with previously lethal birth defects. He concluded by observing, "One of the basic problems will be in solving the causes and prevention of prematurity."[11]

Inspired by one of his mentors, Dr. Robert E. Cooke, the Johns Hopkins pediatrician behind the creation of the Hopkins hospital's Kennedy Institute for Handicapped Children, Sia helped establish Hawaii's Variety School for Learning Disabilities in 1967 and served as chairman of its board of directors for many years.[12] Sia broadened the scope of his community work to address all children with special health care needs. In the early 1970s, he invited Dr. C. Henry Kempe, founder of the Denver-based National Center for the Prevention and Treatment of Child Abuse and Neglect, and Dr. Ray E. Helfer of Michigan—two pioneers in the identification and treatment of child abuse—to help him and a small group of child advocates develop a plan to prevent and treat child abuse and neglect in the islands.[13] That effort netted one of the first 12 demonstration grant awards by the newly created National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect in 1975, with $1 million going to establish the first Hawaii Family Stress Center. The center, later renamed the Hawaii Family Support Center, established several child abuse and neglect programs on Oahu, including a home-visiting program based on Kempe's effective use of "lay therapists." These were home visitors from the community, properly trained and supervised by public health nurses and social workers who could earn the trust of at-risk families and focus on family strengths to reduce environmental risk and prevent child abuse and neglect.[14][15] The center's goal was to identify vulnerable families before their day-to-day stresses, isolation, and lack of parenting knowledge and good role models gave rise to abusive and neglectful behavior.

The center's operations coincided with an effort launched by Dr. Vince L. Hutchins and Dr. Merle McPherson of the Maternal and Child Health Bureau in 1977 to revise and update the mission of the federal agency's Title V and companion "crippled children's" programs to address child development and the prevention of developmental, behavioral and psychosocial problems.[16] McPherson took note of Sia's call for a continuous system of care originating with the primary care pediatrician.[17] The AAP collaborated in this effort by asking each state's AAP chapter to develop a Child Health Plan that set priorities for using MCHB block grants. Sia spearheaded the Hawaii planning effort, bringing together representatives from the Hawaii AAP Chapter, the UH medical school, the Hawaii Medical Association, and Kapiolani Medical Center for Women and Children. Armed with anecdotal evidence showing home visitors were able to promote effective parenting and ultimately improve outcomes, the group wrote a plan that incorporated a coordinated system of care that emphasized wellness and prevention for children, especially those with special needs.[18]

This was the birth of the Medical Home concept for primary care, to which Sia attached the slogan, “Every Child Deserves a Medical Home.”[19] Under this idea, which the American Academy of Pediatrics adopted as a policy statement in 1992,[20] the medical care of all infants, children and adolescents should be accessible, continuous, comprehensive, family-centered, coordinated, compassionate, and culturally effective.[21] It should be delivered or directed by well-trained physicians who provide primary care and help to manage and facilitate essentially all aspects of pediatric care. The physician should be known to the child and family and should be able to develop a partnership of mutual responsibility and trust with them. As Sia and his co-authors of a 2006 monograph on the Medical Home noted, this new model broadens the traditional focus on acute care to include prevention and well care at one end of the continuum and chronic care management of children with special health care needs at the other.[22][23] One expert observed, for example, that for a child born with spina bifida, Sia's Medical Home model would have the family and its health care provider compose a list of specialists and therapists who would be caring for the child and a timeline of anticipated surgeries and interventions. The aim would be to have as few emergencies and unanticipated events as possible.[2]

As the lead author of an often-cited article published by the journal Pediatrics in May 2004, Sia traced the development of the Medical Home concept.[24]

Pilot programs edit

By 1984, Sia had begun to implement the Medical Home concept in Hawaii. As chairman of an ad hoc state legislative task force on child abuse, he persuaded Hawaii lawmakers to authorize the Hawaii Healthy Start Home Visiting Program for the prevention of child abuse and neglect.[14] This state-funded pilot program, carried out by Hawaii Family Support Center in collaboration with the Hawaii Department of Health, focused on a neighborhood in the Ewa community on Oahu, a community with relatively high rates of child abuse and neglect.[15] A year later, he spearheaded the Hawaii Medical Association's effort to obtain a grant from the U.S. Maternal and Child Health Bureau, under the Special Projects of Regional and National Significance (SPRANS) initiative,[25] to train primary care physicians to provide a "Medical Home" for all children with special health care needs.[26] The demonstration project—which sought to help first-time families give their newborn children the best start in life—was so successful it was expanded from a small part of Oahu to other areas of Hawaii, and as word of the demonstrated positive outcomes spread, Hawaii's Healthy Start became a model for parenting education programs nationwide.[21] In the early 1990s, Healthy Families America and the National Healthy Start Association began to standardize and credential programs to ensure effectiveness and research-based practices. Across the United States, according to the MCHB, the home visiting program has shown that it can reduce child maltreatment and increase children's readiness for school.

Meanwhile, Sia launched the Hawaii Early Intervention Program for infants and toddlers in 1986 and also became actively involved with Hawaii's Early Intervention Coordinating Council for Zero to Three, placing this under Hawaii's Department of Health instead of the Department of Education.[26] The focus of this effort was to support the Medical Home system of care with prevention and early intervention programs.

Implementation edit

At a June 1987 conference called by Surgeon General C. Everett Koop and sponsored by the AAP and MCHB to address children with special needs, Sia and his delegation from Hawaii made a presentation of the Medical Home concept. Koop appeared to embrace it by issuing a report that endorsed a system of family-centered, community-based, coordinated care for children with special needs.[27] This was followed in 1989 by the first National Medical Home Conference, which drew 26 AAP state chapters to Hawaii for presentations organized by Sia and MCHB officials on how to train pediatricians in the Medical Home system of care. This led to consultations to introduce the Medical Home training program to interdisciplinary teams of pediatricians, families, and other health care–related professionals in Florida, Minnesota, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Washington and other states.[17]

The pace of activity prompted Sia to close his private medical practice in 1996 so he could devote his time as principal investigator on various early childhood grant projects promoting the Medical Home and its integrated system of care. He launched several initiatives with a MCHB Health Education Collaboration grant in support of interprofessional training in early childhood, a Carnegie Corporation of New York Starting Points planning grant in early childhood, and Consuelo Foundation of Hawaii's Healthy and Ready to Learn grant–all with the emphasis on integrating the continuum of care of the Medical Home with other health, family, and community services from a holistic approach.[7] The MCHB funding enabled him to travel across the country to promote the Medical Home concept to various communities, state AAP chapters, family advocacy groups and state Title V maternal and child health officers.

A three-year pilot project creating a Healthy and Ready to Learn Center in Hawaii began in 1992 and helped gauge the effectiveness of Sia's family-centered interprofessional collaboration approach.[7] Lessons learned from this project were subsequently adopted by the Office of Children and Youth of the Governor's Office of Hawaii with Sia as Co-Principal Investigator.[7] The Carnegie Corp. Starting Points grant then was assumed by the Good Beginnings Alliance in Hawaii.

Sia, serving as chairman of the American Medical Association's Section Council on Pediatrics and other AMA- and AAP-related posts, used those platforms and his network of contacts with other groups to help introduce the Medical Home concept into the care of adults[28] as well as children, although his primary focus has remained on pediatric care. In 2007, the AAP, American Academy of Family Physicians, American Academy of Pediatrics, American College of Physicians and the American Osteopathic Association adopted the Joint Principles of the Patient-Centered Medical Home that set a standard definition of a Medical Home. A year later, the AMA adopted the principles, which have since received support from over 700 member organizations of the Patient Centered Primary Care Collaborative, including primary care and specialty care societies, all major health plans and consumer organizations.[29] In addition, the term Medical Home now regularly shows up in the literature of parent groups such as Family Voices, in family practice journals and on the websites of state public health and medical agencies.[2]

Focus on Asia edit

Beginning in 2000, Sia expanded his efforts related to early child development and the Medical Home to Asia. In 2003, he created the Asia-US Partnership, a think tank based at the University of Hawaii medical school whose mission is to improve child health in Asia and the United States through cross-cultural exchanges with leaders in pediatrics.[30] That same year, Sia initiated and chaired the first of several AUSP Early Child Development and Primary Care conferences, bringing together pediatric and early childhood development experts from Asia and the United States to translate the science of early child development into policy and action. Participants have come from China (Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong), the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand and the United States. According to conference reports, these international exchanges have stimulated translation of the science on early child development and primary care into action programs in the broad areas of advocacy, service delivery, research, and training among the Asian early childhood professionals leadership.[4] Sia has continued to serve as co-chairman of these events, including the sixth international conference, held in the Philippines capital of Manila, in May 2011.[31] After hosting the earliest AUSP conferences in Hawaii, Sia decided to move the 2009 event to Shanghai and tapped a team of Chinese doctors to serve as conference host, signaling what he called a new phase of activity aimed at developing greater shared leadership and stronger "country teams."[32]

Pediatric emergency medicine edit

While planting the seeds of the Medical Home concept in Hawaii, Sia embarked on a related advocacy campaign focused on emergency care for children. In 1979, as president of the Hawaii Medical Association, Sia urged members of the American Academy of Pediatrics to develop multifaceted Emergency Medical Services programs designed to decrease disability and death in children. By January 1981, AAP's executive board had approved formation of a Section on Emergency Medicine, with Sia as one of its seven charter members.[33] He along with José B. Lee then-executive officer of the Hawaii Medical Association Emergency Medical Services Program began working closely with Senator Daniel Inouye, whom he happened to meet on a flight to Washington, D.C.,[2] to create a National Emergency Medical Services for Children System (EMSC) demonstration grant program to address acute injuries, illnesses and other childhood crises.[34] The program was launched after the October 1984 enactment of EMSC legislation (Public Law 98-555), a bipartisan measure sponsored by Inouye and Republican Senators Orrin Hatch of Utah and Lowell Weicker of Connecticut and endorsed by Surgeon General C. Everett Koop.[35][36] States receiving these demonstration grants established an emergency medical care service system for children that upgraded training and equipment for first responders and emergency departments to treat children. Hawaii ultimately received a grant to initiate its own emergency care system for children, which improved care coordination with the primary care physician. EMSC is now an established statewide system of care for children in all 50 states and territories.[3]

Retirement years edit

Sia retired from his Honolulu-based medical practice in 1996, after almost 40 years of treating patients,[37] but continued to promote Medical Home and community pediatrics as professor of pediatrics at the University of Hawaii John A. Burns School of Medicine.[38][39] Although he stepped down as chairman of the American Medical Association Section Council on Pediatrics in 2007, a post he assumed in 1983,[40][41] Sia continued to play a national role as an emeritus member of the executive committee of the National Center for Medical Home Implementation Project Advisory Committee, an organization he formerly served as chairman, for many years.[42]

Honors and awards edit

Several national and state organizations have recognized Sia for developing innovative and responsive family-centered grassroots services.[39] Among the awards he has received are these:

  • 2015Barbara Starfield Primary Care Leadership Award from the Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative, acknowledging "his legendary work leading and promoting the medical home movement across the pediatric community and beyond."[43]
  • 2012University of Hawaii Serving Heart Award.[44]
  • 2010U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration 75th Anniversary Director's Award to Champions In The Field Of Maternal And Child Health In The States And Jurisdictions.[45]
  • 2009Punahou School's Samuel Chapman Award recognizing an individual who has made outstanding contributions in the fields of public service, humanitarian or charitable efforts, arts, letters or sciences, which have gained the awardee significant national or international recognition.[46]
  • 2005 Establishment of the Calvin C.J. Sia Community Pediatrics & Medical Home Leadership & Advocacy Award, awarded annually by American Academy of Pediatrics, by Annie E. Dyson Foundation Initiatives, Chicago, IL.[47] The foundation also created the Calvin C.J. Sia Endowment to support the award.[48]
  • 2001 American Academy of Pediatrics, Clifford G. Grulee Award: Recognition of Outstanding Services to the academy beyond that required of the elected leadership.
  • 2001American Academy of Pediatrics, Job Lewis Smith Award in Community Pediatrics to an individual who has demonstrated outstanding leadership in Community Pediatrics.[49]
  • 2001 Establishment of the Calvin C.J. Sia MD Endowment by the Kapiolani Health Foundation to support people or organizations dedicated to improving the health and development of Hawaii's children.[50]
  • 1998 The American Medical Association Benjamin Rush Award, given to an individual who has made an outstanding contribution to the community for citizenship and public service above and beyond the call of duty as a practicing physician, presented at AMA Interim House of Delegates meeting.[51]
  • 1998 The First Emergency Medical Service for Children National Heroes Lifetime Achievement Award: for an individual who has dedicated himself to transforming the way emergency medical care is provided for children throughout the United States. National Congress on Childhood Emergencies, MCHB, HRSA, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the EMSC National Resource Center, Washington, DC.
  • 1997 Dr. Calvin Sia Day in Hawaii, proclaimed by Governor Benjamin Cayetano for Outstanding Service to his Profession and to the People of our State and Nation, July 28, 1997.
  • 1997 National Governors Association Private Citizen Award for Distinguished Service to State Government in support of his work with “family-centered, preventive approaches to health care to ensure a child’s healthy development," awarded at NGA convention in Las Vegas, NV.[52]
  • 1996 Federal Interagency Coordination Council Achievement Award for Outstanding Contribution to Improving Services to Children & Families through Interagency Collaboration, Washington, DC.
  • 1996 March of Dimes, Jonas Salk Memorial Award 1996 for Achievement in Maternal and Child Health.
  • 1992 Variety Clubs International Sir James Carreras Award recognizing the Physician who has Done Outstanding Work in the Field of Pediatrics Medicine, New York, NY.
  • 1992 American Medical Association and American Academy of Pediatrics Abraham Jacobi Award in Recognition of Significant Contributions in Pediatrics in the Tradition of Abraham Jacobi, Father of American Pediatrics, New York, NY.[53]
  • 1992 Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters, University of Hawaii.
  • 1991 Third C. Henry Kempe Memorial Award, The C. Henry Kempe National Center for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect, Denver, CO.
  • 1988 Commissioner's Award for Outstanding Leadership and Service in the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect, Dept. of Health & Human Services, Office of Human Development, Administration for Children, Youth & Families, Washington, DC.
  • 1979 Hawaii Medical Association's Physician of the Year Award.

Personal life edit

Sia was born in Beijing, China to Dr. Richard Ho Ping Sia, a physician and former Rockefeller Institute researcher in infectious diseases whose work laid the groundwork for the Avery–MacLeod–McCarty experiment on DNA and bacterial transformation,[54] and Mary Li Sia, a Honolulu-born author of several Chinese cookbooks. His mother's parents were Kong Tai Heong and Li Khai Fai, doctors who worked on the 1899 plague outbreak.[55][56] Sia and his older sister Sylvia and younger sister Julia, all United States citizens by birth, grew up in Hawaii, where the family settled in 1939 after living under Japanese occupation in Beijing for nearly two years.[2]

He married Katherine Wai Kwan Li (1927-2019), a daughter of Li Koon Chun, a patriarch of one of the four big families of Hong Kong, in 1951.[57] Sia had three sons, Richard H.P. Sia, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist;[58] Jeffrey H.K. Sia, a Honolulu-based attorney and former president of the Hawaii State Bar Association;[59] and Dr. Michael H.T. Sia, a pediatrician and chairman of Pediatrics at Kapiolani Medical Center for Women and Children;[60] six grandchildren; and a great-grandchild.[61]

Sia died at his Nuuanu home in Honolulu on Aug. 19, 2020, 10 months after the death of his wife. He reportedly had been in failing health due to end-stage kidney failure and a weak heart.[61]

References edit

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  14. ^ a b Princeton University. . Futureofchildren.org. Archived from the original on 2015-02-24. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  15. ^ a b Duggan, Anne K.; McFarlane, Elizabeth C.; Windham, Amy M.; Rohde, Charles A.; Salkever, David S.; Fuddy, Loretta; Rosenberg, Leon A.; Buchbinder, Sharon B.; Sia, Calvin C. J. (1999). "Evaluation of Hawaii's Healthy Start Program". The Future of Children. 9 (1): 66–90. doi:10.2307/1602722. JSTOR 1602722. PMID 10414011. S2CID 11892677.
  16. ^ "Celebrate 2010" (PDF). Fv-ncfpp.org. Retrieved 2015-07-11.[permanent dead link]
  17. ^ a b Taba, Sharon; Osterhus, Elizabeth; Tonniges, Thomas F.; Sia, Calvin (May 2004). "History of the Medical Home Concept". Pediatrics. 113 (Supplement 4): 1473–1478. doi:10.1542/peds.113.S4.1473. PMID 15121914. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  18. ^ "Building Medical Homes for Children With Special Health Care... : Infants & Young Children". LWW. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  19. ^ "Another National Honor for Pediatrics Visionary Calvin Sia, MD". Amchp.org. Retrieved 20 February 2020.
  20. ^ Medical Home Initiatives for Children With Special Needs Project Advisory Committee. American Academy of Pediatrics (2002). "The Medical Home". Pediatrics. 110 (1 Pt 1): 184–186. doi:10.1542/peds.110.1.184. PMID 12093969. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  21. ^ a b "From the Presidents". Amchp.org. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
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  25. ^ . Archived from the original on January 15, 2009. Retrieved November 8, 2011.
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  27. ^ Earl J. Brewer Jr (June 1989). "Family-Centered, Community-Based, Coordinated Care for Children With Special Health Care Needs". Pediatrics. 83 (6). Pedriatics.aappublications.org: 1055–1060. PMID 2726332. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  28. ^ (PDF). Effectibvehealthcare.ahrq.gov. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-23. Retrieved 2015-07-11.
  29. ^ "Pediatric Medical Homes : Laying the Foundation of a Promising Model of Care" (PDF). Nccp.org. Retrieved 2015-07-11.
  30. ^ "Early Child Development in Primary Care" (PDF). Cds.hawaii.edu. Retrieved 2015-07-11.
  31. ^ "Briefing Book : Asia-US Partnership 2011 : Early Childhood Development in Primary Care" (PDF). Cds.hawaii.edu. Retrieved 2015-07-11.
  32. ^ "Asia-US Partnership 2011 : Early Childhood Development in Primary Care" (PDF). Cds.hawaii.edu. Retrieved 2015-07-11.
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  37. ^ Altonn, Helen (October 30, 1996). "The godfather and the grandfather". Archives.starbulletin.com. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  38. ^ "Department of Pediatrics, University of Hawaii : 2012-2013 Annual Report" (PDF). Hawaii.edu. Retrieved 2015-07-11.
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  40. ^ "Board of Directors". Hawaiipacifichealth.org. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
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  42. ^ "National Center Overview - National Center for Medical Home Implementation - American Academy of Pediatrics". Medicalhomeinfo.org. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  43. ^ "Calvin Sia, MD Barbara Starfield Primary Care Leadership Awardee". pcpccevents.com. Retrieved 12 July 2016.
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  49. ^ Sia, C. C. J. (2002). "2001 Job Lewis Smith Award Acceptance Address". Pediatrics. 109 (3): 509–510. doi:10.1542/peds.109.3.509. PMID 11875149. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  50. ^ "Endowment to honor 'visionary' pediatrician". Archives.starbulletin.com. January 13, 2001. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  51. ^ "AMA presents Dr. Sia with Benjamin Rush Award". AAP News. 15 (1): 30. January 1999.
  52. ^ "Miscellanea Medica". JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association. 278 (12): 972. 1997. doi:10.1001/jama.1997.03550120030011.
  53. ^ Sia, Calvin C. J. (September 1992). "Abraham Jacobi Award Address, April 14, 1992 The Medical Home: Pediatric Practice and Child Advocacy in the 1990s". Pediatrics. 90 (3): 419–423. doi:10.1542/peds.90.3.419. PMID 1518700. S2CID 12701864. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  54. ^ Dawson, Martin H.; Sia, Richard H. P. (1930). "The Transformation of Pneumococcal Types In Vitro". Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. 27 (9): 989–990. doi:10.3181/00379727-27-5078. S2CID 84395600.
  55. ^ "Gems by Mary Li Sia". Flavorandfortune.com. 2003-07-06. Retrieved 2015-07-03.
  56. ^ Mohr, James C. (2004). Plague and Fire: Battling Black Death and the 1900 Burning of Honolulu's Chinatown. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. p. 152. ISBN 978-0-19-803676-0.
  57. ^ "Katherine Wai Kwan Li Sia". star-advertiser.com. Retrieved 2020-02-19.
  58. ^ "Richard H.P. Sia". icij.org. Retrieved 29 December 2017.
  59. ^ "Chong, Nishimoto, Sia, Nakamura & Goya". Hawadvocate.com. 2016-07-26. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  60. ^ "Dr. Michael H. T. Sia Pediatrics". healthtap.com. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  61. ^ a b "Calvin Chia Jung Sia". star-advertiser.com. Retrieved 2020-09-02.

External links edit

  • Palfrey, Judith. Child Health in America: Making a Difference Through Advocacy. Johns Hopkins University Press, Oct. 31, 2006, pp. 40–43.
  • Medical Home, Pulse (A Monthly Newsletter From The Association Of Maternal And Child Health Programs), April 2010
  • Calvin C.J. Sia - Interviewed by James E. Strain, Aug. 14, 2004, Honolulu, HI, Oral History Project, Pediatric History Center, American Academy of Pediatrics.
  • History of the Medical Home Concept, Pediatrics, Vol. 113, No. Supplement 4, May 1, 2004, pp. 1473 -1478
  • Durch, Jane S. and Lohr, Kathleen N., eds. Emergency Medical Services For Children Institute of Medicine, National Academy Press, 1993, Chapter 3, pp. 66–107
  • The Godfather and the Grandfather, Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Oct. 30, 1996
  • Calvin Chia Jung Sia, Honolulu Star-Advertiser, Aug. 30, 2020

calvin, born, calvin, chia, jung, june, 1927, august, 2020, primary, care, pediatrician, from, hawaii, developed, innovative, programs, improve, quality, medical, care, children, united, states, asia, particular, programs, have, been, implemented, throughout, . Calvin C J Sia born Calvin Chia Jung Sia June 3 1927 August 19 2020 was a primary care pediatrician from Hawaii who developed innovative programs to improve the quality of medical care for children in the United States and Asia Two particular programs have been implemented throughout America the Medical Home concept for primary care that has been promoted by the American Academy of Pediatrics 1 2 and the federal Emergency Medical Services for Children program administered by the U S Department of Health and Human Services Health Resources and Services Administration Maternal and Child Health Bureau 3 His Medical Home model for pediatric care and early childhood development began to take root in several Asian countries in 2003 4 Calvin C J SiaBorn 1927 06 03 June 3 1927Beijing ChinaDiedAugust 19 2020 2020 08 19 aged 93 Honolulu Hawaii United StatesEducationDartmouth College BA Western Reserve University MD Occupation s Pediatrician child health advocate Sia also created the Hawaii Healthy Start Home Visiting Program to prevent child abuse and neglect 5 and co founded Hawaii s Zero to Three program and Healthy and Ready to Learn Center The Hawaii Healthy Start program which targets expecting and new parents who may be at risk of abusing or neglecting their children became the model for the Healthy Families America home visiting program that the United States Department of Justice s Office of Justice Programs identified in 2010 as a promising approach to child abuse prevention 6 The Healthy and Ready to Learn Center was a three year pilot project to initiate training and health delivery services in an integrated system of care with pediatric residents and graduate students in social work and early childhood education working as a team 7 In addition Sia spearheaded the creation of the Variety School for learning disabled children a Honolulu based educational institution for children ages 5 through 13 8 Contents 1 Education 2 Public service 2 1 Early years 2 2 Pilot programs 2 3 Implementation 2 4 Focus on Asia 2 5 Pediatric emergency medicine 2 6 Retirement years 3 Honors and awards 4 Personal life 5 References 6 External linksEducation editSia was a 1945 graduate of Punahou School in Honolulu and a graduate of Dartmouth College in 1950 He received his medical degree at Western Reserve University School of Medicine in 1955 and did a general rotating internship as a lieutenant in the U S Army Medical Corps at William Beaumont Army Hospital in El Paso Texas from 1955 to 1956 Sia then served his pediatric residency under Dr Irvine McQuarrie at Kauikeolani Children s Hospital in Honolulu 9 and obtained his license to practice medicine in Hawaii in 1958 He was certified by the American Board of Pediatrics in 1960 and recertified in 1987 The University of Hawaii awarded Sia an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree in 1992 10 Public service editEarly years edit As a young practicing pediatrician Sia joined the early cadre of American Academy of Pediatrics consultants for Head Start and Parent Child Centers in Hawaii in the 1960s and developed a strong interest in prenatal neonatal and postnatal causes of physical and mental disabilities in children In a paper he presented in 1964 to the Hawaii Academy of Sciences on advances in neonatology Sia cited progress in the care of premature babies but also noted that completeness of the first physical exam and the education of nurses to be on the alert for early signs of disabilities were possible ways to save newborns with previously lethal birth defects He concluded by observing One of the basic problems will be in solving the causes and prevention of prematurity 11 Inspired by one of his mentors Dr Robert E Cooke the Johns Hopkins pediatrician behind the creation of the Hopkins hospital s Kennedy Institute for Handicapped Children Sia helped establish Hawaii s Variety School for Learning Disabilities in 1967 and served as chairman of its board of directors for many years 12 Sia broadened the scope of his community work to address all children with special health care needs In the early 1970s he invited Dr C Henry Kempe founder of the Denver based National Center for the Prevention and Treatment of Child Abuse and Neglect and Dr Ray E Helfer of Michigan two pioneers in the identification and treatment of child abuse to help him and a small group of child advocates develop a plan to prevent and treat child abuse and neglect in the islands 13 That effort netted one of the first 12 demonstration grant awards by the newly created National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect in 1975 with 1 million going to establish the first Hawaii Family Stress Center The center later renamed the Hawaii Family Support Center established several child abuse and neglect programs on Oahu including a home visiting program based on Kempe s effective use of lay therapists These were home visitors from the community properly trained and supervised by public health nurses and social workers who could earn the trust of at risk families and focus on family strengths to reduce environmental risk and prevent child abuse and neglect 14 15 The center s goal was to identify vulnerable families before their day to day stresses isolation and lack of parenting knowledge and good role models gave rise to abusive and neglectful behavior The center s operations coincided with an effort launched by Dr Vince L Hutchins and Dr Merle McPherson of the Maternal and Child Health Bureau in 1977 to revise and update the mission of the federal agency s Title V and companion crippled children s programs to address child development and the prevention of developmental behavioral and psychosocial problems 16 McPherson took note of Sia s call for a continuous system of care originating with the primary care pediatrician 17 The AAP collaborated in this effort by asking each state s AAP chapter to develop a Child Health Plan that set priorities for using MCHB block grants Sia spearheaded the Hawaii planning effort bringing together representatives from the Hawaii AAP Chapter the UH medical school the Hawaii Medical Association and Kapiolani Medical Center for Women and Children Armed with anecdotal evidence showing home visitors were able to promote effective parenting and ultimately improve outcomes the group wrote a plan that incorporated a coordinated system of care that emphasized wellness and prevention for children especially those with special needs 18 This was the birth of the Medical Home concept for primary care to which Sia attached the slogan Every Child Deserves a Medical Home 19 Under this idea which the American Academy of Pediatrics adopted as a policy statement in 1992 20 the medical care of all infants children and adolescents should be accessible continuous comprehensive family centered coordinated compassionate and culturally effective 21 It should be delivered or directed by well trained physicians who provide primary care and help to manage and facilitate essentially all aspects of pediatric care The physician should be known to the child and family and should be able to develop a partnership of mutual responsibility and trust with them As Sia and his co authors of a 2006 monograph on the Medical Home noted this new model broadens the traditional focus on acute care to include prevention and well care at one end of the continuum and chronic care management of children with special health care needs at the other 22 23 One expert observed for example that for a child born with spina bifida Sia s Medical Home model would have the family and its health care provider compose a list of specialists and therapists who would be caring for the child and a timeline of anticipated surgeries and interventions The aim would be to have as few emergencies and unanticipated events as possible 2 As the lead author of an often cited article published by the journal Pediatrics in May 2004 Sia traced the development of the Medical Home concept 24 Pilot programs edit By 1984 Sia had begun to implement the Medical Home concept in Hawaii As chairman of an ad hoc state legislative task force on child abuse he persuaded Hawaii lawmakers to authorize the Hawaii Healthy Start Home Visiting Program for the prevention of child abuse and neglect 14 This state funded pilot program carried out by Hawaii Family Support Center in collaboration with the Hawaii Department of Health focused on a neighborhood in the Ewa community on Oahu a community with relatively high rates of child abuse and neglect 15 A year later he spearheaded the Hawaii Medical Association s effort to obtain a grant from the U S Maternal and Child Health Bureau under the Special Projects of Regional and National Significance SPRANS initiative 25 to train primary care physicians to provide a Medical Home for all children with special health care needs 26 The demonstration project which sought to help first time families give their newborn children the best start in life was so successful it was expanded from a small part of Oahu to other areas of Hawaii and as word of the demonstrated positive outcomes spread Hawaii s Healthy Start became a model for parenting education programs nationwide 21 In the early 1990s Healthy Families America and the National Healthy Start Association began to standardize and credential programs to ensure effectiveness and research based practices Across the United States according to the MCHB the home visiting program has shown that it can reduce child maltreatment and increase children s readiness for school Meanwhile Sia launched the Hawaii Early Intervention Program for infants and toddlers in 1986 and also became actively involved with Hawaii s Early Intervention Coordinating Council for Zero to Three placing this under Hawaii s Department of Health instead of the Department of Education 26 The focus of this effort was to support the Medical Home system of care with prevention and early intervention programs Implementation edit At a June 1987 conference called by Surgeon General C Everett Koop and sponsored by the AAP and MCHB to address children with special needs Sia and his delegation from Hawaii made a presentation of the Medical Home concept Koop appeared to embrace it by issuing a report that endorsed a system of family centered community based coordinated care for children with special needs 27 This was followed in 1989 by the first National Medical Home Conference which drew 26 AAP state chapters to Hawaii for presentations organized by Sia and MCHB officials on how to train pediatricians in the Medical Home system of care This led to consultations to introduce the Medical Home training program to interdisciplinary teams of pediatricians families and other health care related professionals in Florida Minnesota Nebraska Pennsylvania Washington and other states 17 The pace of activity prompted Sia to close his private medical practice in 1996 so he could devote his time as principal investigator on various early childhood grant projects promoting the Medical Home and its integrated system of care He launched several initiatives with a MCHB Health Education Collaboration grant in support of interprofessional training in early childhood a Carnegie Corporation of New York Starting Points planning grant in early childhood and Consuelo Foundation of Hawaii s Healthy and Ready to Learn grant all with the emphasis on integrating the continuum of care of the Medical Home with other health family and community services from a holistic approach 7 The MCHB funding enabled him to travel across the country to promote the Medical Home concept to various communities state AAP chapters family advocacy groups and state Title V maternal and child health officers A three year pilot project creating a Healthy and Ready to Learn Center in Hawaii began in 1992 and helped gauge the effectiveness of Sia s family centered interprofessional collaboration approach 7 Lessons learned from this project were subsequently adopted by the Office of Children and Youth of the Governor s Office of Hawaii with Sia as Co Principal Investigator 7 The Carnegie Corp Starting Points grant then was assumed by the Good Beginnings Alliance in Hawaii Sia serving as chairman of the American Medical Association s Section Council on Pediatrics and other AMA and AAP related posts used those platforms and his network of contacts with other groups to help introduce the Medical Home concept into the care of adults 28 as well as children although his primary focus has remained on pediatric care In 2007 the AAP American Academy of Family Physicians American Academy of Pediatrics American College of Physicians and the American Osteopathic Association adopted the Joint Principles of the Patient Centered Medical Home that set a standard definition of a Medical Home A year later the AMA adopted the principles which have since received support from over 700 member organizations of the Patient Centered Primary Care Collaborative including primary care and specialty care societies all major health plans and consumer organizations 29 In addition the term Medical Home now regularly shows up in the literature of parent groups such as Family Voices in family practice journals and on the websites of state public health and medical agencies 2 Focus on Asia edit Beginning in 2000 Sia expanded his efforts related to early child development and the Medical Home to Asia In 2003 he created the Asia US Partnership a think tank based at the University of Hawaii medical school whose mission is to improve child health in Asia and the United States through cross cultural exchanges with leaders in pediatrics 30 That same year Sia initiated and chaired the first of several AUSP Early Child Development and Primary Care conferences bringing together pediatric and early childhood development experts from Asia and the United States to translate the science of early child development into policy and action Participants have come from China Beijing Shanghai and Hong Kong the Philippines Singapore and Thailand and the United States According to conference reports these international exchanges have stimulated translation of the science on early child development and primary care into action programs in the broad areas of advocacy service delivery research and training among the Asian early childhood professionals leadership 4 Sia has continued to serve as co chairman of these events including the sixth international conference held in the Philippines capital of Manila in May 2011 31 After hosting the earliest AUSP conferences in Hawaii Sia decided to move the 2009 event to Shanghai and tapped a team of Chinese doctors to serve as conference host signaling what he called a new phase of activity aimed at developing greater shared leadership and stronger country teams 32 Pediatric emergency medicine edit While planting the seeds of the Medical Home concept in Hawaii Sia embarked on a related advocacy campaign focused on emergency care for children In 1979 as president of the Hawaii Medical Association Sia urged members of the American Academy of Pediatrics to develop multifaceted Emergency Medical Services programs designed to decrease disability and death in children By January 1981 AAP s executive board had approved formation of a Section on Emergency Medicine with Sia as one of its seven charter members 33 He along with Jose B Lee then executive officer of the Hawaii Medical Association Emergency Medical Services Program began working closely with Senator Daniel Inouye whom he happened to meet on a flight to Washington D C 2 to create a National Emergency Medical Services for Children System EMSC demonstration grant program to address acute injuries illnesses and other childhood crises 34 The program was launched after the October 1984 enactment of EMSC legislation Public Law 98 555 a bipartisan measure sponsored by Inouye and Republican Senators Orrin Hatch of Utah and Lowell Weicker of Connecticut and endorsed by Surgeon General C Everett Koop 35 36 States receiving these demonstration grants established an emergency medical care service system for children that upgraded training and equipment for first responders and emergency departments to treat children Hawaii ultimately received a grant to initiate its own emergency care system for children which improved care coordination with the primary care physician EMSC is now an established statewide system of care for children in all 50 states and territories 3 Retirement years edit Sia retired from his Honolulu based medical practice in 1996 after almost 40 years of treating patients 37 but continued to promote Medical Home and community pediatrics as professor of pediatrics at the University of Hawaii John A Burns School of Medicine 38 39 Although he stepped down as chairman of the American Medical Association Section Council on Pediatrics in 2007 a post he assumed in 1983 40 41 Sia continued to play a national role as an emeritus member of the executive committee of the National Center for Medical Home Implementation Project Advisory Committee an organization he formerly served as chairman for many years 42 Honors and awards editSeveral national and state organizations have recognized Sia for developing innovative and responsive family centered grassroots services 39 Among the awards he has received are these 2015Barbara Starfield Primary Care Leadership Award from the Patient Centered Primary Care Collaborative acknowledging his legendary work leading and promoting the medical home movement across the pediatric community and beyond 43 2012University of Hawaii Serving Heart Award 44 2010U S Health Resources and Services Administration 75th Anniversary Director s Award to Champions In The Field Of Maternal And Child Health In The States And Jurisdictions 45 2009Punahou School s Samuel Chapman Award recognizing an individual who has made outstanding contributions in the fields of public service humanitarian or charitable efforts arts letters or sciences which have gained the awardee significant national or international recognition 46 2005 Establishment of the Calvin C J Sia Community Pediatrics amp Medical Home Leadership amp Advocacy Award awarded annually by American Academy of Pediatrics by Annie E Dyson Foundation Initiatives Chicago IL 47 The foundation also created the Calvin C J Sia Endowment to support the award 48 2001 American Academy of Pediatrics Clifford G Grulee Award Recognition of Outstanding Services to the academy beyond that required of the elected leadership 2001American Academy of Pediatrics Job Lewis Smith Award in Community Pediatrics to an individual who has demonstrated outstanding leadership in Community Pediatrics 49 2001 Establishment of the Calvin C J Sia MD Endowment by the Kapiolani Health Foundation to support people or organizations dedicated to improving the health and development of Hawaii s children 50 1998 The American Medical Association Benjamin Rush Award given to an individual who has made an outstanding contribution to the community for citizenship and public service above and beyond the call of duty as a practicing physician presented at AMA Interim House of Delegates meeting 51 1998 The First Emergency Medical Service for Children National Heroes Lifetime Achievement Award for an individual who has dedicated himself to transforming the way emergency medical care is provided for children throughout the United States National Congress on Childhood Emergencies MCHB HRSA the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the EMSC National Resource Center Washington DC 1997 Dr Calvin Sia Day in Hawaii proclaimed by Governor Benjamin Cayetano for Outstanding Service to his Profession and to the People of our State and Nation July 28 1997 1997 National Governors Association Private Citizen Award for Distinguished Service to State Government in support of his work with family centered preventive approaches to health care to ensure a child s healthy development awarded at NGA convention in Las Vegas NV 52 1996 Federal Interagency Coordination Council Achievement Award for Outstanding Contribution to Improving Services to Children amp Families through Interagency Collaboration Washington DC 1996 March of Dimes Jonas Salk Memorial Award 1996 for Achievement in Maternal and Child Health 1992 Variety Clubs International Sir James Carreras Award recognizing the Physician who has Done Outstanding Work in the Field of Pediatrics Medicine New York NY 1992 American Medical Association and American Academy of Pediatrics Abraham Jacobi Award in Recognition of Significant Contributions in Pediatrics in the Tradition of Abraham Jacobi Father of American Pediatrics New York NY 53 1992 Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters University of Hawaii 1991 Third C Henry Kempe Memorial Award The C Henry Kempe National Center for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect Denver CO 1988 Commissioner s Award for Outstanding Leadership and Service in the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect Dept of Health amp Human Services Office of Human Development Administration for Children Youth amp Families Washington DC 1979 Hawaii Medical Association s Physician of the Year Award Personal life editSia was born in Beijing China to Dr Richard Ho Ping Sia a physician and former Rockefeller Institute researcher in infectious diseases whose work laid the groundwork for the Avery MacLeod McCarty experiment on DNA and bacterial transformation 54 and Mary Li Sia a Honolulu born author of several Chinese cookbooks His mother s parents were Kong Tai Heong and Li Khai Fai doctors who worked on the 1899 plague outbreak 55 56 Sia and his older sister Sylvia and younger sister Julia all United States citizens by birth grew up in Hawaii where the family settled in 1939 after living under Japanese occupation in Beijing for nearly two years 2 He married Katherine Wai Kwan Li 1927 2019 a daughter of Li Koon Chun a patriarch of one of the four big families of Hong Kong in 1951 57 Sia had three sons Richard H P Sia a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist 58 Jeffrey H K Sia a Honolulu based attorney and former president of the Hawaii State Bar Association 59 and Dr Michael H T Sia a pediatrician and chairman of Pediatrics at Kapiolani Medical Center for Women and Children 60 six grandchildren and a great grandchild 61 Sia died at his Nuuanu home in Honolulu on Aug 19 2020 10 months after the death of his wife He reportedly had been in failing health due to end stage kidney failure and a weak heart 61 References edit AAP MEMBER SPOTLIGHT Aap org Archived from the original on 10 August 2014 Retrieved 23 February 2015 a b c d e Palfrey Judith 2006 11 27 Child Health in America ISBN 9780801884535 Retrieved 23 February 2015 a b Emergency Medical Services for Children Nap edu 1993 doi 10 17226 2137 ISBN 978 0 309 04888 0 Retrieved 23 February 2015 a b Asia US Partnership 2006 Early Child Development in Primary Care PDF Department of Pediatrics John A Burns School of Medicine University of Hawai i at Manoa 2006 Retrieved 23 February 2015 Samer S El Kamary 2004 Hawaii s Healthy Start Home Visiting Program Determinants and Impact of Rapid Repeat Birth Pediatrics 114 3 e317 e326 doi 10 1542 peds 2004 0618 PMID 15342892 Retrieved 23 February 2015 Program Healthy Families America CrimeSolutions gov 2011 09 23 Retrieved 2015 07 03 a b c d CLAS Building Bridges Lessons Learned in Interprofessional Collaboration Clas uiuc edu Retrieved 23 February 2015 Variety School of Hawaii Varietyschool org Retrieved 23 February 2015 Sia Calvin C J September 1992 Abraham Jacobi Award Address April 14 1992 The Medical Home Pediatric Practice and Child Advocacy in the 1990s Pediatrics 90 3 Pediatrics aappublications org 419 423 doi 10 1542 peds 90 3 419 PMID 1518700 S2CID 12701864 Retrieved 23 February 2015 Honorary degrees conferred by the University of Hawaii Hawaii edu Retrieved 23 February 2015 Sia Calvin C J 1964 Advances in neonatology PDF Proceedings of the Hawaiian Academy of Science 16 17 Calvin C J Sia MD FAAP Resume PDF Hawaiiaap org Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2015 07 11 Helping to Prevent Child Abuse and Future Criminal Consequences Hawai i Healthy Start TXT Ncjrs org Retrieved 2015 07 11 a b Princeton University The Future of Children Futureofchildren org Archived from the original on 2015 02 24 Retrieved 23 February 2015 a b Duggan Anne K McFarlane Elizabeth C Windham Amy M Rohde Charles A Salkever David S Fuddy Loretta Rosenberg Leon A Buchbinder Sharon B Sia Calvin C J 1999 Evaluation of Hawaii s Healthy Start Program The Future of Children 9 1 66 90 doi 10 2307 1602722 JSTOR 1602722 PMID 10414011 S2CID 11892677 Celebrate 2010 PDF Fv ncfpp org Retrieved 2015 07 11 permanent dead link a b Taba Sharon Osterhus Elizabeth Tonniges Thomas F Sia Calvin May 2004 History of the Medical Home Concept Pediatrics 113 Supplement 4 1473 1478 doi 10 1542 peds 113 S4 1473 PMID 15121914 Retrieved 27 November 2015 Building Medical Homes for Children With Special Health Care Infants amp Young Children LWW Retrieved 23 February 2015 Another National Honor for Pediatrics Visionary Calvin Sia MD Amchp org Retrieved 20 February 2020 Medical Home Initiatives for Children With Special Needs Project Advisory Committee American Academy of Pediatrics 2002 The Medical Home Pediatrics 110 1 Pt 1 184 186 doi 10 1542 peds 110 1 184 PMID 12093969 Retrieved 27 November 2015 a b From the Presidents Amchp org Retrieved 23 February 2015 1 permanent dead link The Medical Home and Early Child Development in Primary Care 2006 Archived from the original on October 27 2011 Retrieved November 20 2011 Calvin Sia May 2004 History of the Medical Home Concept Pediatrics 113 Supplement 4 Pedriatrics aappublications org 1473 1478 doi 10 1542 peds 113 S4 1473 Retrieved 23 February 2015 Block Grant Program Archived from the original on January 15 2009 Retrieved November 8 2011 a b History of the Medical Home Concept PDF Pediatrics aappublications org Retrieved 2015 07 11 Earl J Brewer Jr June 1989 Family Centered Community Based Coordinated Care for Children With Special Health Care Needs Pediatrics 83 6 Pedriatics aappublications org 1055 1060 PMID 2726332 Retrieved 23 February 2015 2 The Patient Centered Medical Home Closing the Quality Gap Revisiting the State of the Science Executive Summary PDF Effectibvehealthcare ahrq gov Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 23 Retrieved 2015 07 11 Pediatric Medical Homes Laying the Foundation of a Promising Model of Care PDF Nccp org Retrieved 2015 07 11 Early Child Development in Primary Care PDF Cds hawaii edu Retrieved 2015 07 11 Briefing Book Asia US Partnership 2011 Early Childhood Development in Primary Care PDF Cds hawaii edu Retrieved 2015 07 11 Asia US Partnership 2011 Early Childhood Development in Primary Care PDF Cds hawaii edu Retrieved 2015 07 11 The AAP Section on Emergency Medicine PDF 2 aap org Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2015 07 11 Pediatrics American Academy of Physicians American College of Emergency 2004 APLS the Pediatric Emergency Medicine Resource ISBN 9780763733162 Retrieved 23 February 2015 Emergency Medical Services for Children EMSC Health ny gov Retrieved 23 February 2015 EMSC an historical perspective PDF Archived from the original PDF on February 3 2012 Retrieved February 6 2012 Altonn Helen October 30 1996 The godfather and the grandfather Archives starbulletin com Retrieved 23 February 2015 Department of Pediatrics University of Hawaii 2012 2013 Annual Report PDF Hawaii edu Retrieved 2015 07 11 a b Community Pediatrics Pediatric Residency Hawaiiresidency org Archived from the original on 24 February 2015 Retrieved 23 February 2015 Board of Directors Hawaiipacifichealth org Retrieved 23 February 2015 Medicine Institute of Durch Jane S Services Committee on Pediatric Emergency Medical February 1993 Emergency Medical Services for Children ISBN 9780309048880 Retrieved 23 February 2015 National Center Overview National Center for Medical Home Implementation American Academy of Pediatrics Medicalhomeinfo org Retrieved 23 February 2015 Calvin Sia MD Barbara Starfield Primary Care Leadership Awardee pcpccevents com Retrieved 12 July 2016 Manoa Serving Heart Awards are bestowed on four individuals University of Hawaii News hawaii edu Retrieved 27 November 2015 75th Anniversary Celebration Awardees Hrsa gov Archived from the original on 24 February 2015 Retrieved 23 February 2015 Punahou School 2009 PAA Awards Punahou edu Archived from the original on 24 February 2015 Retrieved 23 February 2015 Call for Nominations 2013 Calvin C J Sia Community Pediatrics Medical Home Leadership and Advocacy Award PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 12 2014 Retrieved August 9 2014 Other Named Endowments Aap org Archived from the original on 24 February 2015 Retrieved 24 February 2015 Sia C C J 2002 2001 Job Lewis Smith Award Acceptance Address Pediatrics 109 3 509 510 doi 10 1542 peds 109 3 509 PMID 11875149 Retrieved 24 February 2015 Endowment to honor visionary pediatrician Archives starbulletin com January 13 2001 Retrieved 24 February 2015 AMA presents Dr Sia with Benjamin Rush Award AAP News 15 1 30 January 1999 Miscellanea Medica JAMA The Journal of the American Medical Association 278 12 972 1997 doi 10 1001 jama 1997 03550120030011 Sia Calvin C J September 1992 Abraham Jacobi Award Address April 14 1992 The Medical Home Pediatric Practice and Child Advocacy in the 1990s Pediatrics 90 3 419 423 doi 10 1542 peds 90 3 419 PMID 1518700 S2CID 12701864 Retrieved 24 February 2015 Dawson Martin H Sia Richard H P 1930 The Transformation of Pneumococcal Types In Vitro Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine 27 9 989 990 doi 10 3181 00379727 27 5078 S2CID 84395600 Gems by Mary Li Sia Flavorandfortune com 2003 07 06 Retrieved 2015 07 03 Mohr James C 2004 Plague and Fire Battling Black Death and the 1900 Burning of Honolulu s Chinatown Oxford England Oxford University Press p 152 ISBN 978 0 19 803676 0 Katherine Wai Kwan Li Sia star advertiser com Retrieved 2020 02 19 Richard H P Sia icij org Retrieved 29 December 2017 Chong Nishimoto Sia Nakamura amp Goya Hawadvocate com 2016 07 26 Retrieved 2019 01 29 Dr Michael H T Sia Pediatrics healthtap com Retrieved 2020 02 26 a b Calvin Chia Jung Sia star advertiser com Retrieved 2020 09 02 External links editPalfrey Judith Child Health in America Making a Difference Through Advocacy Johns Hopkins University Press Oct 31 2006 pp 40 43 Medical Home Pulse A Monthly Newsletter From The Association Of Maternal And Child Health Programs April 2010 Calvin C J Sia Interviewed by James E Strain Aug 14 2004 Honolulu HI Oral History Project Pediatric History Center American Academy of Pediatrics History of the Medical Home Concept Pediatrics Vol 113 No Supplement 4 May 1 2004 pp 1473 1478 Durch Jane S and Lohr Kathleen N eds Emergency Medical Services For Children Institute of Medicine National Academy Press 1993 Chapter 3 pp 66 107 American Academy of Pediatrics Member Spotlight The Godfather and the Grandfather Honolulu Star Bulletin Oct 30 1996 Calvin Chia Jung Sia Honolulu Star Advertiser Aug 30 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Calvin C J Sia amp oldid 1220299904, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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