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F.
MICHAEL GLOTH, III, M.D., F.A.C.P., A.G.S.F., C.M.D.
Dr. Gloth is President of Victory Springs Senior Health
Associates and an Associate Professor of Medicine in the
Division of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology at Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine. Dr. Gloth graduated
from Wayne State University School of Medicine. He completed
his residency in Internal Medicine at the Union Memorial
Hospital in Baltimore and a 3-year Fellowship in Geriatric
Medicine and Gerontology at The Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine. In 2005, President Bush appointed Dr.
Gloth to serve as one of 22 members of the Advisory Committee
to the White House Conference on Aging. Dr. Gloth was also
appointed by the Secretary of Health and Human Services
to serve on the National Advisory Council on Aging to NIH
and by the Governor of Maryland to serve on the State Advisory
Council on Pain Management, which he chaired and the Maryland
Board of Physicians as the first Geriatrician to serve
on this Board.
Dr. Gloth represented the American College of Physicians
in the development of the National Osteoporosis Foundation’s
Guidelines for Osteoporosis. He also was the first Chair
of the Special Interest Groups on Osteoporosis and Metabolic
Bone Disease and for Health Information Technology for
the American Geriatrics Society. He was the American Geriatrics
Society Member on the national committee that developed
the Non-Malignant Pain in Long-Term Care Clinical Guidelines,
and most recently helped to develop the American Geriatrics
Society’s Guidelines for the Management of Persistent
Pain in the Older Persons. Dr. Gloth served on the panel
for the Revised Beer’s Criteria on Drugs To Be Avoided
in the Older Adult. Dr. Gloth has also written a book on
pain management entitled Handbook of Pain Relief in Older
Adults, released in December 2003 by Humana Press.
Dr. Gloth
is active in numerous regional and national advisory boards
and medical societies. He is an internationally recognized
author and speaker with over 50 peer-reviewed scientific
publications and over two hundred regional or national
oral presentations. He has served as an ad hoc reviewer
for a variety of scientific entities including Urban & Schwarzenberg
Medical Publishers, the Journal of Bone and Mineral Research,
the Johns Hopkins University Press, the Journal of the
American Geriatrics Society, the Annals of Internal Medicine,
the NIH Grants Study Section, National Institute on Alcohol
Abuse and Alcoholism, the American Journal of Epidemiology,
the American Journal of Medicine, and the Journal of the
American Medical Association.
Dr. Gloth has been the recipient
of numerous grants and awards including:
American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR) Fellow (1990),
International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI) Research Foundation
Fellow (1990 & 1991),
John A. Hartford Foundation Faculty Scholar (1991), Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine Lilly Clinician Scientist (1992 & 1993), The American
Geriatrics Society New Investigator Award (1993), "Top Doc" list
for Geriatrics by Baltimore Magazine three consecutive times, Award for best
1994 Maryland Medical Journal article, "Hospice: The most important thing
you didn't learn in medical school" (1995), and one of which he is particularly
fond, the Golden Apple Teaching Award, Union Memorial Hospital Housestaff (1996).
He has been listed in Who's Who (MARQUIS) and in Best Doctors in America, (Woodward/White
Selection) on multiple occasions. In 1999, he was given the C. Lockhard Conley
Award for Excellence in Resident Education and Research by the Maryland Chapter
of the American College of Physicians/American Society of Internal Medicine.
In 2001 Dr. Gloth was presented with only the second Outstanding Service Award
from the Hospice Network of Maryland. In 2003, he was the top Health Care
Hero award winner for Advances in Health Care given by
the Daily Record. In 2004 the Alzheimer’s Association
of Maryland honored him as a recipient of their Research
Superhero Award. Dr. Gloth is the president of two non-profit
organizations dedicated to medical education, as well as, an electronic medical
records company, Victory Springs Smart E-records. In 1998, Dr. Gloth found
time to run as a candidate for the U.S. Senate. Most importantly, he is a
husband and the father of 4 delightful daughters.
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