Phillip Coule, MD

Vice President and Chief Medical Officer, AU Health System & Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs

  • Augusta GA UNITED STATES
  • Medical College of Georgia and Augusta University

Phillip Coule is an expert in COVID-19 testing, hospital quality & safety, emergency medicine, disaster preparedness, and GRAChIE.

Contact

Spotlight

2 min

Vaping injuries and deaths on the rise — Augusta University experts talk health risks

As the nationwide death toll due to vaping-related lung disease rose to 17 this week, this topic has been making headlines lately as concerned medical providers, parents and even politicians are now demanding action.This week, Augusta University Medical Center reported its first patient with a vaping-related lung injury was admitted to the ICU. More than 500 cases of lung damage and seven deaths linked to vaping have been reported across the U.S. in the last few weeks, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.“It took decades and decades of smoking for us to realize that we had a lot of older people carrying around oxygen tanks and that they were doing damage to their lungs over an extended period of time,” said Dr. Phillip Coule, vice president and chief medical officer for Augusta University Health System. “My concern is we have people thinking that this is safe and we’re not going to know that true effect of this, in terms of the damage occurring to people’s lungs, for years.”Augusta University experts are available to discuss the wide range of questions related to vaping, including:Rise of vaping-related illnesses/deathsKnown and unknown health risksMisnomer that vaping is saferHigh rate of teen/young adult usage“The CDC made a landmark statement: That all of our efforts to get children and adolescents and young adults to move away from nicotine have been ‘erased’ – that’s a very powerful word,” said Dr. Martha Tingen, associate director of Cancer Prevention, Control and Population Health at the Georgia Cancer Center.The health risks related to e-cigarette use are impossible to ignore, she said.“Some students are having a major experience immediately after they smoke, that they are having shallow breathing and they can’t get their breath. When they are admitted into the hospital and go to the emergency room, they are seeing that they actually have some lung damage and they are setting themselves up for future, more intensive lung disease problems,” Tingen said.Dr. Coule serves as vice president and chief medical officer for AU Health System and associate dean for clinical affairs at the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University.Dr. Tingen is a behavioral nurse scientist targeting the prevention of tobacco use in children. She can speak with media regarding the problems e-cigarettes pose for our society.Our experts are available to discuss the wide range of topics concerning e-cigarettes and vaping – simply click on either expert’s icon to arrange an interview.

Phillip Coule, MD

Social

Biography

Phillip Coule, MD serves as vice president and chief medical officer for Augusta University Health System, and associate dean for clinical affairs for the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University. Coule is an expert in emergency medicine, disaster preparedness and mass casualty triage, and he serves as Medical Director for AirLife Georgia’s helicopter transport service and is on the boards of the National Disaster Life Support Foundation. He is also director of the hospital Emergency Communications Center and helps coordinate the hospital’s emergency response during disasters and mass casualty events. Coule received his medical degree from MCG, where he also completed his residency in emergency medicine. He also earned a Master of Business Administration from the University of Tennessee.

Areas of Expertise

Coronavirus
Mass Casualty Triage
Emergency Medicine
Hospital Quality and Safety
Disaster Preparedness
GRAChiE

Media Appearances

First vaping related lung injury hits Augusta

WJBF  

2019-09-30

We sat down with Dr. Phillip Coule, Vice President and Chief Medical Officer. He said, “Those that are vaping need to know that vaping is not safe and this could happen to any one of them tomorrow.”

The nationwide vaping epidemic has hit home. AU’s top doctor wants to let people know the crisis is serious, even in the CSRA.

“We don’t know exactly what is happening in these cases,” he said of the injuries. “Although a large number of them are associated with illicit or not manufactured products being vaped.”

Dr. Coule said the issue surrounds patients with unexplained respiratory or lung failure. Hundreds of cases have popped up across the country that health experts believe are due to vape pens filled with THC, CBD oils or some other chemical. He added the one incident locally is just the tip of the iceberg...

View More

Urgent Care and Prompt Care see long lines due to Omicron tests

WFXG  tv

Augusta University Health's Chief Medical Officer Dr. Phillip Coule says, “If you’re not exposed and if you don’t have symptoms, don’t go get tested.”

If you are having symptoms, however, you should go get tested. Dr. Coule says you might also not even need a test if you're having cold-like symptoms right now. He says you can treat it as a "presumptive positive."

View More

Hospitals still full but omicron surge may have peaked in Augusta, doctor says

Augusta Chronicle  print

2022-01-24

Even as he sees COVID-19 cases rising at AU Medical Center and other hospitals across Augusta and Aiken, Dr. Phillip Coule feels the crest of the omicron wave might be behind them.

According to the latest data, "we're clearly over the peak," said the chief medical officer for AU Health System. New cases in Richmond County dropped 22% over the previous week, McDuffie dipped 24% and Georgia decreased 20% while new cases rose 32% in Aiken County, 11% in Columbia County and 89% in Burke County, and 11% in South Carolina, according to an analysis by the Augusta Chronicle. Some areas around Augusta may actually be a little further behind in terms of reaching their peak, Coule said.

View More

Show All +

Articles

Mass Casualty Triage: An Evaluation of the Science and Refinement of a National Guideline

Society for Disaster Medicine and Public Health

E. Brooke Lerner, David C. Cone, Eric S. Weinstein, Richard B. Schwartz...

2013

Mass casualty triage is the process of prioritizing multiple victims when resources are not sufficient to treat everyone immediately. No national guideline for mass casualty triage exists in the United States. The lack of a national guideline has resulted in variability in triage processes, tags, and nomenclature...

View more

Comparison of Two Packable Hemostatic Gauze Dressings in a Porcine Hemorrhage Model

Prehospital Emergecy Care

Richard Bruce Schwartz , MD, Bradford Zahner Reynolds , MD, Stephen A. Shiver , MD, E. Brooke Lerner , PhD, Eric Mark Greenfield , DO, Ricaurte A. Solis , DO, Nicholas A. Kimpel , DO, Phillip L. Coule , MD & John G. McManus , MD

2011

Uncontrolled hemorrhage remains the primary cause of preventable battlefield mortality and a significant cause of domestic civilian mortality. Rapid hemorrhage control is crucial for survival. ChitoGauze and Combat Gauze are commercially available products marketed for rapid hemorrhage control...

View more

Analysis of Vaccination Rates and New COVID-19 Infections by US County, July-August 2021

JAMA Network

Dr. Phillip Coule, Dr. Neil MacKinnon, Dr. Diego Cuadros, F. DeWolfe Miller, Dr. Susanne Awad

2022-02-10

There is substantial variation in the spatial distribution of COVID-19 vaccination rates in the United States. We conducted an ecological data visualization analysis to assess the association of the heterogeneous distribution of vaccination coverage with the dynamics of COVID-19 during the third wave of the pandemic in the US.

View more

Show All +