Community Health & Family Medicine · Community Health and Family Medicine 2015 - 2016 Annual...

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Community Health & Family Medicine Annual Report 2015-2016

Transcript of Community Health & Family Medicine · Community Health and Family Medicine 2015 - 2016 Annual...

Page 1: Community Health & Family Medicine · Community Health and Family Medicine 2015 - 2016 Annual Report “To serve our patients and community, positively shaping the future of healthcare

Community Health & Family Medicine Annual Report 2015-2016

Page 2: Community Health & Family Medicine · Community Health and Family Medicine 2015 - 2016 Annual Report “To serve our patients and community, positively shaping the future of healthcare
Page 3: Community Health & Family Medicine · Community Health and Family Medicine 2015 - 2016 Annual Report “To serve our patients and community, positively shaping the future of healthcare

Department of

Community Health and Family Medicine 2015 - 2016 Annual Report

“To serve our patients and community, positively shaping the future of healthcare through outstanding teaching, discovery, and innovation in Family Medicine” is the mission of the Department of Community Health and Family Medicine at the University of Florida. We seek to provide the highest quality of care to the diverse patient population we serve and educate learners of all types and levels. We actively study, critically review and research our efforts in these activities to ensure we are providing high quality medical education in an environment that fosters the highest quality patient care. The strength of our department shows through our people. Our 59 faculty, nurses, and staff members provided patient care, with over 190,000 outpatient encounters and more than 2,000 hospital admissions, taught medical students in all years, and trained family medicine

residents and primary care sports medicine fellows. Our department members are involved in expanding the scholarly foundation for Family Medicine through active participation in research studies and quality improvement projects. We are involved in a wide range of activities throughout the Gainesville community and provide leadership in many important areas for patient care and education. As a proud and active member of the Gator Nation, our department serves as the interface between our community and the outstanding academic health center. I appreciate your interest in reading our annual report and in the Department of Community Health and Family Medicine at the University of Florida. We look forward to another exceptional year for our department and to continue serving our patients and learners. Respectfully, Peter J. Carek, MD, MS, CAQSM Professor and Chairman C. Sue and Louis C. Murray, M.D. Professor in Family Medicine

Peter J. Carek, MD, MS, CAQSM Professor and Chairman

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To serve our patients and community,

positively shaping the future of health care

through outstanding teaching, discovery

and innovation in family medicine.

To be a nationally recognized model

department of family medicine.

Our Mission: Our Vision:

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NEW FACULTY AND PROVIDERS

DANIELLE CHAPLIN, ARNP

NURSE PRACITIONER HAILE PLANTATION

Ms. Danielle Chaplin is a Family Nurse Practitioner at UF Health Family Medicine - Haile Plantation. She received her bachelor’s degree in nursing from the University of Florida and began practicing as an ICU nurse in 2010. She returned to the University of Florida and received doctoral training in Advanced Practice Nursing in 2014 as a family nurse practitioner. Danielle worked in private practice providing family medicine prior to joining the Haile Plantation clinic.

HELEN HAGAN, MD

ASSISTANT PROFESSOR HAMPTON OAKS

Dr. Helen Hagan is from Southern California, venturing to Iowa for college at Grinnell and joining the Navy for medical school. During her time in the Navy, she enjoyed providing Primary Care as a Flight Surgeon in Florida, North Carolina, and San Diego. Following these adventures, she completed her Family Medicine Residency in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She then practiced in Beaufort, South Carolina and returned to Florida to practice with the Department of Community Health and Family Medicine at the University of Florida. She is a former ice skater and enjoys outdoor pursuits with her three children.

SILVIA HUNKINS, ARNP NURSE PRACITIONER

MAIN Ms. Silvia Hunkins is a Family Nurse Practitioner at UF Health Family Medicine - Main. She received her master’s degree in mental health counseling from Nova Southeastern University and Master of Science in Nursing degree from Chamberlain College of Nursing.

LAURA PERRY, PHD, LMHC

ADJ ASSISTANT PROFESSOR MENTAL HEALTH COUNSELOR - MAIN

Dr. Laura Perry is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor and Certified Rehabilitation Counselor at UF Health Family Medicine - Main and at other clinics, as needed.

MARIBETH PORTER, MD, MS

ASSISTANT PROFESSOR MAIN

Dr. Maribeth Porter is from Mississippi and attended Ole Miss. She graduated from the University of Mississippi SOM and completed the Trident/MUSC residency program serving as chief resident in 2012-2013. She then completed an academic generalist fellowship and obtained her Master of Science in Clinical Research degree in 2015. Dr.

Porter's clinical and research interests include global and underserved health, quality improvement and health services research and residency education.

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RETIREES

R. WHIT CURRY, JR, MD PROFESSOR EMERITUS

Dr. Whit Curry, Jr. joined the department as a Clinical Fellow in 1976 and as a faculty member since 1977. He served as Residency Director for ten years prior to being appointed Department Chairman in 1992. He possesses an outstanding record of academic productivity and achievements as noted by his numerous peer-reviewed publications and presentations during meetings of nationally recognized medical organizations. Dr. Curry has served in numerous leadership roles and received a number of awards, including the College of Medicine’s Lifetime Achievement Award. After 22 years, he stepped down from the Chair position in 2013 and retired in June 2016. Dr. Curry continues to teach as Professor Emeritus, giving lectures for the department.

LINDA HENSLEY, MD

CLINICAL ASSISTANT PROFESSOR LAB DIRECTOR AND MEDICAL DIRECTOR - MAIN

Dr. Linda Hensley joined the department in 2000 and taught and served as a core faculty member of the Family Medicine Residency Program Clinic and Medical Director for the Family Medicine at Main Street office. Dr. Hensley is a four-time recipient of the College of Medicine Exemplary Techer Award and the College of Medicine’s Thorkild W. Anderson Award. Dr. Hensley retired after sixteen years of service in June 2016.

LARRY G. ROOKS, MD

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR EMERITUS

Dr. Larry Rooks joined the Department as a resident in 1979 and as a faculty member in 1982. He served as clinic Medical Director, Director of the Rural Health program, Medical Director for the North Florida AHEC Program, and Co-Director of Undergraduate Education. He has also served as the Chair of the College of Medicine Curriculum Committee and Director of the Family Medicine and Ambulatory Care Clerkship. He has been the recipient of numerous awards for his excellent teaching skills including the Society of Teaching Scholars Lifetime Achievement Award.

Dr. Rooks has contributed to the development and implementation of several educational experiences that have become integrated into the curriculum of the College of Medicine. He created the first year primary care clerkship in the College of Medicine. The University of Florida was the first medical school to implement this

educational experience for medical students and this model has been replicated in numerous other medical schools. This preceptorship has been one of the College’s highest rated first- year courses for 20 years. He retired from his academic position in June 2016 after serving 34 years as a core faculty member of Community Health and Family Medicine. Dr. Rooks continues to teach as Associate Professor Emeritus.

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CLINICAL SERVICES

FAMILY MEDICINE CLINIC SITES University of Florida Health Physicians, or UFHP, is responsible for managing the clinical component of the University of Florida College of Medicine, or COM, faculty practice plan. UF Health Family Medicine includes nine clinical locations throughout the Gainesville area. Each clinic has a medical director and an ACU manager who oversees the day-to-day operations of the clinic. In total, we have 59 physicians throughout each of our nine clinics. We have a large, unique and diverse patient population that we are able to serve. This year, CHFM providers had over 190,854 patient encounters.

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CLINICAL SERVICES

PATIENT CARE 1. UF Health Family Medicine - Eastside UF Health Family Medicine - Eastside is a full-service health care resource for children, adults and families. Providers at Eastside offer patients of all ages a wide range of services including physical check-ups and immunizations, health screenings, treatment for various ailments, health care advice and education, pharmacy assistance programs and linkage with community resources. The staff includes four physicians, one pediatrician, one pediatric nurse practitioner, one pharmacist, one social work associate and one RN Health Coach.

Medical director: Elvira Mercado, MD Physicians and providers: Peter Carek, MD, MS, CAQSM; Martha Green, MD; Elvira Mercado, MD; Kim Nguyen, MD; Paul Psychas, MD; Jason Powell, PharmD; Karen Theoktisto, DNP, ARNP; Lindsay Novak, PA Nursing staff: Reathea Felder, RN; Yata Armstrong, LPN; Christy Brannin, LPN; Cherie Kirkland, LPN; Victoria Paras, LPN; Rick Sterling, LPN; Gerard Williams, LPN ACU manager: Tawana Brown

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CLINICAL SERVICES

2. UF Health Family Medicine - Haile Plantation UF Health Family Medicine - Haile Plantation provides a wide variety of services, including, but not limited to immunizations, treatment of chronic and acute illnesses, minor surgery, gynecology, dermatology, health maintenance, cryosurgery and skin care. As Haile continues to grow to meet the needs of the community, UF Health Physicians was pleased to announce the opening of a new Haile facility. In 2014, UF Health broke ground with the new location just a mile up the road in Haile. The new location features 24 exam rooms, nearly double the number of exam rooms; 10,987 square-feet of building space; and will hire additional Family Medicine physicians to better serve patients.

Medical director: Michael McTiernan, MD Physicians and providers: Carmen Bray, MD; Philippa Bright, MD; Lucia Hansen, MD; Volha Ihnatsenka, MD; Mitul Jones, MD; Michael McTiernan, MD; Daniel Rubin, MD; Danielle Chaplin, ARNP; Samantha Holtzman, PA-C Nursing staff: Yolanda Anderson, LPN; Rhonda Bosch, LPN; Shannon Brown, Lead LPN; Kayla Hewlett, LPN; Anne Holsey, LPN; Heather Misinec, LPN; Michaele Schauer, LPN; Lara Smith, LPN; Jini Walker, LPN ACU manager: Kimberly Mann

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CLINICAL SERVICES

3. UF Health Family Medicine - Hampton Oaks UF Health Family Medicine - Hampton Oaks offers comprehensive care for patients ranging from children to geriatrics. The medical staff includes seven physicians who are all board certified and one clinical psychologist. Besides routine and preventive healthcare, our physicians treat many conditions including diabetes mellitus, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, coronary artery disease, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis, thyroid problems, menopausal issues, asthma, other pulmonary issues, allergies and more. Our physicians also have various areas of special interests, such as women’s and men’s health, adolescent health, complementary/alternative medical treatments, acupuncture, minor procedures, chronic pain conditions and more, making it a very diverse and dynamic team.

Medical director: Siegfried Schmidt, MD, PhD Physicians and providers: Ku-Lang Chang, MD; R. Whit Curry, Jr., MD; Helen Hagan, MD; Maria Elisa Lupi, MD; Frank Orlando, MD; Siegfried Schmidt, MD, PhD; Kristy Breuhl Smith, MD; Petra Townsend, MD; Charles Byrd, PhD Nursing staff: Sonji Bennett, LPN; Reva High, LPN; Lila Greenfield, LPN; Jody Petroski, LPN; Tamara Jones, LPN; Donna Beverly, LPN ACU manager: Ashley Pankey

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CLINICAL SERVICES

4. UF Health Family Medicine - Jonesville UF Health Family Medicine - Jonesville provides a wide variety of services, including but not limited to treatment of chronic and acute illnesses, minor surgery, gynecology, dermatology, health maintenance, cryosurgery, colposcopy, skin care, and immunizations. Physicians at Jonesville are happy to serve not only the Gainesville and Jonesville community, but also the surrounding areas such as: Newberry, Archer, Williston, Bronson, High Springs, Alachua, Fort White, Lake City and Ocala. The clinic completed their 3-year ramp-up period in November 2015 with notable growth achieved during that time.

Medical director: Alpa Desai, DO Physicians and providers: Alpa Desai, DO; Run Gan, MD; Althea Tyndall-Smith, MD, MS Nursing Staff: Lacondrea Bethea, CMA; Melanie McCray, LPN; Latasha Forrest-Wilcox, LPN ACU manager: Amanda Brown

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CLINICAL SERVICES

5. UF Health Family Medicine - Main UF Health Family Medicine – Main’s residency program was instituted in 1973 and over 287 residents have graduated and attained board certification since the program’s inception. Residents are trained to deliver competent and compassionate health care services to all segments of the community, from birth to elder care, in both inpatient and outpatient settings.

Medical director: Linda Hensley, MD Residency program director: Karen Hall, MD Physicians and providers: Tanya Anim, MD; David Feller, MD; Karen Hall, MD; Linda Hensley, MD; John Malaty, MD; Charlie Michaudet, MD, CAQSM; David Quillen, MD; George Samraj, MD; Michael Ware, MD; Eric Dietrich, PharmD; John Gums, PharmD; Lesa Gilbert, ARNP; Thomas Ward, LCSW Nursing Staff: Ladona Mordecai, RN; Mary Anderson, LPN; Mae Borders, LPN; Tonia Garver, LPN; Cavonda Jenkins, LPN; Arifah Reese, LPN; Cassandra Davis¸ MA; Muriel Flanders, MA; Dyan Krahn, Rad Tech/MA; Amanda Lairson, MA; Jon Bryan, Med Tech; Rebecca Johnson, Med Tech ACU manager: Mindy Halbrook

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CLINICAL SERVICES

6. UF Health Family Medicine - Old Town UF Health Family Medicine – Old Town is located in Old Town, Florida, which is approximately 45 miles west of Gainesville near the Suwannee River. Physicians at this site provide primary care services to a rural community by offering comprehensive adult and pediatric medical care, treatment for chronic and acute illnesses, minor surgery, cryosurgery, skin care, geriatric care, pharmacy consultations, diabetic education and Coumadin clinic. Old Town provides the high level of care that our rural patients recognize and appreciate while making them feel like family. As an added service for our patients at Old Town, cardiologists from UF Health travel to see patients with more complex cardiovascular disease on a monthly basis.

Medical director: Grant Harrell, MD Physicians and providers: Grant Harrell, MD; Robert Hatch, MD, MPH; Sarah Laibstain, MD; Richard Rathe, MD; Larry Rooks, MD; Tan D. Tran, MD; Andrew Bray, PA-C; Gary Rexroat, PA-C Nursing staff: Angie White, Lead CMA; Cassie Cabrera, CMA; Megan Hendricks, CMA; Alisha Huggins, CMA; Ellie Jones, CMA; Crystal Miller, CMA; Erica Sheppard, CMA ACU manager: Gredel Buzbee

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CLINICAL SERVICES

7. Primary Care After Hours Serving as a joint venture between the departments of Community Health and Family Medicine and Internal Medicine, UF Health Primary Care After Hours provides an opportunity for patients in our system to access primary care providers after normal business hours. Due to the popularity of having an after-hours clinic, in September 2014, physicians began seeing patients from 6pm to 9pm Monday through Friday, and 10am to 1pm on Saturdays. Primary Care After Hours had a total of 2,272 visits for the year. Clinic visits have consistently increased despite a limited marketing campaign. The clinic currently sees returning patients from internal UF primary care as well as new primary care patients who cannot wait for the first available new visit with their chosen primary care physician.

Medical director: Robert Hatch, MD Physicians and providers: The Primary Care After Hours clinic is staffed by physicians from the Department of Community Health and Family Medicine and the Department of Medicine, on a rotating basis. Nursing staff: The Primary Care After Hours clinic is staffed by nurses from the Department of Community Health and Family Medicine, on a rotating basis. ACU manager: Katrina Williams

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CLINICAL SERVICES

8. Student Health Care Center The UF Student Health Care Center has been providing care to students since the institution’s inception in 1906. The mission of SHCC is to help all students achieve maximum physical and emotional health so that they may fully participate in the numerous educational and personal growth opportunities. We strive to become the preferred providers for all students. Some services, programs and clinics include nutritional counseling services, primary care, women’s health, psychiatry services, sexual health services and sports medicine. Through a partnership with the Alachua County Health Department, free STI screening is offered. Student Health also assists the College of Medicine with its role as primary in influenza vaccination of faculty/staff/students. Numerous outreach and campus-coordinated programs continue and the most recent programs added are comprehensive weight management for patients with BMI > 30 and transgender medical services. Outside of its core mission, Student Health has also taken on the role of Occupational Medicine and some Worker’s Compensation services for the University.

Director: Guy Nicolette, MD, CAQSM Physicians and providers: Ronald Berry, MD; Jay Clugston, MD, CAQSM; Cynthia Eddleton, MD; Katie Edenfield, MD, CAQSM; Michele Emery, MD; Jocelyn Gravlee, MD, CAQSM; Ann Grooms, MD; Boyd Kellett, MD; Eileen Lauzardo, MD; Charlie Michaudet, MD, CAQSM; Guy Nicolette, MD, CAQSM; Cheree Padilla, MD, CAQSM; Dodi Alexander, ARNP; Ramona Brandon, ARNP; Jennifer Donelan, ARNP; Kirsty Freshwater, ARNP; Sheryl Heinicka, ARNP; Abigail Gabriel, ARNP; Nicole Germain, ARNP; Sue Greishaw, ARNP; Stacey Jackson, ARNP; Susan Nesbit, ARNP; Susan Ryals, ARNP; Ann Zaia, ARNP; Malcolm Hickox, PA-C; Cheri Sellers, PA-C; Melissa Turley, PA-C; Janis Mena, RD

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CLINICAL SERVICES

Nursing staff: Roya Barger, RN; Karen Brennan, RN; Araceli (Ari) Chiodo, RN; Debbie Farrar, RN; LaKendra Filer, RN; Karen Fournier, RN; Lillian Hummer, RN; Monifa Madison, RN; Bruce Major, RN; Gwenn Major, RN; Kelly Mitchell, RN; Ken Mize, RN; Louise Okken, RN; Toni Ratliff, RN; Stacy Rider, RN; Karen Williams, RN; Diane Webb, RN; Mike Wuerz, RN Clinical operations: Toni Ratliff, RN

EDUCATION Community Health and Family Medicine plays a major role in medical student teaching and maintains a key leadership role in educational policy within the University of Florida College of Medicine. We routinely have one to two medical students rotating throughout each of the clinics every semester. UF Health Family Medicine - Main has medical students and about 30 residents every year.

Family Medicine Practice Location Medical Students Residents Fellows

Eastside

Haile

Hampton Oaks

Jonesville

Main

Old Town

Student Health

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MEDICAL STUDENT EDUCATION PROGRAM

EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP WITHIN THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA COLLEGE OF MEDICINE

The department is proud to have several educational leaders. Daniel Rubin, MD took over the existing first-year preceptorship program in 2012, and expanded it to include additional preceptorships at the end of the first-year and in the middle of second-year. Larry Rooks, MD former chair of the Curriculum Committee, created both the preceptorship course for first years and the Staying Whole in Medicine program for all students. Robert Hatch, MD, MPH is chair of the Clerkship Directors Committee and former chair of the Admissions Committee. Jocelyn Gravlee, MD created the fourth-year Advanced Procedures elective, one of the most popular electives at the University of Florida. Richard Rathe, MD serves as assistant dean for Informatics. David Feller, MD was selected as the first recipient of the Scheveling Professorship of Integrative Medicine in recognition of his expertise and teaching in this area. These physicians and several others from our department have been heavily involved in the college’s efforts to renovate the medical school curriculum.

TEACHING AWARDS UF College of Medicine Exemplary Teacher Awards, 2015-16: Philippa Bright, MD Robert Hatch, MD, MPH Shenary Cotter, MD Mitul Jones, MD Alpa Desai, DO John Malaty, MD David Feller, MD Charlie Michaudet, MD, CAQSM Jocelyn Gravlee, MD David Quillen, MD Helen Hagan, MD Richard Rathe, MD Lucia Hansen, MD Daniel Rubin, MD J. Grant Harrell, MD Althea Tyndall-Smith, MD, MS

Robert Hatch, MD, MPH received the Ken Kellner, MD, PhD Outstanding Clerkship Director Award by the College of Medicine. Dr. Hatch was presented the award by Kenneth Kellner, MD, PhD at the Sixteenth Annual Celebration of Excellence in Medical Education Reception on March 16, 2016. The event was hosted by the Society of Teaching Scholars in the George T. Harrell, MD Medical Education Building.

REQUIRED FIRST, SECOND AND THIRD-YEAR COURSES THAT CHFM FACULTY TEACH Family Medicine and Ambulatory Care Clerkship (Third Year) Family Medicine Sub-Internship (Fourth Year) Genetics and Health (First Year) Geriatrics Clerkship (Fourth Year) Foundations of Medicine (First Year) Fundamentals of Microbiology and Immunology (First Year) Health Outcomes and Policy 1 (First Year) Hematology (Second Year) Internal Medicine Clerkship (Third Year) Introduction to Cancer Biology and Clinical Oncology (First Year) Introduction to Clinical Medicine 1-4 (First and Second Year) Introduction to Clinical Practice (First Year) Pediatrics Clerkship (Third Year) Psychiatry Clerkship (Third Year) Research and Discovery Foundations in Medicine (First Year)

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MEDICAL STUDENT EDUCATION PROGRAM

PRECEPTORSHIP SERIES Daniel Rubin, MD is the course director of this popular series, which is consistently rated as one of the highlights of the first two years. Students report a higher degree of confidence upon entering third year clerkships after completing the course. The course continues to integrate a spectrum of topics related to community health in its lecture series. It also remains one of the best intensive opportunities for students to be exposed to positive Family Medicine role models early in their education.

REQUIRED FOURTH-YEAR MEDICINE ROTATION Students can satisfy the fourth-year medicine requirement by spending four weeks on the family medicine inpatient service. All slots are filled early in the process. Students have responded well to the changes that were implemented to produce a more consistent and rigorous experience.

COURSE DIRECTORS AND STAFF Robert Hatch, MD, MPH: Family Medicine and Ambulatory Care Clerkship David Feller, MD: Required Fourth-Year Medicine/Family Medicine Option Jocelyn Gravlee, MD: Common and Advanced Procedures Daniel Rubin, MD: Preceptorship Series William Allen, JD, MDiv: Advanced Issues in Medical Ethics and Law; Financial, Business and Health Systems Aspects of Medicine; and Research and Discovery Foundations of Medicine Maria Bolanos: Academic Assistant for Family Medicine and Ambulatory Care Clerkship

The George T. Harrell, M.D., Medical Education Building

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BIOETHICS, LAW AND MEDICAL PROFESSIONALISM PROGRAM

EDUCATION ACTIVIES The Program in Bioethics, Law and Medical Professionalism (BLMP) faculty teaches ethics and professionalism to medical students throughout all four years of their education, as well as to residents and fellows in various departments, including CHFM. The BLMP faculty also teach in the Putting Families First: Interdisciplinary Family Health course. The education the BLMP faculty provide for medical students is integrated into all four years of undergraduate medical education at UF in the “thread” called Ethics, Law, and Professionalism. The BLMP faculty taught first- and second-year medical students during both the fall and spring semesters of the 2015-2016 academic year through lectures and active learning activities, with much of the active learning take place in the students’ Collaborative Learning Groups (CLGs). Additionally, BLMP faculty taught medical students in workshops and case conferences in the Family Medicine/Ambulatory Care Clerkship, Pediatrics Clerkship and Psychiatry Clerkship. Professor Lauren Solberg assumed directorship of BLMP in November 2015. Under her leadership, the program has expanded BLMP’s educational offerings into the Geriatrics Clerkship, which all medical students are required to complete in their fourth year. Other important program accomplishments include the updating of teaching activities in the curriculum for first- and second-year medical students and the initiation of the Advance Directives Training Project for quality improvement and education in CHFM. Professor Bill Allen provided research ethics training for graduate students in the College of Medicine Interdisciplinary Ph.D. program, the Advanced Postgraduate Program in Clinical Investigation, the Genetics Institute, and other programs throughout the Health Science Center. He served as course director for “Pharmacy Law and Ethics,” taught to College of Pharmacy students, and for “Research and Discovery Foundations in Medicine,” a required course for first-year medical students. Dr. Ray Moseley co-directed with Professor Allen a highly-enrolled fourth-year elective for medical students called “Financial, Business, and Health Systems Aspects of Medicine”. Dr. Moseley also facilitates ethics workshops for Internal Medicine residents on a monthly basis. This year, Dr. Moseley worked with leaders of sister institutions and the Florida Bioethics Network, for which he was a co-founder and is a current board member, to organize the Taking Informed Consent Seriously conference, held on April 29, 2016 in Maitland, Florida. The conference featured a series of talks and panel discussions that emphasized the ethical importance of informed consent and provided attendees with useful strategies for their implementation in both the clinical and research settings.

ADVANCE DIRECTIVES EDUCATION FOR CHFM The team of BLMP faculty offered their expertise to all faculty and staff members at each CHFM clinic through the Advance Directives Training Project (ADTP). During sessions offered to each clinic, BLMP faculty educated physicians, nurses, medical assistants, financial representatives and others about the importance of advance directives and explained the need for clinic-specific protocols to ensure conversations about advance directives occur for each patient. The ADTP will continue into the upcoming academic year with more training sessions, data gathering and quality improvement activities.

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BIOETHICS, LAW AND MEDICAL PROFESSIONALISM PROGRAM

ETHICS COMMITTEE AND CONSULTATION SERVICE BLMP faculty members continued to serve on the UF Health Ethics Committee during the 2015-2016 academic year. Professors Allen, Moseley and Solberg performed ethics consultations for providers and patients at the UF Health Shands Hospital, providing the majority of the staffing for this service. This service is a critical one for the hospital and outpatient clinics, providing both individual and team-based consultation for a variety of issues such as capacity concerns, plan of care conflicts, end of life care planning and advance directives, informed consent questions, confidentiality concerns and appointment of social worker proxies, among other issues.

PROGRAM FACULTY AND STAFF Lauren Solberg, JD, MTS - Director William “Bill” Allen, JD, MDiv Ray Moseley, PhD Bernie Amaro, CPC-A, Academic Assistant

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RESIDENT EDUCATION PROGRAM

MISSION The University of Florida Family Medicine Residency program trains residents to be competent, compassionate, ethical and professional physicians who provide comprehensive care to patients in a continuity of care model. Emphasis is placed on practical and direct patient care-based training in addition to didactic teaching that enhances the learning environment. The program is also committed to supporting each resident in his or her educational endeavors, whether the resident selects a clinical path or moves on to a fellowship, academic medicine or research. New initiatives in the program include emphasis on high quality care and patient safety, as well as enhanced academic and research opportunities. The mission is to instill in residents the love of lifelong learning by providing the framework and tools to ensure success in the long-term art and practice of medicine.

PROGRAM PROFILE The University of Florida Family Medicine Residency program has made a significant impact on the care provided to patients in Alachua County and northern Florida since 1973. Since then, 287 graduates have entered the family physician workforce as providers of comprehensive medical care, academics and providers of specialty care in geriatrics, emergency medicine, hospital-based medicine and sports medicine.

CURRENT ACTIVITIES AND HIGHLIGHTS FOR 2015-2016 The University of Florida Family Medicine Residency program has achieved recognition as a Patient-Centered Medical Home. We continue to work toward team-based care and plan to reconfigure our office in four teams mentored by faculty and led by senior residents. We continue our ongoing efforts toward multi-level resident quality improvement projects. The three teams were facilitated by Peter Carek, MD, MS, CAQSM; Maribeth Porter, MD, MS; and John Malaty, MD and included projects on Dexa Scan for Detection of Osteoporosis, Preventative Health Smart Sets and Primary Care Management of Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD). Going forward, quality initiatives will be reassigned to new teams. The program also conducts physicals for high school athletes, the Special Olympics and Pop Warner Little Scholars and provides educational support for local schools in health, tobacco avoidance and lifestyle education. The program’s attention to enhancing scholarly activity paid off well over the year. Residents traveled to national sports medicine meetings and presented posters while faculty and residents presented at the national Society of Teachers of Family Medicine conference held this year. As new interns were welcomed, the class of 2016 graduated. Eight of eleven graduates will be staying in Florida. The 2016 graduates continued the trend of 100 percent board certification, which marks four consecutive years of 100 percent pass rate. Additionally, the In-Training Exam scores improved and exceeded national means. Residency program director: Karen Hall, MD Core Faculty: Tanya Anim, MD; David Feller, MD; Karen Hall, MD; Linda Hensley, MD; John Malaty, MD; Charlie Michaudet, MD, CAQSM; George Samraj, MD; Faculty: Carmen Bray, MD; Philippa Bright, MD; Peter Carek, MD, MS, CAQSM; Ku-Lang Chang, MD; R. Whit Curry, Jr, MD; Run Gan, MD; Helen Hagan, MD; Lucia Hansen, MD; Robert Hatch, MD, MPH; Mitul Jones, MD; Michael McTiernan, MD; Elvira Mercado, MD; Maribeth Porter, MD, MS; David Quillen, MD; Siegfried Schmidt, MD, PhD;

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RESIDENT EDUCATION PROGRAM

Michael Ware, MD; Eric Dietrich, PharmD; John Gums, PharmD; Steven Smith, PharmD; Elizabeth DiCarlo, ARNP; Lesa Gilbert, ARNP; Silvia Hunkins, ARNP Education coordinator: Tina Engstrom Residency/fellowship program assistant: Kimberly Zinkel

BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE The Behavioral Medicine faculty and staff participate in projects and activities involving all major missions of the department and the UF College of Medicine, including teaching and administrative activities, direct patient care services and consultation and research and scholarly activities. In terms of educational programs, the Behavioral Medicine faculty undertake the development and implementation of medical educational programs for family medicine residents, medical students, community practicing physicians and academic physicians. One major focus of the program is on curricula designed to educate medical trainees in various aspects of the biopsychosocial model of care, including home visits and office-based lifestyle modification (e.g., smoking cessation, healthy exercise patterns). Other areas of special emphasis include 360-degree evaluation of resident performance, including physician-patient communication skills and professionalism. The Behavioral Medicine program is an integral part of the clinical mission of the department. The faculty and staff of the program provide psychotherapy and evaluation services to patients referred by the physician faculty of the department and by the family medicine residents. In addition, the Behavioral Medicine faculty often combine clinical care and resident educational activities.

MEDICAL STUDENT CURRICULUM The Behavioral Medicine faculty are involved in teaching activities for medical students during their first, second, third and fourth years of training, including:

• Co-leading small groups during the “Essentials of Patient Care” and “Interdisciplinary Family Health” sections of the medical school curriculum.

• Workshops and lectures on behavioral medicine topics for students during their third and fourth year clerkships.

• Ten to 12 lectures on human behavior and mental health presented as part of the Residency program didactic sessions for third-year Family Medicine and Ambulatory Care clerkship and fourth year required Medicine rotation students.

• Behavioral Medicine program faculty consult and precept third- and fourth-year medical students regarding the social agency needs of patients, the assessment of psychological disorders or family conflict.

CURRENT EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES - RESIDENTS The Behavioral Medicine program’s educational activities for our residents include: Orientation Program, Balint and Support Groups, Faculty Advisor Roles, Resident Evaluation Processes, Third-Year Behavioral Medicine Rotation and Didactic Series. Faculty: David Feller, MD; Michael Ware, MD; Jenny Land, PhD; Laura Perry, PhD, LMHC; Tom Ward, LCSW

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RESIDENT EDUCATION PROGRAM

Class of 2016 Practice Location Lisa Chacko, MD CHFM Eastside/Main – Gainesville, FL

John George, MD Hospitalist – Gainesville, FL

Sally Head Hinman, MD Sports Medicine Fellowship – Tampa, FL

Courtney Jones, MD Private Practice – Gainesville, FL

Erica Judge, MD Private Practice – Austell, GA

Jason Konopack, MD CHFM Old Town – Old Town, FL

John Lombardi, MD Hospitalist – Longwood, FL

Keiran Shute, MD Hospitalist – Morton, WA

Dale Taylor, MD Hospitalist – Gainesville, FL

Greg Westwood, MD CHFM Old Town – Old Town, FL

Lilika White, MD Jacksonville, TX

Class of 2017 Class of 2018 Class of 2019

Jeffrey Costain, MD Saba University

Ryan Dickert, MD Florida State University

Gary Allen, DO Des Moines University College of

Osteopathic Medicine

Samuel Dickmann, MD University of Florida

Bahram Dideban, MD Saba University

Kassandra Brown, MD Loma Linda University

Monique Dieuvil, MD University of Florida

George Eldayrie, MD University of Florida

Lauren Conroy, MD University of Florida

Nicholas Dorsey, MD St. George’s University

Jairo Olivas, MD University of New Mexico

Denise Driscoll, MD University of Florida

Brittany Hoyes, MD Morehouse School of Medicine

Rica Jester, MD Florida Atlantic University

Frank Gonzalez, MD University of Miami

David Kramer, DO Kansas City University of Medicine

Biosciences

Jessica Prince, MD Tufts University

Alexander Leasure, MD University of Queensland

Danielle Olson, MD University of Miami

Jacob Szereszekski, MD Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

Sey Park, MD University of Florida

Isaac Truelson, MD Florida International University

Coty Tino, MD East Tennessee State University

Jason Seitchik, MD Albert Einstein

College of Medicine

Kelli Woody, MD

Saba University Janelle Wilkinson, MD

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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QUALITY AND PATIENT SAFETY

OVERVIEW The Department of Community Health and Family Medicine continually evaluates current quality indicators and sets new goals as we strive to provide the best patient care possible. Department-wide quality improvement projects, which plan to focus on chronic conditions such as diabetes mellitus and preventive services such as influenza and pneumococcal vaccination and smoking cessation, have been initiated at each individual clinic site. These projects will be tailored to each clinic’s unique patient population and be overseen by the medical director. The dedication of the faculty and staff at each of our clinics is the driving force behind offering our patients the very best care available. PATIENT-CENTERED MEDICAL HOME RECOGNITION All clinics in our department are recognized by the National Committee for Quality Assurance, or NCQA, as Level 2 Patient-Centered Medical Homes, or PCMH. Obtaining PCMH recognition on any level requires a significant amount of effort and expertise, with much dedication and coordinated teamwork, in order to transform clinic processes and practices from one of the traditional doctor-centered medical practice to one that is truly patient-centered. PCMH models have been shown to improve patient health outcomes and professional physician satisfaction. HOSPITAL READMISSION REDUCTION The Family Medicine service has seen a reduction in their hospital readmission rates. A readmission registry has been created to keep track of patients who were discharged from family medicine practices at UF Health. Using data from the registry, weekly quality improvement rounds are conducted with the inpatient team and readmission risk factors for specific patients are reviewed and addressed. This weekly retrospective readmission root-cause analysis that highlights high-risk patients, conducted by the inpatient team (residents, attending, case manager), began December 1, 2014, as part of the Resident Safety and Quality Rounds. As a result of this activity, CHFM was the recipient of the 2015 Family Practice Management Award for Practice Improvement sponsored by the Society of the Teachers of Family Medicine and the American Academy of Family Physicians. QUALITY IMPROVEMENT ACTIVITIES CHFM was honored in December 2015 as the recipient of the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Family Practice Management Award for Practice Improvement 2015. This award is cosponsored by Family Practice Management and is offered annually to a primary care practice or practice organization that has made significant improvement in one or more of the following in the past three calendar years: • Clinical outcomes • Clinical process improvement • Patient satisfaction • Staff satisfaction • Physician satisfaction • Practice efficiency and productivity

Peter Carek, MD, MS, CAQSM and Paulette Blanc receiving, on behalf of CHFM, the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine

Family Practice Management Award for Practice Improvement 2015 at the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Conference.

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QUALITY AND PATIENT SAFETY

SUMMARY OF PROJECT

University of Florida Family Medicine Inpatient Readmission Project

Readmissions following hospital discharge are common and used by many individuals as a measure of the quality of care provided. According to the Centers for Medicare Services (CMS), approximately 1 in 5 patients are readmitted to the hospital within 30 days of discharge. The Family Medicine inpatient team at the University of Florida was among the services with the highest readmission rates in the hospital with an average of 23 percent of patients discharged returning to the hospital within 30 days of their discharge. To address this high rate of readmission, a multidisciplinary team was assembled in the fall of 2014 to implement a High-Risk Patient Discharge Plan Project. This team included family medicine physicians, emergency medicine physicians, pharmacists, nurses, social workers and home health providers. The project team developed and implemented two parallel processes in an effort to reduce the readmission rate: 1) Identification of High-Risk Patients and 2) Implementation of Weekly Readmission Review Quality Rounds. The readmission rate for the ten weeks prior to the start of our initiative averaged 23 percent. For the 20 weeks following the implementation of this project, the readmission rate of the Family Medicine inpatient service was 18 percent, an absolute reduction of 5 percent and a relative reduction of 22 percent in the readmission rate. This reduction was attributed to the following activities: a multidisciplinary team was organized, the weekly readmission rate was used to monitor progress, the inpatient team met weekly to specifically review patients that were recently readmitted, a group of patients at high risk for readmission were identified and trends in selected aspects of their demographics and care were examined. Figure. Weekly readmission rate for the inpatient service (control chart with median (solid line) and upper and lower confidence limits (dashed lines)). Arrow denotes initial time of intervention implementation.

17%

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22%19%

25%29%

24%

16%

27%

32%

39%

14%

20%21%22%18%

11%

22%26%

20%16%

14%

23%

17%

18%21%

14%14%

22%20%

17%

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10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

50%

Read

mis

sion

Rat

e (%

)

Week of Dishcarge

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Page 26: Community Health & Family Medicine · Community Health and Family Medicine 2015 - 2016 Annual Report “To serve our patients and community, positively shaping the future of healthcare

COMMUNITY HEALTH

Rural Health ORGANIZATION AND STRUCTURE UF Health Family Medicine – Old Town continues to see growth in its practice and proves to be a vital role in the Medical Student Education program. The five faculty members who participated in the program this past year include Grant Harrell, MD, Medical Director; Robert Hatch, MD, MPH; Larry Rooks, MD; Sarah Laibstain, MD; and Richard Rathe, MD. Andrew Bray, PA and Gary Rexroat, PA were the two physician assistants at the Old Town clinic. Mr. Rexroat continues to provide care for a large patient population with his style and expertise and has been in practice for over 40 years. Karen Sando, PharmD continues to provide patient care through managing Old Town’s Coumadin clinic, Smoking Cessation clinic and Diabetic Education program.

OBJECTIVES • To develop and maintain a rural clinical teaching network capable of full implementation of a coordinated

departmental curriculum. • To provide medical students with an opportunity to learn about health care issues specific to an under-

served rural community. • To improve the quality of and access to health care for the rural communities of north Florida. • To offer cost-effective, comprehensive, longitudinal health care to rural communities in Florida. • To offer health maintenance and disease prevention programs by means of community education and as a

component of clinical practice. • To develop the rural teaching sites as referral bases for the Family Medicine Residency program and Shands

subspecialty care. • To collaborate with the University of Florida AHEC program including hosting a student from the Rural

Scholars program during the summer term.

Equal Access ABOUT The Equal Access Clinic was established by a group of dedicated medical students in 1988. The clinic opened its doors in 1992 at a local Salvation Army facility and fortunately was later provided with free access to a University of Florida Family Practice Medical Group facility in Gainesville, Florida. David Feller, MD serves as faculty advisor. Today, the organization is one of the largest and most comprehensive student-run free healthcare clinics in the nation. The clinic provides free healthcare and other services to the medically underserved in Alachua County and its surrounding counties. A diverse group of undergraduate and professional students from the University of Florida partake in volunteer activities at the clinic. The majority of student support is derived from the Colleges of Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacy and Public Health and Health Professionals.

This year was the most successful year yet for the Equal Access Clinic network. A fantastic relationship was forged with HealthStreet at UF and now have two clinics operating out of their facilities. This has allowed the expansion of the Ophthalmology Clinic and the Mental Health Therapy Clinic. It is expected that this partnership will allow the further expansion of these services for our patients.

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COMMUNITY HEALTH

Opening the dental clinic in February 2016 was the highlight of the year. We partnered with Gainesville Community Ministries to open a dental clinic which provides fillings and extractions. Demand for the clinic quickly grew and was expanded from once per month to twice per month starting in April 2016. The goal is to build the ability to provide cleaning and preventive services for patients’ dental health. UF Health Family Medicine - Main location continues to be the busiest clinic with up to 20 patients per night. The move to the UF Health Family Medicine - Eastside clinic has expanded the ability to see patients on Tuesday nights.

With the support of the Department of Community Health and Family Medicine and Dr. Ryan Nall, we were able to open a LGBT specific clinic where patients can feel secure addressing their needs.

In addition, the administrative staff from the Department of Community Health and Family Medicine provided much needed and appreciated support to the Equal Access Clinic. Faculty from the departments of Family Medicine, Internal Medicine and Emergency Medicine provided the supervision to assess and treat patients at each clinic site.

GOALS • Long-term sustainability: Continued focus on our ability to provide services for the long term with specific

interest in establishing a long-term funding source. • Physician recruitment: Have enough providers to keep clinic open all year. • Maintain dental clinic: Expand capacity for preventive dental care in addition to the extraction and filling

care we currently provide. • Quality improvement and research: Continue to improve clinic through critical analysis of processes and

data driven projects. Specific areas include tracking success of referrals to outside resources, such as WeCare and clinic efficiency.

• Lab resource efficiency: Lab work is currently the largest budget item. The goal is to evaluate our lab usage and indications to ensure we are utilizing this resource as efficiently as possible, ensuring we maximize this benefit to our patients.

• Pharmacy: We have had huge success in reducing our pharmacy costs over the past two years by being cost conscious and prescribing generics when possible. Our goal is to assess our practices to ensure the quality of care is maintained.

• Long-term contraception: Continue to add long-term contraception to the services offered. • Spanish services: Improve our ability to serve Spanish-speaking patients by having all materials available in

Spanish, while educating our volunteers on the translation services that are available. • Recommended screenings: Our capacity to connect patients with all recommended health screenings, such

as colonoscopies, has waxed and waned over the years. Our goal is to ensure that we are maximizing the community resources available to get these for our patients.

SERVICE HOURS

Annual Volunteering at EAC Medical Clinics • Physician .............................................................................................................................. 800 hours • Residents ............................................................................................................................ 500 hours • Medical Students (clinical volunteering) ............................................................................. 6,400 hours • Medical Students (administrative) ...................................................................................... 3,000 hours • Other Health Professional Students .................................................................................... 4,000 hours • Undergraduate Students ..................................................................................................... 20,000 hours • Family Medicine Staff, Bus Driver, Social Worker ................................................................ 800 hours

Total hours of service for all volunteers ............................................................................................. 35,500 hours

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COMMUNITY HEALTH

COMMUNITY HEALTH AND FAMILY MEDICINE FACULTY MEMBERS AND RESIDENTS WHO CONTRIBUTED SERVICE TO THE EQUAL ACCESS CLINIC

FACULTY Ronald Berry, MD

Peter Carek, MD, MS, CAQSM Ku-Lang Chang, MD

David Feller, MD Helen Hagan, MD Lucia Hansen, MD

Jonathan Grant Harrell, MD Robert Hatch, MD, MPH Volha Ihnatsenka, MD Sarah Laibstain, MD

John Malaty, MD Elvira Mercado, MD

Charlie Michuadet, MD, CAQSM Lindsay Novak, PA-C

Maribeth Porter, MD, MS Richard Rathe, MD

Larry Rooks, MD George Samraj, MD

Siegfried Schmidt, MD, PhD Kristy Smith, MD

THIRD-YEAR RESIDENTS Lisa Chacko, MD John George, MD Sally Hinman, MD

Courtney Jones, MD Erica Judge, MD

Jonathan Lombardi, MD Keiran Shute, MD Dale Taylor, MD

Greg Westwood, MD Lilika White, MD

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Page 29: Community Health & Family Medicine · Community Health and Family Medicine 2015 - 2016 Annual Report “To serve our patients and community, positively shaping the future of healthcare

STATE OF THE DEPARTMENT

EVENT On Friday, September 16, the annual State of the Department address was conducted for all Community Health and Family Medicine faculty, staff and special guests, including Dean, Michael Good, MD. Presentations provided an overview of the activities and accomplishments of our department and faculty members. In particular, our medical and program directors presented accomplishments of their clinics and programs.

PATIENT CARE • Opened a new facility for UF Health Family Medicine - Haile Plantation • Increased patient access for daily appointments and patient volume • Provided additional services to our patients, such as primary care sports medicine and anticoagulation clinic • Involved in numerous research studies

MEDICAL STUDENT EDUCATION • College of Medicine Leadership Positions

o Director of Preceptorships and Third-Year Clerkship o Faculty advisor for the Family Medicine Interest Group

• Faculty membership on Curriculum Committee, Admissions Committee

COURSES • Preceptor Series, Family Medicine/Ambulatory Care Clerkship and 4th-Year Sub Internship

INNOVATION • Continuity Clinic, Inter-Professional Learning and Students Writing Orders

RESIDENT EDUCATION • Matched nine first-year resident positions • 100 percent pass rate on ABFM Certification Examination • Improved the patient care experience in our family medicine centers • High volume of patient visits with expanded services • Implemented additional/focused procedural training • Team-based care addressing population health as well as care of individual patients • Expanded opportunities for research and quality improvement • Improved resident survey results • Maintained outstanding teaching evaluations

FELLOWSHIP • Primary Care Sports Medicine Fellowship (in partnership with the Department of Emergency Medicine) • Worked closely with the University Athletic Association to provide care to UF student-athletes • Opportunities for resident and student rotations

FACULTY DEVELOPMENT • Instituted a faculty development series with emphasis on improving scholarship and teaching skills • Departmental Grand Rounds addressing faculty related matters; additional conferences presenting clinical

topics

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ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AND COMMITTEES

Our department faculty and staff continue to give their time and talent to serve others. Listed below are the 421 administrative service rolls and committees they serve at a national, regional and local level.

FACULTY William L. Allen, JD, MDiv

• National o Editorial Board Member, Genetic Testing and Molecular Biomarkers

• Regional/State o Florida CARES Reviewer

• Local/University o Admissions Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Board of Directors, Center for Government Responsibility, University of Florida Levin College of Law o Ethics Consultation Service, UF Health Shands Hospital o Member, UF Health Shands Hospital Ethics Committee o University of Florida Genetics Institute Executive Committee

Tanya Anim, MD

• Local/University o UF College of Medicine Faculty Council o UF College of Medicine Graduate Medical Education Committee

Ronald Berry, MD

• Local/University o Chair, University Sick Leave Pool Committee o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Charles E. Byrd, PhD, MS

• Regional/State o Active Member, Medical Reserve Corps, Florida Unit (SERVFL) o Executive Board Member, Florida Afterschool Network (FAN), C.S. Mott Foundation o Member & Vice Chair, 4-H Youth Development Advisory Council, UF 4-H Program, IFAS

Peter J. Carek, MD, MS, CAQSM

• National o Co-Chair, Group on Research in Residency Training, Society of Teachers of Family Medicine o Chair, Review Committee for Family Medicine, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical

Education (ACGME) o Deputy Chair, Medical Section, Council of Review Committees, Accreditation Council for Graduate

Medical Education (ACGME) o Chair, Sports Medicine Milestones Working Group, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical

Education (ACGME) o Chair, Council of Review Committee Chairs, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education

(ACGME) o Member, Board of Directors, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) o Member, Executive Committee, Board of Directors, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical

Education (ACGME) o Member, Policies and Procedures Committee, Board of Directors, Accreditation Council for

Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) o Member, Governance Committee, Board of Directors, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical

Education (ACGME) o Member, Common Program Requirements Phase I - Fatigue Mitigation, Patient Safety and

Professionalism - Task Force, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)

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ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AND COMMITTEES

o Participant, Symposium on Physician Well-Being, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)

o Member, Ad Hoc Committee for Addiction Medicine Application, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)

o Member, Task Force on Physician Well-Being, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medicine Education (ACGME)

• Regional/State o Member, Residency Director’s Council, Florida Academy of Family Physicians o Member, Advisory Committee, Florida Blue Center for Health Care Quality

• Local/University o Chair, Department of Community Health and Family Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Chief of Family Medicine, UF Health Shands Hospital o Member, UF Health Shands Hospital Medical Staff Quality and Operations Committee o Member, College of Medicine Executive Committee, University of Florida o Member, Board of Directors, Florida Clinical Practice Association, Inc. o Member, Managed Care Strategy Committee, UF Health Physicians College of Medicine,

University of Florida o Member, Implementation Science Operations Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, OneFlorida Steering Committee, University of Florida o Vice-Chair, Mission Track Promotion Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Educational Incentive Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Research Leadership Group, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Medical Director, ACORN Clinic o Member, Junior Honors Medical Program Advisory Committee, College of Medicine, University of

Florida o Member, Capital Review Advisory Committee, UF Health, University of Florida o Member, Readmissions Steering Committee, UF Health, University of Florida o Mentor, University Minority Mentor Program, University of Florida o Member, Clinical Information Technology Steering Committee, UF Health o Member, Steering Committee, OneFlorida Clinical Research Consortium o Chair, CTSI Translational Pilot Program Steering Committee, University of Florida o Member, Executive Committee, OneFlorida Clinical Research Consortium o Member, Patient Satisfaction Survey Steering Committee, University of Florida Physicians o Member, Public Health External Advisory Committee, College of Public Health and Health

Professions, University of Florida o Member, Efficiency, Effectiveness, and Patient Centeredness, Readmission Steering Committee o Member, Efficiency, Effectiveness, and Patient Centeredness, Discharge Appointment Scheduling

Improvement Committee o Member, Efficiency, Effectiveness, and Patient Centeredness, Community Engagement Committee o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Lisa Chacko, MD, MPH

• National o Resident Member, Primary Care Leadership + Innovation Academy

• Local/University o Resident Member, Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Committee, University of Florida

Health System Ku-Lang Chang, MD

• Local/University o Billing and Compliance Officer and Director of Compliance (Clinics) o Director of Quality and Safety (Clinics) o Medical Review Officer, UF Health Shands Hospital

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ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AND COMMITTEES

o Member, Patient Safety and Quality Week Planning Committee UF Health o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Jay Clugston, MD, MS, CAQSM

• National o Operating Committee, NCAA-DoD Grand Alliance-Concussion Awareness Research Education

(CARE) Study o Research Committee, American Medical Society for Sports Medicine o Targeted Evaluation and Active Management (TEAM) Approaches to Treating Concussion

• Regional/State o Working Group on Concussion, Southeastern Athletic Conference (SEC) o Florida Academic Healthcare Patient Safety Organization, Concussion Group, State of Florida Self

Insurance Program • Local/University

o Medical Advisory Committee, University Athletic Association o Research Sub-Committee, Medical Advisory Committee, University Athletic Association o Concussion Committee, University Athletic Association o Chair, Research Director Search Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine

Shenary Cotter, MD

• Local/University o Co-Chair, Carey Barber Memorial Foundation Scholarship o Founding Member, Secretary, VA and UF UNESCO Bioethics Steering Committee

Robert W. Curry, Jr., MD

• National o Distinguished Member, Scholarship Advisory Committee for the Pisacano Scholars Program

• Regional/State o Florida Academy of Family Physicians

Medical Education Committee Residency Director’s Council Committee Medical Care Advisory Committee

o Florida CARES Reviewer • Local/University

o University of Florida College of Medicine Campaign Chair, COM Raising Hopes Campaigns Executive Fiscal Affairs Committee Medical Director, Shands Occupational Health Services Medical Health Advisor, Health in a Heartbeat radio series Chair, Strategic Plan Taskforce Chair, Liaison Committee for Medical Education Subcommittee on Faculty Liaison Committee for Medical Education Steering Committee

Alpa Desai, DO

• Local/University o Member, Clinical Operations Committee, University of Florida o Medical Director, UF Health Family Medicine - Jonesville o Medical Director Committee, University of Florida Physicians o Medical Student Interview Committee, University of Florida o Member, Multidisciplinary Academic-Community Obesity Disparities Research Agenda Planning

Team, University of Florida o Chair, Jonesville Faculty Search Committee

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ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AND COMMITTEES

Marvin A. Dewar, MD, JD • National

o Editorial Board, Healthcare Professional Liability Review o Editorial Board, Journal of General Practice and Medical Diagnosis o National Faculty Question Writer, Core Content Review of Family Medicine

• Regional/State o Reviewer, Florida Board of Medicine

• Local/University o Medical Executive Committee, UF Health Shands Hospital o Self Insurance (SIP) Liability Claims Review Committee, University of Florida o Self Insurance (GatorCare), University of Florida

Executive Sponsors Group Steering Committee Chair, Network Committee Chair, TPA Negotiation Committee Implementation Workgroup

o Chair, Clinical Safety Committee, UF Health Physicians o Dean’s Leadership Group, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Epic Governance Committee, University of Florida o Compensation Committee, University of Florida o Dean’s Finance Group, University of Florida o Dean’s Cabinet, University of Florida o Chair, Medical Director’s Committee, University of Florida o Continuing Medical Education Advisory Committee, University of Florida o Senior Vice President Health Affairs Operations Leadership Group, University of Florida o Senior Vice President Health Affairs Forward Together Group, University of Florida o COM Recruitment Committee, University of Florida o Epic Physician Documentation Leadership, University of Florida o Clinical IT Steering Committee, University of Florida o IT Infrastructure Steering Committee, University of Florida o Data Governance Committee, University of Florida o Executive IT Steering Committee, University of Florida o GatorCare Executive Sponsors Group, University of Florida o CEO, UF Health Physicians, University of Florida o Chair, Hospitality and Service Task Force, University of Florida o Data Governance Committee, University of Florida o UF Health Strategy Group, University of Florida o Task Force on UF Health Governance and Organization, University of Florida o Medical Executive Committee, University of Florida o New Towers Transition Steering Committee, University of Florida o Search Committee (various positions), University of Florida

Eric Dietrich, PharmD

• Local/University o Readmission Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Readmission Steering Committee, UF Health Shands, University of Florida

Katherine Edenfield, MD, CAQSM

• Local/University o Member, Emergency Safety and Infection Control Committee, Student Health Care Center,

University of Florida o Member, Medical Advisory Committee, University of Florida Athletic Association

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ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AND COMMITTEES

Michele Emery, MD • Local/University

o Health Care Provider, Clinic Bus David Feller, MD

• Regional/State o Chair, Communications Committee, Florida Academy of Family Physicians

• Local/University o Member, Residency Education Committee, Family Practice Residency Program, University of

Florida o Member, Operations Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Quality Patient Safety Committee, University of Florida o Member, Lab Advisory board, UF Health Shands Hospital o Member, Community Engagement Group, UF Health Shands Hospital o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Jocelyn Gravlee, MD, CAQSM

• Local/University o Member, Medical Advisory Committee, University of Florida Athletic Association

Ann Grooms, MD

• Local/University o Medical Advisory Committee, University Athletic Association

John Gums, PharmD

• National o Member, Editorial Board, Pharmacotherapy o Member, Editorial Panel, The Annals of Pharmacotherapy (Ambulatory Care) o Fellow, American College of Clinical Pharmacy (ACCP) o Member, National Interdisciplinary Primary Care Practice Based Research Network (PBRN) o Editor, PharmaNote Monthly Pharmacy Newsletter, National Newsletter, Department of

Community Health and Family Medicine. o Scientific Editor, Pharmacotherapy

Helen Hagan Hansen, MD

• Local/University o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Karen L. Hall, MD

• National o Member, AFMRD, Committee on Membership o Member, AFMRD, Committee on Education

• Local/University o Member, Operations Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Residency Program Director, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida

Lucia Hansen, MD

• Local/University o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Jonathan Grant Harrell, MD

• Local/University o Preceptor, Athletic Training Program, University of Florida

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ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AND COMMITTEES

o Task Force on Observed Clinical Skills, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Clinical Operations Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of

Florida o Medical Director, UF Health Family Medicine - Old Town o Medical Director Committee, University of Florida Physicians o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Robert Hatch, MD, MPH

• Regional/State o Post-Licensure Assessment System Committee (joint NBME/FSMB committee) o Chair, NBME Family Medicine Subject Exam Task Force o China Health Coach Expert Survey Group, NBME, 2015 o Member, Implementation Group, Phase II of CEPAER Learner Community, AAMC, 2015 – 2016 o Reviewer for Journals, Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine o STFM Representative on the Alliance for Clinical Education (ACE) o Chair, Research Committee, Alliance for Clinical Education (ACE)

• Local/University o Clerkship Director, Family Medicine and Ambulatory Care Clerkship, Primary Care Center Director o Faculty Advisor, Premed American Medical Students Association o University Minority Mentor Program o National Health Service Corps Advisor Network o University of Florida College of Medicine

Director of Medical Student Education Chair, Clerkship Directors Committee Director, H. James Free Center for Primary Care Education and Innovation Medical Student Advisor Executive Committee Junior Faculty Member Mentor Member, Operations Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine Search Committee Chair, Faculty Position Search Committee Chair, Residency Program Director Search Committee, Research Director Primary Care Conference Committee Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic

Linda Hensley, MD

• Regional/State o Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee

• Local/University o Member, Clinical Operations Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Medical Director, UF Health Family Medicine – Main o Medical Director Committee, University of Florida Physicians o Graduate Medical Education

Chair, Internal Review Committee Committee Member

o Special Olympic Physicals, Sidney Lanier School Volha Ihnatsenka, MD

• Local/University o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

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ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AND COMMITTEES

Sarah Laibstain, MD • Local/University

o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Preceptor, Athletic Training Program, University of Florida

Arch Mainous, III, PhD

• National o Visiting Professorship, Lewis Sigmon Senior Visiting Scholar, American Board of Family Medicine,

Lexington, KY o Visiting Professorship, Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA o Visiting Professorship, Department of Family Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA o Grant Review Committee, National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive Disease and Kidney Disease,

Special Emphasis Panel on Ancillary Studies in Biomarkers of Diabetes Complications’ of Health o Grant Review Committee, National Institutes of Health, Special Emphasis Panel on Fellowships:

Risk, Prevention, and Health Behavior o Deputy Editor, Family Medicine o Editorial Board Member, Annals of Family Medicine o Editorial Board Member, Quality in Primary Care o Editorial Board Member, BMJ Open o Manuscript Reviewer, Journal of Family Practice o Manuscript Reviewer, Journal of Rural Health o Manuscript Reviewer, Family Medicine o Manuscript Reviewer, Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved o Manuscript Reviewer, American Journal of Managed Care o Manuscript Reviewer, Ambulatory Child Health o Manuscript Reviewer, Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine o Manuscript Reviewer, JAMA o Manuscript Reviewer, Journal of General Internal Medicine o Manuscript Reviewer, American Journal of Public Health o Manuscript Reviewer, American Journal of Preventive Medicine o Manuscript Reviewer, American Journal of Medicine o Manuscript Reviewer, Journal of the American Medical Women’s Association o Manuscript Reviewer, Journal of Investigative Medicine o Manuscript Reviewer, Social Science and Medicine o Manuscript Reviewer, Pediatrics o Manuscript Reviewer, Canadian Medical Association Journal o Manuscript Reviewer, Annals of Family Medicine o Manuscript Reviewer, Emerging Infectious Diseases o Manuscript Reviewer, Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine o Manuscript Reviewer, Annals of Internal Medicine o Manuscript Reviewer, Medical Care o Manuscript Reviewer, Health Services Research o Manuscript Reviewer, Circulation: Cardiovascular Imaging o Manuscript Reviewer, PLOS ONE o Chair, Steering Committee, CAFM Educational Research Alliance o Member, Steering Committee, National Family Medicine Scholarship Collaborative

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ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AND COMMITTEES

o Member, Review Committee, John M. Eisenberg Center for Clinical Decisions and Communications Science at Baylor College of Medicine. Interventions to Improve Appropriate Antibiotic Use for Acute Respiratory Tract Infections

• Local/University o Chair, Department of Health Services Research, Management & Policy, University of Florida o Co-Director, Florida Blue Center for Health Care Access, Patient Safety and Quality Outcomes,

University of Florida o Director, PhD in Public Health, College of Public Health and Health Professions, University of Florida o Member, Advisory Committee, Clinical and Translational Science Institute Training and

Professional Development Program, University of Florida o Member, Department of Community Health and Family Medicine Research Committee o Member, Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center (GRECC) advisory committee, Veterans

Affairs, Gainesville, Florida John Malaty, MD

• Local/University o Director of Residents as Teachers (RasT) Program, College of Medicine, University of Florida o University of Florida Graduate Medical Education, Program Review Committee o Medical Director, UF Health Family Medicine – Main o Medical Director Committee, University of Florida Physicians o Medical Executive Committee, UF Health o Physician Advisory Task Force for EPIC Implementation, Shands Hospital o Member, Clinical Operations Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of

Florida o Clinical Competence Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Program Evaluation Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Patient Care Quality Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Resident Applicant Interviewer and screener of applicant packets, University of Florida Family

Medicine Residency Program o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Michael McTiernan, MD

• Local/University o Member, Clinical Operations Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of

Florida o Medical Director, UF Health Family Medicine - Haile Plantation o Medical Director Committee, University of Florida Physicians

Elvira Mercado, MD

• Local/University o Member, Clinical Operations Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of

Florida o Medical Student Interview Committee, University of Florida o Medical Director, UF Health Family Medicine - Eastside o Medical Director Committee, University of Florida Physicians o Member, Multidisciplinary Academic-Community Obesity Disparities Research Agenda Planning

(MACOD-RAP) Team, University of Florida o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Charlie Michaudet, MD, CAQSM

• National o Member of Educational Committee, American Medical Society for Sports Medicine

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• Local/University o Search Committee Member, Faculty Residency Position, Family Medicine Residency, Community

Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Medical Student Interview Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Recruiting Committee, Sports Medicine Fellowship, University of Florida o Member, Recruiting Committee, Family Medicine Residency Program, University of Florida o Member, Program Educational Committee, Family Medicine Residency Program, University of

Florida o Member, Clinical Competency Committee, Family Medicine Residency Program, University of

Florida o Team Physician, Santa Fe College, Gainesville, FL o Physician Volunteer, Annual Pop Warner Physicals o Physician Volunteer, Five Points of Life Marathon o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Susan Millan, MD

• Local/University o Continuing Medical Education Committee, University of Florida

Ray E. Moseley, PhD

• Regional/State o Senior Board Member, Florida Bioethics Network o Chair, Florida Bioethics Network/Florida Department of Health, Public Health Ethics Workgroup o Pan American Bioethics Initiative Advisory Committee, University of Miami Ethics

Programs o Alpha-1 Foundation

Chair, Ethical, Legal, Social Issues (ELSI) Working Group MASAC Steering Committee Research/Registry Working Group

• Local/University o University of Florida, Health Science Center, Institutional Review Board Committee

Board Member Executive Committee Member Vice Chair

o Volunteer Teacher, University of Florida Center for PreCollegiate Education and Training BioDecide Program Student Science Training Program (SSTP)

o Chair, University of Florida Clinical and Translational Science Awards, Exemplary Investigator Program Development Ad Hoc Committee

o Ethics Advisory Committee and Consult Service, UF Health Shands Hospital o Host, Annual Medical Student Student-Faculty Dinner o Research Advisory Committee, Clinical Research Center o Vice-Chair, University of Florida Gainesville Health Science Center Institutional Review Board (IRB-

01) Kim Nguyen, MD

• National o Fellow of American Academy of Pediatrics o National Health Service Corp Ambassador

• Local/University o Member, Minority Mentor Program, University of Florida

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ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AND COMMITTEES

Guy Nicolette, MD, CAQSM • National

o Member, Musculoskeletal Ultrasound Committee, American Medical Society for Sports Medicine o Member, Fellowship Committee, American Medical Society for Sports Medicine o American Registry Diagnostic Medical Sonography - Physician Standard Setting o Senior Editor, 2015 American Medical Society for Sports Medicine Case Studies o Editor, 2016 American Medical Society for Sports Medicine In-Training Exam o Peer reviewer, The Journal of Family Practice o Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) Affiliate Physician

• Local/University o Neurology Chair Search Committee, University of Florida o Member, Clinical Operations Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of

Florida o Member, Operations Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Wellness Committee, University of Florida and UF Health o University Athletic Association Concussion Committee o Senate Medical Withdrawal Subcommittee, University of Florida o Senate Petitions Committee, University of Florida o Member, Emergency Operations Team, University of Florida o Team physician for football, men’s basketball, baseball, University of Florida Athletic Association o Team physician for lacrosse, football, men’s tennis, University of Florida Athletic Association o Team physician for men’s and women’s basketball, baseball, softball, Santa Fe College

Lindsay Novak, PA-C

• Local/University o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Frank Orlando, MD

• Local/University o Member, Medical Student Interview Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Faculty Search Committee, UF Health Family Medicine - Jonesville, University of Florida

Cheree Padilla, MD, CAQSM

• Local/University o Medical Advisory Committee, University Athletic Association

Maribeth Porter, MD, MS

• National o Contributing Editor, Prescriber’s Letter Journal Club o North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG) Communications Committee

• Local/University o Academic Status Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Institutional Program Review Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Effectiveness, Efficiency & Patient Centeredness Initiative—Community Engagement, UF Health,

University of Florida o Effectiveness, Efficiency & Patient Centeredness Initiative--ED Care Redesign, UF Health o Physician Director of Quality, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Search Committee for Vice Chair of Research, Department of Community Health and Family

Medicine, University of Florida o Quality Improvement Committee, University of Florida o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

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David Quillen, MD • Local/University

o Chair Elect, Faculty Senate, University of Florida o UF Faculty Senate, elected Senator for Fall 2015, 3-year term, University of Florida o Appointed Member, UF Faculty Enhancement Opportunity (FEO) Task Force, University of Florida o Co-Chair, Continuing Education Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Chair, Faculty Enhancement Opportunity Review Committee, College of Medicine, University of

Florida o Admissions Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Admissions Interview Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Medical Selection Committee, Junior Honors Medical Program, College of Medicine, University of

Florida o Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery Residency Program Admission Committee, College of Medicine,

University of Florida o UF Health Shands Hospital Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee, University of Florida o Epic Operations Committee, University of Florida o Physicians Documentations Committee/ECAG, University of Florida

Richard Rathe, MD

• Local/University o Member, Medical Student Education Committee, Department of Community Health and Family

Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Epic Physicians Advisory Council o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Larry Rooks, MD

• Regional/State o Chairperson, Education Committee, Florida Academy of Family Practice Physicians

• Local/University o Steering Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Daniel Rubin, MD

• Local/University o Faculty Advisor, Family Medicine Interest Group

George Samraj, MD

• National o Fellow, Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists o Fellow, American Academy of Family Physicians

• Local/University o Chairman, Prenatal Care Committee, University of Florida Family Medicine Residency Program o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic o Volunteer Physician, WE CARE, Alachua County Health Service o University Senator, Faculty Senate, University of Florida o Member, Research and Scholarship Council, University of Florida o Member, Resident Education Committee, UF Family Medicine Residency Program

Siegfried Schmidt, MD, PhD

• National o Reviewer, Journal of the National Medical Association o Reviewer, American Family Physician, published by the American Academy of Family Physicians o Reviewer/Editor, AAFP Home Study Monograph, American Academy of Family Physicians

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• Regional/State o Physician evaluator, Florida CARES and Competency Advancement Program

• Local/University o Volunteer Faculty, Alachua County Medical Society (ACMS) Mini-internship Program o Board Member, UF Shands Psychiatric Hospital Community Advisory Council o CHOIR Working Group (Collaborative Health Outcomes Information Registry), University of

Florida o Personalized Medicine Program Committee, University of Florida o Medical Director Committee, University of Florida Physicians o Member, Primary Care Patient Access Center Physician Advisory Council, University of Florida o Moderator and Presenter, “Pain Connection”, UF Pain Research and Interventional Center of

Excellence o Member, Promotion Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine o Member, Clinical Operations Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine o Member, Operations Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Member, College of Medicine Faculty Compensation Plan Committee o Director, Family Medicine Residency Program, Chronic Pain Management at Main (CPM²),

University of Florida o Associate Editor, Personalized Medicine Corner and Pharma Note, UF Health Personalized

Medicine Program o Board Member, Shands at Vista Community Advisory Board o Member, Spring Hill User Group o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Kristy Smith, MD

• Local/University o Senator, College of Medicine Representative, University of Florida o Volunteer Physician, Equal Access Clinic, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Steven Smith, PharmD

• National o Anniversary Fellow in Pharmacy, Institute of Medicine o Founding Member, American Society of Hypertension Committee on the Certified Hypertension

Clinician Certification o Member, Ambulatory Care PRN, American College of Clinical Pharmacy o Member, Research Process Committee, American College of Clinical Pharmacy o Member, Cardiology PRN, American College of Clinical Pharmacy o Member, American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy, Pharmacy Practice Session o Member, National Interdisciplinary Primary Care Practice-Based Research Network o Editorial Board Member, Pharmacotherapy o Journal Referee

Annals of Pharmacotherapy Expert Opinion on Drug Metabolism Pharmacist’s Letter Pharmacotherapy Therapeutic Advances in Cardiovascular Diseases Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice American Journal of Hypertension PLoS One Journal of Human Hypertension Journal of Clinical Hypertension Obesity

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ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AND COMMITTEES

• Local/University o Co-Director, Anticoagulation and Pharmacotherapy Consult Services, Department of Community

Health and Family Medicine o Member, Search Committee for Community Health and Family Medicine Vice Chair for Research,

College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Research/QI Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Personalized Medicine Program Education Advisory Board, Clinical and Translational

Science Institute, University of Florida Lauren Solberg, JD, MTS

• Local/University o Faculty Council, College of Medicine, University of Florida o President, Women’s Golf Boosters, University of Florida o Academic Policy Council, University of Florida o University Curriculum Committee, University of Florida o University Curriculum Committee Course Review Subcommittee, University of Florida o Faculty Senate, University of Florida o Public Responsibility in Medicine & Research (PRIM&R) Knowledge Center Advisory Group,

University of Florida o Member, Medical Student Interview Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Operations Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o UF Health Ethics Committee, University of Florida o Consultant, UF Health Ethics Consult Service o Public Responsibility in Medicine & Research (PRIM&R) Annual Meeting Planning Committee,

University of Florida o Poster Abstract Sub-Committee for Advancing Ethical Research Annual Conference, University of Florida o Steering Committee, Department of Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Research and QI Committee o Poster Judge, University of Florida Graduate Student Research Day

Beverly Vidaurreta, PhD

• Local/University o Member, Minority Mentor Program, University of Florida o Mentor, Florida Opportunity Scholars Academy of Leadership, University of Florida o Member, Physician Assistant Admissions Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Physician Assistant Professional Standards and Promotions Committee, College of

Medicine o Chair, Student Advocacy Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Academic Status Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Clerkship Directors’ Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Course Directors’ Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Chair, Low Performing Student Task Force, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Curriculum Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida o Member, Student Services Subcommittee and Learning Environment Subcommittee

Michael Ware, MD

• Local/University o Faculty Evaluation Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Program Evaluation Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida o Core Curriculum Committee, Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida

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STAFF Bernie Amaro

• Local/University o Member, UF Health Ethics Committee o Authorized Spanish Interpreter, UF Health Shands Hospital and Clinics o Member, UF Community Health and Family Medicine Primary Care Plus Live Committee

Sheila Diuguid

• Local/University o Committee Chairperson, Boy Scouts, Troop 416

Lavina Gramig

• Local/University o Representative, Superior Accomplishment Award Division 5 Committee, College of Medicine

Misty Gray

• Local/University o Member, Primary Care Conference Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida

Dana Ives

• Local/University o Representative, University of Florida Campaign for Charities Department

Najwa Liscombe

• Local/University o Board Member, American Academy of Professional Coders Chapter Association (AAPCCA) o Assistant Coordinator, No One Dies Alone (NODA) Program, UF Health Shands Hospital o President, Council of Catholic Women in Gainesville o Treasurer, North Central Florida Chapter of the American Academy of Professional Coders o Fundraiser, Children’s Miracle Network, UF Health Shands Hospital o Volunteer, Local Food Bank and Backpack Program o Member, Bereavement and St. Vincent De Paul Committees, St. Patrick Catholic Church

Lacey Rhea

• National o Member, National Council of University Research Administrators

Sherri Swilley

• National o Association of Family Medicine Administration, AFMA o Healthcare Compliance Resources

• Local/University o Education Officer, American Academy of Professional Coders Gainesville, Florida Chapter o Compliance Committee, University of Florida College of Medicine o Superior Accomplishment Award Committee, University of Florida Health Science Center o University of Florida Department of Community Health and Family Medicine

Billing Compliance Officer Operations Committee Primary Care Conference Committee

Art Watson

• Local/University o Member, Primary Care Conference Committee, College of Medicine, University of Florida

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AWARDS

NATIONAL AWARDS

Departmental Award • STFM Family Practice Management Award for Practice Improvement December 2015

Shenary Cotter, MD • Fellow, American Academy Family Physicians December 2015

Arch G. Mainous III, PhD

• Innovative Program Award, Society of Teachers of Family Medicine May 2016

• Distinguished Paper, Society of Teachers of Family Medicine May 2016

Frank Orlando, MD • American Medical Association Physician Recognition Award November 2015

Maribeth Porter, MD, MS • Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Foundation 2016 New Faculty Scholar Award

Larry Rooks, MD • Society of Teaching Scholars Lifetime Achievement Award March 2016

Steven M. Smith, PharmD, MPH

• American College of Clinical Pharmacy 2015 New Investigator Award October 2015

• Institute of Medicine Anniversary Fellow in Pharmacy, 2014 – 2016, The National Academies of Science, Washington, DC

Michael Ware, MD • Awarded Life Fellow status, American Psychiatric Association January 2016

RESIDENT GRADUATION AWARDS

Sally Hinman, MD • Achievement and Appreciation Certificate Sports Medicine Chief Resident • Sports Medicine Area of Concentration

Jason Konopack, MD • Award for Professionalism • Excellence in Family Medicine & Counseling

Charlie Michaudet, MD • Teacher of the Year Award

Keiran Shute, MD

• Golden Apple Resident Teacher • Resident of the Year • Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Teaching Award • Achievement and Appreciation Certificate Co-Chief Resident

Dale Taylor, MD • Achievement and Appreciation Certificate Co-Chief Resident

Lilika White, MD • Achievement and Appreciation Certificate Women’s Health Chief Resident

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AWARDS

UNIVERSITY AWARDS

Departmental Award • UF Health Quality and Patient Safety Award - 3rd place March 2016

Denny Fe Agana, MPH • Outstanding Research Award April 2016

Ku-Lang Chang, MD • Faculty Enhancement Opportunity Award October 2015

R. Whit Curry, Jr, MD • UF COM Lifetime Achievement Award April 2016

Sheila Diuguid • Superior Accomplishment Award, Division 5 UF Health April 2016

Robert Hatch, MD, MPH • Ken Kellner, MD, PhD Outstanding Clerkship Director Award June 2016

Ray Moseley, PhD • 2015 Technology Innovator Award, UF Office of Technology

Frank Orlando, MD • Internal Project Award (IPA), Community Health and Family Medicine, University of Florida COM, 2015

David Quillen, MD • UF Health Quality Leader March 2016

Rachel Rivera • Superior Accomplishment Award, Division 5 UF Health April 2016

Daniel Rubin, MD • Gold Humanism Honor Society Induction 2016

Sherri Swilley, CPC • Superior Accomplishment Award for Diversity and Inclusion,

Division 5 UF Health April 2016

UF HEALTH SHANDS AWARDS

Elvira Mercado, MD • Customer Service is Key Award July 2015

Frank Orlando, MD

• 2015 Physician Recognition Award for Positive Impact on Quality or Patient Safety November 2015

Siegfried O.F. Schmidt MD, PhD • Customer Service is Key Award July 2015

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GRANTS, RESEARCH AND PUBLICATIONS

GRANTS A Randomized Multicountry, Multicenter Double-blind Parallel placebo-controlled Study of the Effects of Atrasentan on Renal Outcomes in Subjects with Type 2 Diabetes and Nephropathy

AbbVie The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether or not Atrasentan is effective in delaying the time to serum creatinine doubling or the onset of End Stage Renal Disease in subjects with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and Kidney Disease. In addition, this study will compare Atrasentan with a placebo to see if taking Atrasentan is better than taking a placebo.

• CHFM primary investigator: Karen Hall, MD • CHFM total grant: $36,249.96.00

An Interactive Patient-Centered Consent for Use in Research with Electronic Medical Records

National Institutes of Health (NIH) The goal of this project is to develop and evaluate a novel, electronic informed consent application for research involving electronic health record (EHR) data. In response to NIH RFA-OD-15-002, this study addresses research using clinical records and data, including the issues of the appropriate content and duration of informed consent and patient preferences about research use of clinical information. First, this study will design an electronic consent application intended to improve patients’ satisfaction with and understanding of consent for research using their EHR data. The electronic application will provide interactive functionality that creates a virtual, patient-centered discussion with patients about research that uses EHR data. • CHFM investigators: Ray Moseley, PhD and Arch Mainous, III, PhD • CHFM total grant: $534,877.23

Cardiovascular Screening with History, Physical, ECG and Echo in College Athletes. 5-Year Results from Two Division I Institutions

American Medical Society for Sports Medicine Foundation Research Grant (AMSSM) The purpose of this study is to investigate the results of comprehensive cardiac screening done at the University of Florida and the University of Georgia from 2011 to 2016. The primary objective of the study is to determine the sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive value of history, physical, ECG and echo for cardiovascular screening for detection of cardiovascular conditions. Secondary objectives are: 1) to determine high risk groups stratified by sport, gender and race/ethnicity, 2) to report echocardiographic norms in college athletes, and 3) To report any complications or morbidity caused by secondary investigations or treatments. • CHFM primary investigator: Katherine M. Edenfield, MD, CAQSM • CHFM total grant: $10, 448.00

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Characterizing the Complications Associated with Therapeutic Blood Transfusions for Hemoglobinopathies

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention The goal of this project is to develop and implement a clinical decision support system into the electronic health record for sickle cell disease and other hemoglobinopathies using expertise on treatment and complications of hemoglobinopathies. Using appropriate algorithms in the clinical decision support system, the implementation of this system within the electronic medical record would allow for more focused and appropriate care delivered in the Department of Community Health and Family Medicine with trigger prompts and education for the primary care physicians to best evaluate appropriate management and quality of care of patients with sickle cell disease and other hemoglobinopathies. • CHFM investigators: Arch Mainous, III, PhD and Peter Carek, MD, MS, CAQSM • CHFM total grant: $8,077.00

Co-Investigator advising the Implementation Science Program to look at adapting interventions into clinical settings.

Implementation Science Grant • CHFM primary investigator: Maribeth Porter, MD, MS • CHFM total grant: $25,500.00

DoD/NCAA Grand Alliance: Concussion Assessment, Research and Education (CARE) Consortium

Department of Defense (DoD) / National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) A prospective, longitudinal, multi-center, multi-sport investigation that delineates the natural history of concussion in both men and women by incorporating a multi-dimensional assessment of standardized clinical measures of post-concussive symptomatology, performance-based testing (cognitive function, postural stability), and psychological health. • CHFM primary investigator: James R. Clugston, MD, CAQSM • CHFM total grant: $436,700.00

Dose-Finding of Semaglutide Administered Subcutaneously Once Daily Versus Placebo and Liraglutide in Subjects with Type 2 Diabetes Subtitle: A 26-Week, Multicentre, Double-Blind, Randomised, Controlled Dose-Finding Trial, Phase 2

Novo Nordisk This was a 26-week multicenter, randomized, double-blinded, dose-finding trial comparing four dose levels of semaglutide administered s.c. OD to four dose levels of placebo and liraglutide in 704 subjects diagnosed with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) treated with diet and exercise with or without metformin. The treatment period is 26 weeks in total followed by a follow-up visit after 7 weeks. Total trial duration for the individual subjects will be up to 36 weeks. To compare the efficacy of four (4) dose-levels of semaglutide administered subcutaneously (s.c.) once daily (OD) versus placebo on glycemic control after 26 weeks of treatment, 2) to compare the efficacy of semaglutide administered s.c. OD versus liraglutide on glycemic control after 26 weeks of treatment, and 3) to compare semaglutide administered s.c. OD versus placebo and liraglutide on other parameters of efficacy, patient reported outcomes, safety and tolerability after 26 weeks of treatment. • CHFM primary investigator: Karen Hall, MD • CHFM total grant: $40,333.26

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Expanding an Established Family Medicine Residency by Adding a Rural Track Program

US Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA) • CHFM primary investigator: Karen Hall, MD • CHFM total grant: $1,920,000.00

GATR: Gator Athletics TBI Research

Banyan Biomarkers This prospective and observational single-center trial is being conducted with a population of subjects over the age of 18 participating in Men’s Football, Women’s Soccer, and Women’s Lacrosse at the University of Florida (UF), Gainesville. Subjects are being followed for the duration of their collegiate athletic career for the presence or absence of trauma to the head (concussion). In addition to the standard clinical measures that are routinely used in accordance with the UF Athletic Association Concussion Management Policy, subjects are being recruited to participate in research directed procedures involving blood-based biomarkers, and head impact sensor technology. Analysis is being conducted in concert with MRI neuroimaging data that was collected alongside this effort under a separate protocol recruiting and enrolling subjects from the same participating sports teams. • CHFM primary investigator: James R. Clugston, MD, CAQSM • CHFM total grant: $322,035.00

Genomic Medicine Implementation: The Personalized Medicine Program

National Institutes of Health (NIH) CYP2D6 poor metabolizers are at increased risk for toxicity with TCA, whereas ultra-rapid metabolizers are at increased risk for treatment failure. We hypothesized that 1) CYP2D6 genotyping will lead to better pain management and control; 2) having CYP2D6 genotype results is useful to inform prescribing decisions for pain medication from the physician’s perspective; and 3) genotype results beyond CYP2D6 would be informative for individualizing use of multiple medications prescribed patients in the Family Medicine Clinic. • CHFM primary investigator: Siegfried Schmidt, MD, PhD • CHFM total grant: $72,091.23

Hearing Loss and Chronic Disease

University of Florida CHFM Internal Project Award The two aims of this study were to: 1) assess whether self-reported hearing loss is associated with undiagnosed chronic disease: hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus, and urinary microalbuminuria, and 2) to evaluate control of chronic diseases in the setting of hearing loss: diabetes mellitus, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and obesity. • CHFM primary investigator: John Malaty, MD • CHFM total grant: $10, 900.00

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HeartMath: Biofeedback Mechanism Used for Physician Wellbeing Monitoring

University of Florida CHFM Internal Project Award IHM created HeartMath in 1991, a scientifically validated biofeedback tool used to teach the practitioner emotional self-regulation techniques providing both immediate and sustained psychological benefits. The practitioner is connected to an HRV monitor while practicing specific self-regulation techniques to help them achieve cardiac coherence. These regulation techniques, such as ‘mindfulness,’ increase the autonomic nervous system’s parasympathetic tone to meet the stress-driven sympathetic tone, and the practitioner can see themselves reaching cardiac coherence as it occurs on the biofeedback monitor. This study was an open-label, randomized controlled trial with concealed allocation and matching to determine if using HeartMath with daily mindfulness practice is a practical way to improve job satisfaction and performance of primary care staff, therefore improving clinical outcomes. • CHFM primary investigators: Frank Orlando, MD and Maria Lupi, MD • CHFM total grant: $ 7,720

Integration of Serum Biomarkers, MRI, Functional Assessments, and Impact Accelerometer Data to Improve Diagnosis and Management and Predict Prolonged Recovery of Sports Concussions Experienced by UF Collegiate Athletes (AWARE)

Florida High Tech Corridor Council (FHTCC) Research goal is to more objectively diagnose, manage, and predict recovery of sports concussions using 1) brain imaging using advanced forms of MRI, 2) quantitative measurements of head impacts using the Head Impact Telemetry System in helmeted athletes (football), 3) blood-based concussion biomarker testing, and 4) standard functional assessments of sports concussion currently used in most athletic and clinical settings. • CHFM primary investigator: James R. Clugston, MD, CAQSM • CHFM total grant: $133,494.48

MEDication Focused Outpatient Care for Underutilization of Secondary Prevention (MEDFOCUS)

National Institutes of Health (NIH) To conduct a multi-center, cluster-randomized implementation study utilizing a web-based, centralized cardiovascular risk service, or CVRS, to determine the extent to which the CVRS model will be adopted and implemented in medical offices with large geographic, racial and ethnic diversity. Subjects enrolled at UF will be in the control group, receiving standard care, rather than the CVRS intervention. • CHFM primary investigator: John G. Gums, PharmD • CHFM total grant: $83,580.00

Nurse Education, Practice, Quality, and Retention-Interpersonal Collaborative Practice

US Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA) • CHFM Co-investigator: Shenary Cotter, MD • CHFM total grant: $81,357.50

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GRANTS, RESEARCH AND PUBLICATIONS

OneFlorida Cancer Control Network

Florida Department of Health Establish a statewide network that will quickly bring the benefits of research in labs and other clinical settings to more than nine million patients in all of Florida’s 67 counties. The network will initially create tobacco cessation programs in doctors’ offices around the state in a coordinated effort to prevent cancers and other cardiovascular diseases related to tobacco use. • CHFM primary investigator: Peter Carek, MD, MS, CAQSM • CHFM total grant: $102,531.00

OneFlorida Clinical Research Consortium Phase II

Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) • CHFM primary Co- Principal investigator: Peter Carek, MD, MS, CAQSM • CHFM total grant: $32,900.00

OneFlorida Clinical Research Consortium Phase II

Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) • CHFM primary Co- Principal investigator: David Feller, MD • CHFM total grant: $3,290.00

Pharmacogenomic Evaluation of Antihypertensive Responses

National Institutes of Health (NIH) • CHFM primary investigator: R. Whit Curry Jr., MD • CHFM total grant: $526,817.79

Pharmacokinetic and Pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) Studies of Cardiovascular Drugs

US Food and Drug Administration (USFDA) The goal of this project is to provide pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data to help the FDA better understand which factors should be considered in bioequivalence studies of metoprolol ER products.We will address our hypotheses with the following specific aims: 1) compare the pharmacokinetics and cardiovascular effects of brand name and generic metoprolol ER products in patients with hypertension; 2) determine the impact of gastric pH variation on the concentration-response relationship with different metoprolol ER products; and 3) examine the effect of CYP2D6 genotype on the pharmacokinetics of different metoprolol ER products. • CHFM primary investigator: Siegfried Schmidt, MD, PhD • CHFM total grant: $38,704.50

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SaTC-EDU: EAGER: Education Initiative TECH MeD: Transdisciplinary Education for Critical Hacks of Medical Devices

National Science Foundation (NSF) By employing a range of educational strategies, the TECH MeD (Transdisciplinary Education for Critical Hacks of Medical Devices) initiative seeks to broaden the discourse regarding the cybersecurity implications of remotely accessible, implantable medical devices beyond the narrow confines of computer science. Our goal is to educate a broad audience, including undergraduate and graduate-level students from various disciplines, healthcare professionals, patients with implantable medical devices, and the general public about the ethical, legal, social, and technical implications of these remotely accessible technologies. • CHFM primary investigator: Lauren Solberg, JD, MTS • CHFM total grant: $35,000.00

Southeastern Conference Visiting Faculty Travel Grant University of Florida

Award to be used for travel for collaboration with University of Georgia and split travel costs with another investigator from the University of Florida. • CHFM primary investigator: Katherine M. Edenfield, MD, CAQSM • CHFM total grant: $1,200.00

Sports Concussion and Neuromuscular Function

National Institute of Health (NIH) The long-term goal of this research was to understand the effect of sports concussion on the neuromusculoskeletal system and integrate that knowledge in post-concussion rehabilitation and return-to-play protocols. The overall objective of this study, which is a step toward the long-term goal, was to examine neuromuscular function of the quadriceps following sports concussion. The central hypothesis was that athletes with concussion will have altered quadriceps neuromuscular function at the time of return to play and 30 days later when compared to athletes without concussion. This was a prospective cohort study. Male and female athletes with concussion (n = 34) were matched by age, sex, and pubertal status to athletes without concussion (n = 34). Athletes with concussion were tested within 10 days of physician clearance to return to play and 30 days later. Follow-up testing provided insight into longitudinal changes in neuromuscular function. Athletes without concussion were tested at 2 time points spaced 30 days apart. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) were conducted at the first test session only, whereas the interpolated doublet technique and movement analysis was conducted at both test sessions. • CHFM primary investigator: James R. Clugston, MD, CAQSM • CHFM total grant: $31,417.00

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PUBLICATIONS Anim TE, Keehbauch J. Vaginal bleeding, abnormal (algorithm). In: Domino FJ, ed. The 5-Minute Clinical Consult 2017. 25th ed. Philadelphia: Wolters Kluwer Health; 2016. Asken B, McCrea M, Clugston J, Snyder A, Houck Z, Bauer R. “Playing through it:” Delayed reporting and removal from athletic activity following concussion predicts prolonged recovery. Journal of Athletic Training. 2016;51(4): 329-335. Baker R, Honeyford K, Levene LS, Mainous AG 3rd, Jones DR, Bankart MJ, Stokes T. Population characteristics, mechanisms of primary care and premature mortality in England: A cross-sectional study. BMJ Open. 2016;6(2): e009981. Beers PJ, Adgerson CN, Millan SB. Porcine tri-layer wound matrix for the treatment of stage IV pressure ulcers. JAAD Case Reports. 2016;2(2): 122-124. doi:10.1016/j.jdcr.2016.01.001. Bonnet JP, Clugston JR. Seeing double - football. Medicine & Science in Sports and Exercise. 2016;48(5S): 348. Carek PJ. Educating nurse practitioners and physician assistants in the family medicine practice: We need a thoughtful and focused team-based approach. Fam Med. 2016;48(5): 343-4. Carek PJ, Mims LD, Conry CM, Maxwell L, Greenwood V, Pugno PA. Program director participation in a leadership and management skills fellowship and characteristics of program quality. Fam Med. 2015;47(7): 536-40. Carney PA, Conry CM, Mitchell KB, Ericson A. Dickinson WP, Martin JC, Carek PJ, Douglass AB, Eiff MP. The importance of and the complexities associated with measuring continuity of care during resident training: Possible solutions do exist. Fam Med. 2016;48(4): 286-93. Carris NW, Ghuschyan V, Libby AM, Smith SM. Health-related quality of life in persons with apparent treatment-resistant hypertension on at least four antihypertensives. J Hum Hypertens. 2016;30: 191-6. Carris NW, Smith SM. Quality of life in treatment-resistant hypertension. Curr Hypertens Rep. 2015;17(8):578. Carris N, Smith SM, Gums JG. Osteoarthritis. In: Chisholm-Burns MA, Schwinghammer TL, Wells BG, Malone PM, Kolesar JM, DiPiro JT, eds. Pharmacotherapy Principles & Practice. 4th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, (Chapter 58) 2016:889-899. (ISBN-978-0-07-183502-2). Chang KL. Keep your tools clean. Fam Pract Manag. 2015 Jul-Aug;22(4): 38. Chang KL, Weitzel K, Schmidt S. Pharmacogenetics: Using genetic information to guide drug therapy. Am Fam Physician. 2015 Oct 1;92(7): 588-594. Chang SW, Gong Y, McDonough CW, Langaee TY, Kenari NN, Beitelshees AL, Gums JG, Chapman AB, Turner ST, Johnson JA, Cooper-DeHoff RM. Melatonin pathway and atenolol – Related glucose dysregulation – Is there a correlation? Clin Transl Sci. 2016;9:114-122. Chang S, Gong Y, McDonough CW, Kenari N, Langee T, Beitelshees AL, Gums JG, Chapman AB, Turner ST, Johnson JA, Cooper-Cehoff RM. Correlating the melatonin (MT) pathway with atenolol associated glucose dysregulation in the pharmacogenetic evaluation of antihypertensive response (PEAR) Study. Clin. Pharmacol. Ther. 2015;97: S17. doi:10.1002/cpt. 48.

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Davis K, Dietrich E. Ivabradine (Corlanor) for heart failure. Am Fam Physician. 2016;15:682-84. Davis KA, Miyares MA, Dietrich E. Dual antiplatelet therapy with clopidogrel and aspirin after ischemic stroke: a review of the evidence. Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2015;72:1623-9. de Oliveira FA, Shahin MG, Gong Y, McDonough CW, Beitelshees AL, Gums JG, Chapman AB, Boerwinkle E, Turner ST, Frye RF, Fiehn O, Kaddurah-Daouk R, Johnson JA, Cooper-DeHoff RM. Genomis-metabolmics integrative approach reveals novel biomarkers in DPYS-associated with higher glucose change after treatment with atenolol circulation 2015;132:A18338 (AHA 2015, Orlando, FL). DeCastro A, Carek PJ. Osteoporosis. In Bope ET, Kellerman R (ed). Conn’s Current Therapy 2016. Waltham, MA:Elsevier;2016:632-636. Deininger KM, Reich JA, Hirsch JD, Graveline S, LaFleur J, Smith SM, Ambardekar AV, Lindenfeld J, Aquilante CL. Qualitative assessment of patient-perceived treatment burden following cardiac transplantation. Am J Transplant. 2016;16(suppl 3):553 Desai BK, Desai A. Obstetric & gynecologic emergencies. In Desai BK, Allen BR. Nailing the Emergency Medicine Boards. New York: Springer, 2016 Dewar M, Gruber L, Singer T. Planning an asthma-related quality improvement initiative in two group practices. Alliance Almanac. 2015;37(11): 3-6. Dieuvil M, Malaty J. An uncommon cause of acute encephalopathy in liver cirrhosis. BMJ Case Reports. 2016 April 20; doi:10.1136/bcr-2016-214948. Feller, DB “Medicine of the arts: Photography”. Florida Family Physician. 2015:64 (3);28-29. Gharaibeh KA, Turner ST, Hamadah AM, Chapman AB, Cooper-Dehoff RM, Johnson JA, Gums JG, Bailey KR, Schwartz GL. Comparison of blood pressure control rates among recommended drug selection strategies for initial therapy of hypertension. Amer. Soc. Hyper. 2016 June; doi: 10.1093/ajh/hpw067. Gong Y, McDonough CW, Beitelshees AL, Rouby NE, Hiltunen TP, O'Connell JR, Padmanabhan S, Langaee TY, Hall K, Schmidt SO, Curry RW Jr, Gums JG, Donner KM, Kontula KK, Bailey KR, Boerwinkle E, Takahashi A, Tanaka T, Kubo M, Chapman AB, Turner ST, Pepine CJ, Cooper-DeHoff RM, Johnson JA. PTPRD gene associated with blood pressure response to atenolol and resistant hypertension. Journal of Hypertension. 2015 Nov;33(11):2278-85. PubMed PMID: 26425837. Gong Y, Wang Z, Beitelshees AL, McDonough CW, Langaee TY, Hall K, Schmidt SO, Curry RW, Gums JG, Bailey KR, Boerwinkle E, Chapman AB, Turner ST, Cooper-DeHoff RM, Johnson JA. Pharmacogenomic genome-wide meta-analysis of blood pressure response to beta-blockers in hypertensive African Americans. Hypertension. 2016 Mar;67(3):556-63. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.115.06345. Epub 2016 Jan 4. PMID 26729753. Gruber L, Singer T, Dewar M. Implementing asthma-related quality improvement – establishing a baseline. Alliance Almanac (Alliance for Continuing Education in the Health Professions). 2016;38(6): 6-10. Harle CA, Listhaus A, Covarrubias C, Schmidt SOF, Mackey S, Carek PJ, Fillingim RB, Hurley RW. Overcoming barriers to implementing patient-reported outcomes in an electronic health record: A Case Report. JAMIA. 2016;23(1): 74-79. Hinman S, Quillen DJ, Smith KB, Smith MS. Exercise in pregnancy: A clinical review. Sports Health. 2015 Nov 7.

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Houck Z, Asken B, Bauer R, Pothast J, Michaudet C, Clugston J. Epidemiology of sport-related concussion in an NCAA division I football bowl subdivision sample. Am J Sports Med. 2016 May 3. doi:10.1177/0363546516645070 Kuritzky L, Espay AJ, Gelblum J, Payne R, Dietrich E. Diagnosing and treating neurogenic orthostatic hypotension in primary care. Postgrad Med. 2015;127:702-15. Mainous AG III, Phillips WR. Big data research requires a big role for primary care. Fam Med. 2016 June;48(6):427-9. Mainous AG 3rd, Tanner RJ, Baker R. Prediabetes diagnosis and treatment in primary care. J Am Board Fam Med. 2016; 29(2): 283-5. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2016.02.150252. Mainous AG 3rd, Tanner RJ, Anton SD, Jo A. Grip strength as a marker of hypertension and diabetes in healthy weight adults. Am J Prev Med. 2015;49(6): 850-8. Mainous AG 3rd, Tanner RJ, Anton SD, Jo A. Low grip strength and prediabetes in normal-weight adults. J Am Board Fam Med. 2016;29(2): 280-2. Mainous AG 3rd, Tanner RJ, Mainous RW, Talbert J. Health considerations in regulation and taxation of electronic cigarettes. J Am Board Fam Med. 2015;28(6): 802-6. Malaty J. Medical management of chronic rhinosinusitis in adults. Sinusitis. 2016 May 28. Malaty J. Take a breath and consider the other’s perspective. Fam Med. 2016 March; 48(3): 226-7. Matheson EM, Cerbo T, Carek P, Hueston WJ, Allen C. Evaluating the effectiveness of simulation training in the MUSC family medicine residency program. J SCMA. 2015;111(1): 24-27. Mims LD, Everard KM, Hall K, Hatch R, Malaty J, Rubin D, Agana DF, Carek PJ. Family medicine clerkship directors’ influence on the residency program selection process: A CERA study. Fam Med. 2016;48(2):108-13. PMID:26950781. Moseley RE. Healthcare Ethics Committees. 1st ed. Miami, FL: CITI Program, University of Miami; February 2016. Nguyen K, Jacobs K. Urethral prolapse. Consultant for Pediatricians. 2016 Mar;15(3): 138-140. Phipps EJ, Chacko LR, Fassbender JE, Allison KC, Sarwer SB, Wallace SL, Tan-Torres S, Bowman MA, Wadden TA, Kumanyika SK. Provider views of the feasibility and utility of lifestyle obesity treatment in primary care: Insights from the Think Health! Study. European Journal for Person Centered Healthcare. 2015;3(1): 77-82. Porter M, Diaz VA, Gavin J, Matheson E. Church Attendance associated with healthier life choices. SM J Community Med. 2016;2(1): 1016. Porter M, Diaz VA, Gavin JK, Zacarias A, Dickerson L, Hueston WJ, Carek PJ. Cost and utilization: Hospitalized patients on a family medicine service. South Med J. 2015;108(6): 364-9. Porter M, Mims L, Garven C, Gavin J, Carek P, Diaz V. International health experiences in family medicine residency training. Fam Med. 2016;48(2): 114-20-.

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Sa AC, Webb Y, Gong Y, McDonough CW, Shahin MH, Langaee TY, Turner ST, Beitelshees AL, Chapmah AB, Boerwinkle E, Gums JG, Scherer S, Cooper-Dehoff RM, Sadee W, Johnson JA. Hypertension (HTN)/ blood pressure (BP) signature genes and BP response to thiazide diuretics (TD): Results from PEAR and PEAR-2 studies. Clin. Pharmacol. Therap. 2016;99: S19(PT23). Sacino AN, Shuster JJ, Nowicki KW, Carek PJ, Wegman MP, Listhaus A, Gibney JM, Chang LK. Novel application of a reverse triage protocol providing increased access to care in an outpatient, primary care clinic setting. Fam Med. 2016;48(2): 136-9. Shahin MH, Sa AC, Webb A, Gong Y, Langaee T, McDonough CW, Riva A, Beitelshees AL, Chapman AB, Gums JG, Turner ST, Frye RF, Scherer S, Sadee W, Cooper-Dehoff RM, Johnson JA. Finding a needle in the haystack for thiazide response using genomics/transcriptomics in pharmacogenomic evaluation of antihypertensive response (PEAR) study. Clin. Pharmacol. Therap. 2016;99: S19. Shahin MH, Rotroff DM, Gong Y, Langee T, McDonough CW, Beitelshees AL, Garrett TJ, Chapman AB, Gums JG, Turner ST, Motsinger-Reif A, Frye RF, Schere SE, Sadee W, Fiehn D, Cooper-Cehoff RM, Kaddurah-Daouk R, Johnson JA. Integrating metabolomics and genetics reveals novel biomarkers of hydrochlorothiazide response in pharmacogenomic evaluation of antihyperntive response (PEAR) Study. Clin Pharmcol Ther. 2015;97:S11-S18. doi:10.1002/cpt 48. Shahin MG, Rotroff DM, Webb A, Gong Y, Langaee T, McDonough CW, Beitelshees AL, Garrett T, Gums JG, Motsinger-Reif A, Chapman AB, Turner ST, Boerwinkle E, Frye RF, Scherer SE, Sadee W, Fiehn O, Cooper-DeHoff RM, Kaddurah-Daouk R, Johnson JA. Integrating metabolomics and genomics uncovers novel pathways and genetic signatures influencing hydrochlorothiazide blood pressure response: A genetic response score for hydrochlorothiazide. Circulation. 2015;132:A13621 (AHA 2015, Orlando, FL). Shniderman AB, Solberg LB. Cosmetic psychopharmacology for prisoners: Reducing crime and recidivism through cognitive intervention. Neuroethics. 2015;8(3): 315-326. Smith MS, Prine BR, Smith KB. Current concepts in the management of exertional heat stroke in athletes. Current Orthopaedic Practice. 2015;26 (3): 287-290. Smith SM, Hasan M, Huebschmann AG, Penaloza R, Schorr-Ratzlaff W, Sieja A, Roscoe N, Trinkley KE. Physician acceptance of a physician-pharmacist collaborative treatment model for hypertension management in primary care. J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich.) 2015;17(9): 686-691. Smith SM. Resistant hypertension and susceptible outcomes: Exploring the benefits of aggressive blood pressure control. J Clin Hypertens. 2016;18(1): 40-42. Smith SM, Carris NW, Dietrich ED, Gums JG, Uribe L, Coffey C, Gums TH, Carter BL. Physician-pharmacist collaboration versus usual care for treatment-resistant hypertension. J Am Soc Hypertens. 2016;10(4): 307-17. Solayman MH, Langaee T, Gong Y, El-Hamamsy M, El-Wakeel L, Boerwinkle E, Chapman A, Turner S, Gums J, Beitelshees A, Cooper-DeHoff R, Badary O, Johnson J. Association of plasma MicroRNA with antihypertensive response to beta-blockers. AACP 2015. Clinical Pharmacology and Drug Development. 2015;4(51); 58-59. Solberg LB, Nguyen PN. Medical school applicants’ attitudes about social media use in the admissions process. J Contemp Med Edu. 2015;3(4): 181-183.

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Wechsler ME, Yawn BP, Fuhlbrigge AL, et al. Collaborators: … Chang KL ….. Anticholinergic vs long-acting beta-agonist in combination with inhaled corticosteroids in black adults with asthma: The BELT randomized clinical trial. JAMA. 2015 Oct 27;314(16): 1720-1730.

POSTERS International Asken B, McCrea M, Clugston J, Snyder A, Houck Z, Bauer R. "Playing through it": delayed reporting and removal from athletic activity following concussion predicts prolonged recovery. Poster presented at: International Neuropsychological Society 44th Annual Meeting; February 2016; Boston, MA. Crew EC, Asken BM, Sullan MJ, Clugston JR, Bauer RM. Acute sleep changes following sport-related concussion are associated with increased intra-individual cognitive variability on the ImPACT. Poster presented at: International Neuropsychological Society 44th Annual Meeting; February 2016; Boston, MA. Gaynor L, Asken B, Clugston J, Bauer R. Base rates of concussion-like symptoms in healthy collegiate athletes: A predictive tool for post-concussion recovery time. Poster presented at: International Neuropsychological Society 44th Annual Meeting; February 2016; Boston, MA. Snyder AR, Asken BM, Clugston JR, Bauer RM. Confirmatory factor analysis in the Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing (ImPACT). Poster presented at: International Neuropsychological Society 44th Annual Meeting; February 2016; Boston, MA. Sullan MJ, Asken BM, Snyder AR, Crew EC, Clugston JR, Bauer RM. The relationship between post-concussive sleep symptoms and recovery time in Division I collegiate athletes. Poster presented at: International Neuropsychological Society 44th Annual Meeting; February 2016; Boston, MA.

National Abuaku B, Psychas P, Ricks P, Ahorlu C, Mumba P, Mensah D, Mensah S, Sackey W, Oppong S, Koram K. Impact of one vs two rounds of IRS on malaria parasitaemia in children in northern Ghana. Poster presented at: American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene Annual Conference; November 2015; Philadelphia, PA. Asken B, Clugston JR, Bauer R. Differences between collegiate athletes and non-athletes in acute post-concussion presentation. Poster presented at: The Sports Concussion Symposium, Sports Neuropsychological Society 4th Annual Conference; April 2016; Houston, TX. Carris NW, Smith SM, Taylor JR, Sando K, Powell J, Hwang A, Gums JG, Dietrich E, Vogel Anderson K. Anticoagulation-related quality of life associated with extended-interval monitoring: A pre-specified analysis of the FADE-OUT study. Poster presented: the 2015 American College of Clinical Pharmacy Global Conference on Clinical Pharmacy; October 20, 2015; San Francisco, CA. Abstract published in Pharmacotherapy 2015;35(11):e271. Dadzie S, Coleman S, Mumba P, Seyoum A, Ricks P, Szumlas D, Psychas P, Williams J, Appawu M, Boakye D. Evolution of insecticide resistance in An. gambiae s.s. population after six years of indoor residual spraying in northern Ghana. Poster presented at: American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene Annual Conference; October 25-29, 2015; Philadelphia, PA. Deininger KM, Reich JA, Hirsch JD, Graveline S, LaFleur J, Smith SM, Ambardekar AV, Lindenfeld J, Aquilante CL. Qualitative assessment of patient-perceived treatment burden following cardiac transplantation. Poster presentation at: 2016 American Transplant Congress; June 11-15, 2016; Boston, MA.. Abstract published in Am J Transplant 2016;16 (suppl 3):553

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Dietrich E, Smith SM, Gums JG. A novel, revenue-generating, pharmacy-led transitions of care program. Poster presented at: 2015 American College of Clinical Pharmacy Annual Meeting; October 21, 2015; San Francisco, CA. Farland M, Ryan S, Ramachandran N, Smith SM. An electronic gallery walk in a high enrollment pharmacy population health course. Technology Showcase Demonstration and Poster Presented at: Team-Based Learning Collaborative 2016 Annual Meeting; March 3 - 5, 2016; Albuquerque, NM. George J, Malaty J. Type 2 diabetes quality improvement project: Utilizing EMR to improve quality of care. Poster presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Houck Z, Asken B, Clugston J, Bauer R. Epidemiology of sport-related concussion in a collegiate Division I football bowl subdivision sample. Poster presented at: The Sports Concussion Symposium, Sports Neuropsychological Society 4th Annual Conference; April 2016; Houston, TX. Kramer D, Michaudet C, Eisenschenk S, Shah KJ, Clugston JR. Headache in a collegiate golfer after dental procedures. Poster presented at: American Medical Society for Sports Medicine Annual Meeting; April 2016; Dallas, TX. Malaty J, Dickmann S, Dieuvil M, Kramer D, Blanc P, Carek P. Mildly elevated transaminases and evaluation for hepatitis B and C in a family medicine center. Poster presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Pollard C, Hatch RL, Zirulnik A. Medical students make an impact on patient safety. Poster presented at: The 42nd Annual Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Conference on Medical Student Education; January 28-31, 2016; Phoenix, AZ. Schmidt S, Hagan H, Chang KL, Gilbert L, Samraj G. Does a chronic pain management program reduce pain related emergency room visits and hospitalizations? Works in progress presentation at: The 49th STFM Annual Spring Conference; May 3, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Smith SM, Hwang AY, Dave C. Trends in antihypertensive medication use among U.S. patients with resistant hypertension, 2008-2013. Poster presentation at: 2016 American Society of Hypertension Annual Meeting; May 14, 2016; New York, NY. Abstract available in J Am Soc Hypertens 2016;10(4S):e36. Solberg L, Carter CS, Solberg LM. A boot camp approach to interprofessional geriatrics education: Replication and validity. Presented at: American Geriatrics Society Annual Meeting; May, 2016; Long Beach, CA. Solberg L, Carter CS, Solberg LM. A boot camp approach to interprofessional geriatrics education: Replication and validity. Presented at: Gerontological Society of America Annual Scientific Meeting; November, 2015; Orlando, FL. Trujillo JM, Malhotra JV, Smith SM, Franson KL. Establishing inter-rater reliability of two patient-centered communication rubrics with international faculty evaluators. Poster presented at: the 2015 American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy Annual Meeting; July 11-15, 2015; Washington D.C. Trujillo JM, Franson KL, Smith SM, Trujillo TC. Establishing the inter-rater reliability of two patient-centered communication evaluation rubrics. Poster presented at: the 2015 American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy Annual Meeting; July 11-15, 2015; Washington D.C. Tsai T, Kroehl M, Smith SM, Thompson A, Trinkley K. Efficacy and safety of twice- versus once-daily dosing of lisinopril for the treatment of hypertension. Poster presented at: the 2015 American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) Midyear Annual Meeting; December 7, 2015; New Orleans, LA.

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State Millan S. Porcine tri-layer wound matrix for the treatment of stage IV pressure ulcers. Poster presented at: Florida Medical Association; July 2015; Orlando, FL. Quillen D. Admissions to medical school: The new MCAT and the holistic review. Poster presented at: Florida Academy of Family Physicians Spring Forum; April 21-23, 2016; Orlando, FL.

Local Agana DF, Hatch R, Porter M, Rubin D, Carek P. UF Primary Care physicians’ satisfaction. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Asken B, Clugston J, Bauer R. Baseline test performance and days to return-to-contact: Implications for the lack of effectiveness of “Sandbagging.” Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Asken B, Clugston J, Bauer R. Differences between varsity athletes and non-athletes in acute post-concussion presentation. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Bonnet J, Eisenschenk S, Clugston J. Seeing double. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Bonnet J, Okken L, Nicolette G. A “New Dimension” of obesity care. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Carek PJ, Dietrich E, Feller D, Malaty J, Lombardi J, Blanc P, Samraj G. Addressing hospital readmissions: Impact of weekly review. Poster presented at: University of Florida Health Quality and Patient Safety Week; March 17, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Crew E, Asken B, Sullan M, Clugston J, Bauer R. Acute sleep changes following sport-related concussion are associated with increased intra-individual variability on ImPACT®. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Dieuvil M, Carek P, Judge E, Listhaus A, Samraj G. Does insurance status influence HPV vaccination rates at university based primary care clinics? Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Dieuvil M, Malaty J. An uncommon cause of acute encephalopathy in liver cirrhosis. Poster presented at: University of Florida College of Medicine Celebration of Research; February 22, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Dieuvil M, Malaty J. An uncommon cause of acute encephalopathy in liver cirrhosis. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Dorsey N, Michaudet C, Storey T, Clugston J. Football athlete with low back pain. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Gaynor L, Asken B, Clugston J, Bauer R. Base rates of concussion-like symptoms in healthy collegiate athletes: A predictive tool for post-concussive recovery time. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL.

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George J, Malaty J. Type 2 diabetes quality improvement project: Utilizing EMR to improve quality of care. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Greif S, Snyder A, Asken B, Clugston J, Bauer R. Confirmatory factor analysis on the immediate post-concussion assessment and cognitive testing (ImPACT®) at baseline. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Houck Z, Asken B, Bauer R, Clugston J. Epidemiology of sport-related concussion in a NCAA Division I football bowl subdivision sample. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Houck Z, Asken B, Bauer R, Perlstein W, Boone J, Dubose D, Clugston J. Improved performance on the king-devick test when re-tested after collegiate sport exposure. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Hwang A, Smith S, Dave C. Trends in antihypertensive medication use among US patients with resistant hypertension, 2008-2014. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Hwang A, Carris N, Smith S, Taylor J, Sando K, Powell J, Gums J, Dietrich E, Anderson KV. Anticoagulation-related quality of life associated with extended-interval monitoring: A pre-specified analysis of the FADE-OUT Study. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Judge E, Carek P, Dieuvil M, Listhaus A, Samaraj G. Racial differences in HPV vaccination rates at an academic family medicine clinic. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Kramer D, Michaudet C, Eisenschenk S, Shah K, Clugston J. Headache in a collegiate golfer after dental procedures. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Millar J, Psychas P, Valle D. Identifying malaria risk factors in a hyper-endemic setting using bayesian model selection. Poster presented at: University of Florida Emerging Pathogens Institute Research Day; February 18, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Nguyen P, Solberg L. Medical school applicants’ attitudes about social media use. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Nowicki KW, Wegman MP, Bosse RR, Sacino AN, Cooper LA, Hardt N, Chang KL. Student-run free-clinic participation has a positive and significant correlation in medical student professional development. University of Florida, College of Medicine, 2016 Celebration of Research; February 22, 2016; Gainesville, Florida. Pond B, Psychas P. Malaria indicator surveys demonstrate a markedly lower prevalence of malaria in large cities of Sub-Saharan Africa. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Schmidt SO, Gilbert L, Chang KL, Samraj G, Listhaus A. Establishing a pain management program within a university based family medicine residency. University of Florida, College of Medicine, 2016 Celebration of Research; February 22, 2016; Gainesville, Florida.

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Smith M, Schmidt S, Weitzel K, Hatton R, Elsey A, Cavallari L, Johnson J. Feasibility of implementing a personalized approach to chronic pain management using CYP2D6 genotype in a primary care clinic. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Sullan M, Asken B, Snyder A, Crew E, Clugston J, Bauer R. The relationship between post-concussive sleep symptoms and recovery time in Division I collegiate athletes. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Wilt J, Padilla C. Otorrhea induced by fall from skateboard. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Wilt J, Okken L, Nicolette G. Simple interventions to help improve blood pressure screening. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Zapf A, Zaremski J. Chronic back pain in a football player. Poster presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL.

PRESENTATIONS International Carek P. Lessons learned in the first two years of the I3 POP Collaborative Cohort. Presented at: North American Primary Care Research Group Annual Meeting; October 24-28, 2015; Cancun, Mexico. Carek P. Review committee – family medicine (RC-FM) update. Presented at: Program Directors Workshop, American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians; April, 2016; San Juan, PR. Diaz V, Gavin J, Mainous A, Player M. Southeastern virtual institute for health equity and wellness (SE VIEW): Use of a tablet-based risk assessment to improve health counseling and patient-provider relationships. Presented at: 43rd annual meeting of the North American Primary Care Research Group; October, 2015; Cancun, Mexico. Gums J. Implementing clinical pharmacy services in Austria. Presented to: Series of Lectures to Austrian Pharmacy Association; September, 2015; Vienna, Austria. Mainous A, Wallace W, Seehusen D, Koopman R, Peterson L, Barr W, Chen F, Chessman A, Ewigman B. Understanding and using the CERA surveys: A workshop for investigators and mentors. Presented at: 43rd annual meeting of the North American Primary Care Research Group; October, 2015; Cancun, Mexico. Moseley R. Withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment. Presented at: Bioethics Society of the English Speaking Caribbean, The Trinidad & Tabago Anaethetists Association, University of West Indies, Clinical Ethics Forum; October, 2015; Port of Spain, Trinidad & Tabago. Moseley R. Health care ethics. Presented at: Bioethics Society of the English Speaking Caribbean, The Trinidad & Tabago Anaethetists Association, University of West Indies, Clinical Ethics Forum, October, 2015; Port of Spain, Trinidad & Tabago. Porter M, Diaz V, Harvey J, Gavin J. A qualitative study to explore tobacco use and cessation in a homeless population. Presented at: NAPCRG; October 24-28, 2015; Cancun, Mexico. Porter M, Mims L, Simpson K, Carek PJ. The “July Effect”: A look at medical admissions. Presented at: NAPCRG; October 24-28, 2015; Cancun, Mexico.

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Psychas P. What drives malaria risk in Northern Ghana? Geospatial & biostatistical analysis of the Bunkpurugu-Yunyoo dataset overview of efforts to date. Presented at: Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, University of Ghana; May, 2016; Accra, Ghana. Stokes T, Levene L, Baker R, Honeyford C, Mainous A, Bankart J. Mechanisms of primary care and premature mortality in England: A cross-sectional study. Presented at: 2015 Primary Health Care Research Conference, July 2015; Adelaide, Australia. Wallace L, Saultz J, William Cayley W Jr, Freeman J, Mainous A, Scherger J, Andrea Wendling A. Writing and reviewing manuscripts for Family Medicine. Presented at: 43rd annual meeting of the North American Primary Care Research Group; October, 2015; Cancun, Mexico.

National Abuaku B, Psychas P, Ricks P, Ahorlu C, Mumba P, Mensah D, Mensah S, Sackey W, Oppong S, Koram K. Impact of one vs two rounds of IRS on malaria parasitaemia in children in Northern Ghana. Presented at: American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene Annual Conference; October 25-29, 2015; Philadelphia, PA. Agana DF, Porter M, Carek P, Hatch RL, Rubin D. Job satisfaction among academic family physicians. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Allen W. Regulating genetic selection in humans: What is a compelling state interest? Presented at: Bioethics Summer Retreat; June 22-26, 2016; Lake Geneva, WI. Ball JA, Waugh S, Nicolette GW, Chen X, Gerke T. College football games as predictors of genital herpes visits at a large university student health care center. Presented at: American Public Health Association 143rd Annual Meeting; October 31 - November 4, 2015; Chicago, IL. Bonnet J. Seeing double. Presented at: American College of Sports Medicine Annual Meeting; May 31 - June 4, 2016; Boston, MA. Carek P. Fellowship forum: Update from the review committee for family medicine. Presented at: American Medical Society for Sports Medicine Meeting; April, 2016; Dallas, TX. Carek P. Osteoporosis. Presented at: Practical Advances in Musculoskeletal and Sports Care Live Course, American Academy of Family Practice; October, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Carek P. Performance enhancing drugs. Presented at: Practical Advances in Musculoskeletal and Sports Care Live Course, American Academy of Family Practice; October, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Carek P. Review committee – family medicine (RC-FM) update. Presented at: 2016 ACGME Annual Meeting; February, 2016; Washington, DC. Carek P. Review committee – family medicine (RC-FM) update. Presented at: PDW and RPS Residency Education Symposium; April, 2016; Kansas City, MO. Carek P. The pre-participation evaluation. Presented at: Practical Advances in Musculoskeletal and Sports Care Live Course, American Academy of Family Practice; October, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Carek P. Wound care. Presented at: Practical Advances in Musculoskeletal and Sports Care Live Course, American Academy of Family Practice; October, 2015; Las Vegas, NV.

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Carek PJ, Malaty J, Dietrich E, Lombardi J, Porter M, Blanc P, Samraj G. Impact of weekly multidisciplinary readmissions rounds on readmission rate. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Clugston JR. Concussion diagnosis and management. Presented at: 2015 MusculoSkeletal and Sports Medicine National Live Course. American Academy of Family Practice; October 23, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Invited. Presentation video included in AAFP Self Study Online Access Package – 8th edition. 2016. Clugston JR. Concussion prevention in football. Presented at: Concussion Across the Spectrum of Injury Conference, New York University, School of Medicine, Department of Neurology; February 26, 2016; New York, NY. Clugston JR. Concussion sideline evaluation - SMART Workshop. Presented at: 2016 American Medical Society for Sports Medicine Annual Meeting; April 19, 2016; Dallas, TX. Clugston JR. Elbow evaluation and examination. Presented at: 2015 MusculoSkeletal and Sports Medicine National Live Course. American Academy of Family Practice; October 24, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Invited. Presentation video included in AAFP Self Study Online Access Package – 8th edition. 2016. Clugston JR. Hip evaluation and examination. Presented at: 2015 MusculoSkeletal and Sports Medicine National Live Course. American Academy of Family Practice; October 23, 2015. Las Vegas, NV. Invited. Presentation video included in AAFP Self Study Online Access Package – 8th edition. 2016. Clugston JR. Sickle cell trait and the athlete. Presented at: 2015 MusculoSkeletal and Sports Medicine National Live Course. American Academy of Family Practice; October 24, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Invited. Presentation video included in AAFP Self Study Online Access Package – 8th edition. 2016. Cobbs-Tarantola L, Perrin A, Vidaurreta B. Perspectives on peer-assisted learning: Challenges and innovations. Presented at: Association of American Medical Colleges, GSA-CiM-OSR Professional Development Conference; June 23-26, 2016; St. Louis, MO. Cooper-DeHoff R, McIntyre L, Weng L, Garrett T, Frye R, Culver J, Gardell S, Morse A, Gums JG, Beitelshees A, Borum P, Petucci C, Janicki T, Edison A, Johnson JA. Pharmacometabolomics identifies acylcarnitines associated with beta blocker-induced fasting glucose alterations: Findings from RCMRC #U24DK097209. Presented at: Metabolomic Society Annual Meeting; June 29 - July 2, 2015; San Francisco, CA. Costain J, Olson D, Listhaus A, Gilbert L, Schmidt S, Samraj G. Assessment of first 100 patients at a family medicine residency chronic pain management program. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Dickmann S, Blanc P, Dieuvil M, Kramer D, Malaty J. Mildly elevated transaminases and evaluation for hepatitis B and C in a family medicine center. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Dietrich E. Contemporary considerations and models for transitions of care services. Presented at: American Society of Health Systems Pharmacists Summer Meeting, Ambulatory Care; June 11-15, 2016; Baltimore, MD. Dietrich E, Smith SM, Gums JG. A novel, revenue-generating, pharmacy-led transitions of care program. Paper presented at: 2015 A College of Clinical Pharmacy Annual Meeting; October 20, 2015; San Francisco, CA. Dieuvil M, Carek P, Judge E, Listhaus A, Samraj G. Does insurance status influence HPV vaccination rates at university based primary care clinics? Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN.

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Dorsey NJ, Michaudet C, Silvestri P, Clugston J. Football athlete with sickle cell trait and low back pain. Presented at: American Medical Society for Sports Medicine Annual Meeting; April 17, 2016; Dallas, TX. Edenfield K. Exercise prescription. Presented at: 2015 Practical Advances in MusculoSkeletal and Sports Medicine National Live Course, American Academy of Family Practice; October 21, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Edenfield K. Female athlete triad. Presented at: 2015 Practical Advances in MusculoSkeletal and Sports Medicine National Live Course, American Academy of Family Practice; October 21, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Edenfield K. Nutritional and dietary supplements. Presented at: 2015 Practical Advances in MusculoSkeletal and Sports Medicine National Live Course, American Academy of Family Practice; October 21, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Edenfield K, Michaudet C. Casting and splinting. Presented at: 2015 Practical Advances in MusculoSkeletal and Sports Medicine National Live Course, American Academy of Family Practice; October 22, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Edenfield K, Michaudet C. Casting and splinting. Presented at: 2015 Practical Advances in MusculoSkeletal and Sports Medicine National Live Course, American Academy of Family Practice; October 23, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Feller DB, Ware MR, Hall KL, Listhaus A, Feller J. Evaluating a collaborative care behavioral health model. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. George J, Malaty J. Type 2 diabetes quality improvement project: Utilizing EMR to improve quality of care. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Hatch RL, Rosenberg E, Rubin D, Zirulnik A, Stacey J. Impact of a clerkship-based patient safety curriculum. Paper presented at: 42nd Annual Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Conference on Medical Student Education; January, 2016; Phoenix, AZ. Hatch RL, Rubin D, Nall R, Stacey J, Harrell JG, Laibstain S. Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs): Using family medicine clerkships to teach essential skills. Presented at: 42nd Annual Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Conference on Medical Student Education; January, 2016; Phoenix, AZ. Judge E, Carek P, Dieuvil M, Listhaus A, Samraj G. Racial differences in HPV vaccination rates at an academic family medicine clinic. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Kramer D, Michaudet C, Eisenschenk S, Shah K, Clugston JR. Headache in a collegiate golfer after dental procedures. American Medical Society for Sports Medicine Annual Meeting; April, 2016; Dallas, TX. Liaw L, Post R, Mainous A, Stange K. Shark tank for family medicine: Real-time and sustained feedback for primary care research ideas. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Mainous A, Chessman A, Seehusen D, Wallace L. CAFM Education Research Alliance (CERA)—How it works and how to get involved. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN.

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Mainous A, Tanner R, Anton S, Jo A. Prevalence of prediabetes and abdominal obesity among healthy weight adults: 18-year trend. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Malaty J, Taylor D, George J, Kramer D. Team-based chronic kidney disease quality improvement project. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Michaudet C. Ankle and foot – evaluation and management. Presented at: 2015 MusculoSkeletal and Sports Medicine National Live Course, American Academy of Family Practice; October, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Michaudet C. Low back pain. Presented at: 2015 MusculoSkeletal and Sports Medicine National Live Course, American Academy of Family Practice; October, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Michaudet C. Sprains, strains and dislocations. Presented at: 2015 MusculoSkeletal and Sports Medicine National Live Course, American Academy of Family Practice; October, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Michaudet C. Casting and splinting workshop. Presented at: 2015 MusculoSkeletal and Sports Medicine National Live Course, American Academy of Family Practice; October, 2015; Las Vegas, NV. Moseley R. Honoring patient’s end of life decisions. Presented at: 25th Annual Alpha 1 National Education Conference; June, 2016; Miami, FL. Nicolette GW. Tendon/bursal disorders, osteoarthrosis, imaging modalities in sports medicine, & case studies/hot topics in sports medicine. Presented at: AAFP Practical Advances in Musculoskeletal and Sports Care 2015, Las Vegas NV, October, 2015. Olson D, Costain J, Gilbert L, Listhaus A, Schmidt S, Samraj G. Establishing multidisciplinary chronic pain management curriculum in inner-city family medicine residency education. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Oyola S, Sierpina V, WinklerPrins V, Michelfelder A, Schumann SA, Bradner M, Minor S, Hatch RL, Chao J. Best practices for preparing and assessing our clerkship students: How do multiple choice exams fit into the big picture? Presented at: 42nd Annual Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Conference on Medical Student Education; January, 2016; Phoenix, AZ. Porter M, Agana DF, Carek P, Hatch RL, Rubin D. Family medicine clerkship directors’ views and actions on medical students’ impressions of Family Medicine: A CERA study. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Porter M, Blanc B, Listhaus A, Shuster J, Carek P. Referral rate in a family medicine residency clinic: How does it compare? Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Potts S, Carek P, Danoff R, Lausen H, Munzing T. Requirements, milestones, NAS, and other accreditation issues: A workshop with the ACGME review committee for family medicine. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN. Quillen D. Admissions to medical school: The new MCAT and the Holistic Review. Lecture: 47th Annual Scientific Meeting of the Hungarian Medical Association of America; October 25-30, 2015; Lido Beach, Sarasota, FL.

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Rathe R. Building problem-oriented notes: The evolution of a documentation tool. Presented at: Epic Physicians Advisory Council; April, 2016; Verona, WI. Schmidt S, Chang KL, Gilbert L, Hagan H, Samraj G. Does chronic disease management applied in a chronic pain management program improve patient reported outcomes, reduce emergency room visits, and decrease hospitalizations? Presented at: The 49th Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Annual Spring Conference; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minnesota, MN. Smith SM. Resistant hypertension: Determinants, outcomes, and approaches for blood pressure intransigence. Presented at: 36th Annual Meeting of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy; October 18, 2015; San Francisco, CA. White L, Hwang A, Samraj G. Impact of comprehensive anticoagulation program in improving multidisciplinary training and patient outcome. Presented at: The 49th Annual Spring Conference for the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine; April 30 - May 4, 2016; Minneapolis, MN.

State Allen W. From secrecy to disclosure: The history of informed consent. Taking informed consent seriously. Presented at: 2nd Annual Issues in Clinical Ethics Conference; April 29, 2016; Orlando, FL. Michaudet C. MSK1: Neck and upper extremity injuries and fractures. Presented at: 2016 Board Review Course, Florida Academy of Family Physicians; March 12, 2016; Orlando, FL. Michaudet C. MSK2: Low back and lower extremity injuries and fractures. Presented at: 2016 Board Review Course, Florida Academy of Family Physicians; March 12, 2016; Orlando, FL. Moseley R. Protecting research participants. Presented at: Florida Department of Health; May, 2016; Tallahassee, FL. Moseley R. Strategies for taking informed consent seriously. Presented at: 2nd Annual Clinical Ethics Conference, Taking Informed Consent Seriously, Florida Bioethics Network; April, 2016; Orlando, FL. Moseley R. Proper feeding and watering of the American ethics committee. Presented at: Florida Bioethics: Debates, Decisions, Solutions; April, 2016; Miami, FL. Moseley R. Navigating ethics. Presented at: WPBT2-PBS; March, 2016; Miami, FL. Moseley R. Making sense of the challenges. Presented at: Ethical Issues in Healthcare: Distressing Issues, BayCare; February, 2016; Tampa, FL. Moseley R. Ethical issues surrounding childhood immunizations. Presented at: 8th Annual Pediatric Ethics Conference; November, 2015; Jacksonville, FL. Solberg L. Giving consent for future procedures: Advance directives. Presented at: Florida Bioethics Network Conference: Taking Informed Consent Seriously; April, 2016; Orlando, FL.

Local Agana DF. UF Primary Care physicians’ satisfaction. Presented at: The University of Florida College of Medicine Celebration of Research Day; February 13, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Agana DF. Characteristics of emergency department utilizers of UF Family Medicine in 2015. Presented at: University of Florida Public Health and Health Professions Research Day; April 13, 2016; Gainesville, FL.

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Carek P, Dietrich E, Feller D, Malaty J, Lombardi J, Blanc P, Samraj G. Addressing hospital readmissions: Impact of weekly review. Presented at: University of Florida Health Quality and Patient Safety Week. March 17, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Clugston JR. Update on concussion prevention in football. Presented at: Safety in Adolescent and High School Sports Conference, University of Florida Orthopedics and Sports Medicine Institute; February 20, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Clugston JR, Asken B, McCrea M, Snyder A, Houck Z, Bauer R. Playing through it: Delayed reporting and removal from athletic activity after concussions predicts prolonged recovery. Presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Dewar M. Managing medical staff relations. Florida American College Healthcare Executives; September, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Dickmann S, Blanc P, Carek P, Dieuvil M, Kramer D, Malaty J. Mildly elevated transaminases and evaluation for hepatitis B and C in a family medicine center. Presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Dietrich E. Antibiotic pharmacokinetics. Presented at: 2016 Inpatient Family Medicine Morning Didactics, Medicine Service; July 2015 - June 2016; Gainesville, FL. Dietrich E. Anticoagulation reversal. Presented at: 2016 Inpatient Family Medicine Morning Didactics, Medicine Service; July 2015 - June 2016; Gainesville, FL. Dietrich E. Electrolytes I and II. Presented at: University of Florida MTM Master’s Program: Renal Section, University of Florida College of Pharmacy; January, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Dietrich E. Transitions of care - focus on diabetes. Presented at: University of Florida MTM Master’s Program: Renal Section, University of Florida College of Pharmacy; October, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Edenfield K. University of Florida Nutrition Intensive for 1st year medical students: Panel Member. October 26, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Edenfield K. Sports nutrition and ergogenic aids. Presented at: University of Florida Nutrition Intensive for 1st year medical students; October 28, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Feller D. Fad diets and functional food for weight control. Presented at: First Year UF Medical School Nutrition and Health Intensive; October, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Feller D. Integrative medicine for pain. Presented at: Conference and Panel Discussion for 2nd Year UF Medical Students; November, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Gravlee J. The Female athlete triad. Presented at: The Student Health Care Center CME; 2015; Gainesville, FL. Gums J. Antibiotic resistance. Presented to: Student Health Care Center Grand Rounds, University of Florida; February, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Gums J. Antimicrobial resistance: Implications for the primary care provider. Presented at: Student Health Care Center Grand Rounds, University of Florida; June, 2016; Gainesville, FL.

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Hinman SK, Smith KB, Quillen DM, Smith MS. Exercise in pregnancy: A clinical review. Presented at: Sports Health; November, 2015. Mainous A. Prevalence of prediabetes and abdominal obesity among health weight adults: An 18-year trend. Presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night, June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Malaty J, Taylor D, George J, Kramer D. Team-based chronic kidney disease quality improvement project. Presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Michaudet C. Primary care medicine. Presented at: HSC 2000 Introduction to Health Professions, University of Florida; February, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Michaudet C. Primary care sports medicine. Presented at: University of Florida Pre-Med AMSA; December, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Millan S. Adventures in research. Presented at: Healogics Specialty Physicians; May, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Millan S. Wound care update, Part I. Presented at: UF Student Health Care Center; August, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Millan S. Wound care update, Part II. Presented at: UF Student Health Care Center; September, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Moseley R. Advance directives training project. Presented at UF Health Family Clinics; June, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Moseley R. Current technologies for documenting end of life decisions. Presented at: Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine Grand Rounds, University of Florida College of Medicine; June, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Moseley R. Multi-faceted aspects of dying. Presented at: Making the End Count; October, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Porter M, Malaty J, Michaudet C, Shuster J, Blanc P, Carek P. Referral rate in a family medicine residency clinic: How does it compare? Presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Psychas P. Malaria: Basic epidemiology, global burden and control strategies. Presented at: “Global Public Health” Course, UF College of Public Health and Health Professions; January, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Psychas P. Malaria 101: Understanding an ancient scourge and the new medications used to fight it. Presented at: UF Oak Hammock Nobel Prize Lecture Series; April, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Psychas P. A gator family doctor fights malaria in West Africa. Presented at: UF Medical Honors Program Seminar; March, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Psychas P. U.S. medical officer in West Africa: An unusual, rewarding career option in global health. Presented at: UF College of Medicine Local/Global Health Equity Track Seminar; December, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Smith S, Carris N, Dietrich E, Gums J, Uribe L, Coffey C, Gums T, Carter B. Pharmacist-physician collaboration for uncontrolled treatment-resistant hypertension. Presented at: Community Health and Family Medicine Research Night; June 23, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Solberg L. Introduction to research ethics. Presented at: UF Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute Citizen Scientist Program; June, 2016; Gainesville, FL.

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Solberg L. Assisting teams with ethical issues in patient care: the UF Health Ethics Consult Service. Presented at: University of Florida Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Grand Rounds; May, 2016; Gainesville, FL. Solberg L. Ethics bowl panelist. Presented at: University of Florida Premedical AMSA Politics and Ethics in Medicine; December, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Solberg L. Ethics case discussion. Presented at: University of Florida Department of Aging and Geriatric Research, Geriatric Care Boot Camp: Transitions of Care; November, 2015; Gainesville, FL. Solberg L. Ethics case discussion. Presented at: Malcolm Randall VA Medical Center, VA Geriatric Care Boot Camp; October, 2015; Gainesville, FL.

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AT-A-GLANCE

CHAIRMAN LETTER ................................................................................................................1

MISSION AND VISION .............................................................................................................2

NEW FACULTY AND PROVIDERS .............................................................................................4

RETIREES .................................................................................................................................5

CLINICAL SERVICES .................................................................................................................6

MEDICAL STUDENT EDUCATION PROGRAM ..........................................................................16

BIOETHICS, LAW AND MEDICAL PROFESSIONALISM PROGRAM ...........................................18

RESIDENT EDUCATION PROGRAM .........................................................................................20

QUALITY AND PATIENT SAFETY ..............................................................................................23

COMMUNITY HEALTH ............................................................................................................25

STATE OF THE DEPARTMENT ..................................................................................................28

ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES AND COMMITTEES ....................................................................29

AWARDS .................................................................................................................................43

GRANTS, RESEARCH AND PUBLICATIONS...............................................................................45

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