DFM Showcase

Winter 2012

Lead Story

  1. Ethiopian Fellows visited the UW Health Odana Atrium clinic.

    DFM Helps Introduce Family Medicine to Ethiopia

    In October, the Department of Family Medicine (DFM) hosted five faculty physicians from Ethiopia’s Addis Ababa University (AAU) Faculty of Medicine, who were here for a family medicine faculty development fellowship.

    Now, just a few months later, these fellows—some of whom had never before explored family medicine in depth—are using their new knowledge to create the very first family medicine department in Ethiopia’s history.

Department Announcements

  1. 2011 Renner/Hansen Awards Ceremony

    DFM Honors Winners at Renner/Hansen Awards

    The Department of Family Medicine (DFM) held its annual Renner/Hansen Awards Ceremony on Wednesday, November 2, 2011, at the Pyle Center in Madison.

Education

  1. Bucky welcomed the PA Program's incoming DE students

    PA Program’s DE Option in its Tenth Year of Success, Expands North

    Danielle Rieck, a 2011 graduate of UW–La Crosse, is a volunteer EMT in Ellsworth, Wisconsin, a small rural town near River Falls. Amanda Rynearson is a brain cancer researcher in Rochester, Minnesota. Jeffrey Wood is a firefighter and paramedic in Parker, Colorado, with a wife and three children.

    What do they have in common? They’re all first-year students in the UW-Madison Physician Assistant (PA) Program.

  2. A resident at the Augusta rural training site cares for a patien

    WRPRAP Grant Program Aims to Create and Expand RTTs, Rural Residencies

    As part of its new grant initiative, the Wisconsin Rural Physicians Residency Assistance Program (WRPRAP), a state-funded program administered by the Department of Family Medicine (DFM), recently received two letters of intent to establish new or expanded rural training tracks (RTTs) or rural residency programs in Wisconsin.

    It’s an important step toward increasing rural training opportunities for residents—and ultimately, addressing Wisconsin’s critical need for rural physicians.

Research

  1.  Sarah Petto, MFA, helped Jeremy Amble rediscover photography...

    Art-in-Healthcare Program Promotes Self-Expression, Healing, and Wellness

    Jeremy Amble was always a photography buff. He learned photography techniques as a boy in 4-H, and later put those skills to use working on his high school yearbook.

    But when Jeremy suffered a C4 spinal cord injury—one that left him with very limited arm movement and no finger dexterity—he thought he’d never be able to take photographs again.

  2. The FASD research team

    FASD Training, Outreach Projects Expand with Renewal Funding

    Over the past three years, the Great Lakes FASD Regional Training Center (GLFRTC), a seven-state project funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and based at the Department of Family Medicine (DFM), has trained over 5000 healthcare providers to better assess and treat fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD).

    In September 2011, GLFRTC received renewal funding to continue those efforts—and also find ways to incorporate screening and brief intervention services into primary care.

  3. The WIPHL team

    WIPHL Expands with New BSI, Health Educator Training Initiatives

    The Wisconsin Initiative to Promote Healthy Lifestyles (WIPHL) is recruiting healthcare clinics for a new program to further refine the behavioral screening and intervention (BSI) model it’s implemented throughout Wisconsin over the past five years.                                                   

Patient Care

  1. Health literacy class held at Wingra Clinic

    Wingra Clinic Hosts Health Literacy Class

    Over one-third of adults in the US struggle with health literacy: the ability to understand, process, and communicate health-related information.

    It’s a big problem in primary care—one that not only affects healthcare quality, but also drives up costs. In Wisconsin alone, clinicians lose $3.4 billion each year due to patients’ lack of health literacy.

  2. Eau Claire team honored with the 2011 Davis Award.

    Eau Claire and Portage Clinics Improve Efficiency, Win Davis Awards

    Two projects aimed at improving clinic efficiency—specifically, reducing wait times for nursing visits at the UW Portage Clinic, and reducing total patient appointment times at the UW Health Eau Claire Family Medicine Clinic—won the 11th annual James E. Davis Quality Improvement Awards.

    The awards were presented on November 5, 2011, during the Renner/Hansen ceremony and reception.