Kelly Archer

Kelly Archer, a case manager at University Medical Center in Tuscaloosa, received an honorable mention in Case Management Institute’s 2022 Case Management Week Essay Contest. The title of her essay is “Case managers are at the forefront of quality measures.” In her essay, Archer describes case managers as “professionals who prevent patients’ needs from slipping…


CCHS magazine lauded for excellence

The College of Community Health Sciences Annual Report magazine received two prestigious awards for excellence from the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE). The 2020 publication was awarded a Circle of Excellence Award and a Best of District III Award. Circle of Excellence Awards recognize outstanding work in communications, marketing and alumni relations…


CCHS welcomes new fellows

The College of Community Health Sciences has welcomed new fellows in obstetrics and sports medicine. The College has seven fellowship programs that are designed to enhance the education of family medicine physicians, especially those who plan to practice in rural and underserved communities where there might be few specialists practicing. In addition to obstetrics, sports…


Integrated Residency Program eases transition to residency

The University of Alabama Tuscaloosa Family Medicine Residency Program offers a one-year Integrated Residency (IR) Program for fourth-year medical students planning a primary care practice to better prepare them for their first year (intern year) of residency. Established in 2021, students at the University of Alabama at Birmingham Marinex E. Heersink School of Medicine are…


CCHS researcher part of NIH artificial intelligence program

Dr. Pamela Payne-Foster, professor of community medicine and population health with the College of Community Health Sciences, is part of a University of Alabama at Birmingham research team recently awarded funding as part of the National Institutes of Health’s newly launched Bridge2AI (Artificial Intelligence) program. The aim of the Bridge2AI program will be to accelerate…


Mini Medical School

Members of the Tuscaloosa community have the opportunity to learn about trends and advances in health and medicine as part of the Mini Medical School program. Mini Medical School is a collaborative effort of the College of Community Health Sciences and The University of Alabama OLLI program and features a series of lectures provided by…


Monkeypox cases declining

Reported cases of monkeypox peaked in August and have since been trending downward, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Why? “People took it seriously,” said Dr. Richard Friend, a family medicine physician and dean of the College of Community Health Sciences. “In groups and geographic areas where this virus…


Minimally invasive gyn surgery can help urinary incontinence

Urinary incontinence is an involuntary leakage of urine. Studies suggest that 40% to 50% of women who experience urinary incontinence never actually complain to anyone. Seventy percent of women with urinary incontinence worry about coughing, sneezing and laughing in public in fear of having an accident, and 35% travel less frequently and avoid sexual intercourse.…


In Memory

Houston Pearce, a longtime supporter of CCHS who built and operated radio stations across the Southeast, died Sept. 9, 2022, in Tuscaloosa. He was 89 years old. Born in 1933, Pearce grew up in Whitfield, Ala., where his family owned a general store. When he was 8 years old his father died and Pearce and…


Accolades

Susan Page, proposal development administrator and grant writer with the CCHS Institute for Rural Health Research, received the 2022 Mark G. Foster Scholarship awarded by The University of Alabama Professional Staff Assembly. The $1,000 scholarship is awarded to a professional staff member enrolled in undergraduate or graduate courses at UA. Page is working on a…