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Inclusive partnershipNational leaders in practice-based, community participatory, and practice redesign and improvement research.
Jodi Holtrop, PhD, MCHES
Vice Chair for Research
Welcome to the Department of Family Medicine - Research & Innovation.
Our research mission is simple: To improve community health and well-being through high-quality research in patient-centered family medicine using holistic and integrative models of health.
We are innovators and experts in the discovery and dissemination of new knowledge through translational and practice-based research.
We serve as the primary resource for family medicine practices, by providing knowledge, health information technology and practice transformation tools and guidance to satisfy the Quadruple Aim of improving the health of populations, enhancing the experience of care for individuals, reducing the per capita cost of health care, and attaining joy in work.
We continuously push to expand the reach of our practice-based research networks to more effectively support practices, share information, develop and sustain a dynamic learning community and bring value to our stakeholders by answering their questions.
We are here for you, your community, and your health.
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Inclusive partnership____
Attention to DEIA in team composition____
Authentic community engagement____
Need for continuous growth, learning, self-reflection____
Moving from documenting to dismantling health inequities____
Use of appropriate theoretical models and frameworks, such as a public health critical race praxis
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A proactive, comprehensive, and continuous appraisal of how equity may disproportionately affect oppressed people
For Jeffrey Cain, MD, FAAFP, his passion for medicine is deeply rooted in relationships. And for him, a career in family medicine has offered the ability to combine relationships and science in the spirit of improving people’s health.
“We understand that if people have a relationship with the family physicians they get their care from, they are more likely to get that care and take steps to take care of themselves,” Cain says. “When you develop relationships with patients over time, you have the opportunity to take better care of them. My patients look out for me just as much as I look out for them.”He has supported thousands of medical students, residents, fellow physicians and even young kids, through his powerful work in healthcare policy and advocacy. As just one example, he co-founded Tar Wars, a youth tobacco-free education program. Through this innovative program, he realized the power and potential to educate and inform millions of children.
“When I talked to one kid in my office, I was making a difference for that one kid,” Cain says. “If I was standing in front of 30 kids and could get them excited, all of a sudden I was making an impact on 30 kids. Once I started working with residency programs, in the communities, and with the AAFP, we hit 10 million kids.”
As Cain reflects on his career at CU, he’s choosing to pay it forward through a planned gift to benefit the Department of Family Medicine. This gift will also help boost the A.F. Williams Family Endowment within the Department. Through Cain’s generosity, he will help future generations continue to transform and advocate for family medicine and its importance in healthcare.“My mom always taught us, ‘It’s not what you do with your hands that counts but what lives on after you.’ We’ve had careers that have let us be comfortable with our needs, our families. We need to think: ‘What lives on after me?’” Through a legacy gift, Cain says, “You still get to build this in the background. You can still be living your life, while actively making a difference in the future.”
Through his planned gift, Cain will help ensure healthcare policy and advocacy can and will live on as part of the fabric in family medicine at CU and in our communities. His hope is to help remove boundaries, make healthcare more accessible for all and encourage better physician-patient relationships.“We need to get out of ingrained silos, ingrained patterns that work because of current incentives and move toward things that incent the value of relationships,” Cain says. “Family medicine itself is about building relationships over time with people. When we understand values, it becomes a conversation where people are willing to take a step for their health. When you develop relationships with patients over time, you have the opportunity to take better care of them.”
Cain has seen the department and residency program grow over the course of his 35 years with CU. From 60 faculty in the 1980s to over 700 faculty, staff and clinical volunteer faculty in the department now, Cain says it’s demonstrating excellence in teaching, research, healthcare policy and rural and medical education. He wants to a part of the future of the department through his legacy giving.“We spend our days doing this for a living and in the middle of busy times, it’s hard to see how important it all is,” Cain says. “Having been a part of the education of over 450 residents, when I stand back and look at the wall of photos of all those residents, I am amazed to see all of the medical students who have grown into talented family physicians and are now making a difference in their communities. That’s what you see over time and what we witness – just one small part of the roles we play.”
Jodi Holtrop, PhD, MCHES
Vice Chair for Research
jodi.holtrop@cuanschutz.edu
Carlee Kreisel, MPH
Research Services Specialist
carlee.kreisel@cuanschutz.edu
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