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About Us

Family Medicine is the largest primary care specialty in the US and provides most of the care to under-resourced communities in this nation. It is a field that focuses on prevention, chronic disease, acute conditions management where a three to four year residency training includes inpatient, outpatient, pediatric, obstetric and mental health care. We are trained broadly to provide care to any age, any gender and any condition. We are stem cells that can differentiate into Sports Medicine, Integrative Medicine, Geriatric Care, Palliative Care, Adolescent, Obstertic Care and Primary Mental Healthcare providers according to the need of the patient and community before us. Unlike our fellow primary care colleagues in general internal medicine, general pediatrics, and medicine-pediatrics, we are not bound by age and while many of us have specific interests, our ultimate desire is to adapt to any need, for any age patient when they need us.

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Diversity and Inclusion Statement

The Department of Family Medicine is committed to social justice, diversity equity and inclusion. We embrace our differences and honor our uniqueness to create a learning environment where every individual has the opportunity and support to reach their full potential, growth and success.

Through our efforts we will address barriers in education and research, reduce disparities in healthcare, and promote anti-racist policies to achieve greater equity among our patients, learners, colleagues, community and institutions.

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What is Family Medicine?

Defining the Specialty

The specialty of family medicine is centered on lasting, caring relationships with patients and their families. Family physicians integrate the biological, clinical and behavioral sciences to provide continuing and comprehensive health care. The scope of family medicine encompasses all ages, sexes, each organ system and every disease entity. Read more about the history, scope and definition of family medicine by reviewing the following resources.

Value and Scope of Family Medicine

Research shows that countries that emphasize primary care have better health outcomes at lower costs. As the U.S. struggles to improve health care delivery, it is clear that primary care providers, especially family physicians, are key to a more effective system.

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Primary Care Defined

The Institute of Medicine defines primary care as "the provision of integrated, accessible health care services by clinicians who are accountable for addressing a large majority of personal health care needs, developing a sustained partnership with patients, and practicing in the context of family and community." According to a 2008 report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO), research shows that "the nation's over reliance on specialty care services, at the expense of primary care, leads to a health care system that is less efficient." The GAO also acknowledges that there is research showing that "preventive care, care coordination for the chronically ill, and continuity of care - all hallmarks of primary care medicine - can achieve better health outcomes and cost savings."

Simply put, primary care is the backbone of the health care system. Utilizing primary care physicians puts an emphasis on the physician-patient relationship by shifting the focus from physician-centered care to patient-centered care.

Of the primary care specialties (family medicine, general internal medicine and pediatrics), family physicians provide the most care - managing nearly one-fourth of all primary care visits. Given the scope of family medicine, this comes as no surprise.

Family medicine is a three-dimensional specialty, incorporating (1) knowledge, (2) skill and (3) process. At the center of the process element is the patient-physician relationship with the patient viewed in the context of the family. It is the extent to which this relationship is valued, developed, nurtured and maintained that distinguishes family medicine from all other specialties.

Family physicians integrate the biological, clinical and behavioral sciences to provide continuing and comprehensive health care. Unlike pediatricians, who only provide care for children, and internists, who only provide care for adults, family medicine encompasses all ages, sexes, each organ system and every disease entity. Family physicians also pay special attention to their patients' lives within the context of family and the community. While there are similarities between family medicine and the other primary care specialties, family physicians have an unprecedented opportunity to have an impact on the health of an individual patient over that person's entire lifetime.