OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE UTAH ACADEMY OF FAMILY PHYSICIANS

Pub. 5 2021 Issue 2

Isaac-Noyes-and-Chad-Spain

UAFP Annual Member Dinner

Image above: Outgoing UAFP President Dr. Isaac Noyes with Incoming President Dr. Chad Spain

The annual UAFP member meeting and dinner was held on September 17. It was our first indoor, in-person member event since the pandemic and staff went to great lengths to ensure safety protocols were in place while also providing a virtual option for those unable to attend in person.

The evening kicked off with some comments from outgoing UAFP President, Dr. Isaac Noyes. Isaac has been a great example of leadership in action, always looking for ways the Academy can advance the practice of family medicine, especially during the pandemic.

Awards are always a highlight of the evening, and this year was no exception. We included a new award from AAFP – Boundary Breakers – one given to two physicians from each state who provided exceptional service during the pandemic. Dr. Alana Jonat, Infection Prevention Specialist with Community Health Centers Inc., Stephen D. Ratcliffe Clinic, and Dr. Michele Goldberg, Medical Director with Fourth Street Clinic were both recognized this year for their outstanding efforts.

The UAFP Family Medicine Champion of the Year Award was presented to Dr. Marc Babitz. This award is given to a person who advocates and champions the practice of family medicine. Dr. Babitz recently retired from the Utah Department of Health where he was a strong advocate, not only for family medicine, but for UAFP, providing wisdom and insight that helped guide our own advocacy efforts.

And our annual UAFP Family Medicine Physician of the Year Award was presented to Dr. Kurt Rifleman, Medical Director with Midtown Community Health Centers. Dr. Rifleman is beloved by patients, colleagues, and community members and has served as an inspiring example of what it means to be a family physician to countless students and residents over the years.

The meeting closed with comments from new UAFP President, Dr. Chad Spain. Dr. Spain inspired all to take pride in their work, to recognize the extraordinary responsibility family physicians have and to be mindful of the need to take care, personally.

Boundary Breaker award winner
Dr. Alana Jonat with new UAFP President Dr. Chad Spain
Michele-Goldberg

Boundary Breaker award winner
Dr. Michele Goldberg with new UAFP President Dr. Chad Spain

Marc-Babitz

UAFP Family Medicine Champion of the Year Award winner
Dr. Marc Babitz

Kurt-Rifleman

UAFP Family Medicine Physician of the Year
Dr. Kurt Rifleman with Outgoing UAFP President Dr. Isaac Noyes

Outgoing AAFP President, Dr. Ada Stewart

We were joined virtually by outgoing AAFP president, Dr. Ada Stewart. Her remarks were poignant and timely, and she was kind enough to let us share them with you:

I am honored to bring you Greetings from the National Academy of Family Physicians.

Wow, what a year I have had … What an 18-plus months we have had! Who would have predicted I would be greeting you all virtually again? Thank you for giving me the opportunity.

Throughout this public health emergency, your national academy has been here for you, providing updated information related to COVID-19, being the go-to resource for you, your practice, your patients and your community. Throughout it all, our membership continues to be strong – 133,500 members strong – and I thank you!

The AAFP continues to advocate for you and address your priorities that include:

  1. Reducing Administrative Burdens
  2. Advocating for Health care systems and payment models that value primary care
  3. Increasing overall payment
  4. And Protecting Family Physician’s interests with regard to non-physician providers

We continue advocacy efforts around financial relief, especially during this pandemic and stress, and the need to follow science.

We continue to FIGHT FOR FAMILY MEDICINE. Just this week I joined the Group of Six representing over 590,000 frontline physicians to Advocate around Medicaid Parity, The Integration of Behavioral Health and Primary Care, the Need to Advert the End-of-Year Medicare Cuts to Physicians and Maternal Mortality, to name a few.

As we advocate, one must recognize how COVID has definitely changed the way we advocate – writing numerous letters on behalf of our specialty, our members, patients, and communities, and meeting virtually, just as I am meeting with you this evening. But no matter what the method, the goal is still the same: “FIGHTING FOR FAMILY MEDICINE.”

In May of 2021, AAFP praised the NASEM Report which recommends an increased investment in and access to high-quality primary care. The report, of which AAFP was one of the sponsors, stated “Primary care is the key to transforming health care in America.”

Primary care is the only discipline of medicine where a greater supply is equated to better health outcomes, longer life expectancy and lower costs. NASEM’s report is the result of nearly 18 months of research and work to examine the role that primary care should play in the U.S. health care system. Its recommendations include:

  1. Pay for primary care teams to care for people, not doctors to deliver services.
  2. Ensure that high-quality primary care is available to every individual and family in every community.
  3. Train primary care teams where people live and work.
  4. Design information technology that serves the patient, family, and interprofessional care team.
  5. Ensure that high-quality primary care is implemented in the United States.

With this report, we recognize it is time to change the conversation about primary care and finally deliver to the American people a health care system that prioritizes their health. That is why our organization, along with other key partners, came together to form Primary Care for America (primarycareforamerica.org), a collaboration focused on demonstrating the value of primary care, the need for increased primary care investment and the importance of innovation in primary care delivery and payment models.

In coming together, we stated “We can’t wait another 50 years, or even another day, to deliver comprehensive, continuous and coordinated primary care to improve the health of all Americans.”

This campaign will seek to educate policymakers, health care thought leaders, purchasers and employers and health care influencers on the value of primary care to individuals, communities, vulnerable populations and the health care system. One of the focuses is to position primary care as a solution to the major policy challenges, including health disparities and to increase the investment in primary care.

As we look to transform healthcare and the future, we will continue to work hard to address diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). And as we work to achieve this, we will continue to provide the necessary resources to help us all succeed in achieving health equity.

Your Academy with continue to be here for you, your patients, and your community. We will continue to work to preserve the sacred patient-physician relationship. We will continue to promote science. We will continue to be there for ALL our members.

I am grateful for our Academy, our diversity of minds, thoughts, ideas – because it just makes us who we are – we are family medicine. Remember: what we do is sacred – we make a difference in the lives of our patients, in our communities, in the boardroom, and in D.C.

Thank you for all for all you do every day – thank you for your sacrifices.