Family medicine practitioners run the gamut from primary care physicians to a researcher on racial and ethnic disparities in the health care system. One of the practitioners, who serves in the U.S. Navy, was even on ABC’s The Bachelor! See the family medicine practitioners featured below and other family medicine practitioners making an impact in social media, elsewhere on the Web, and in their communities in our Top Family Medicine Practitioners profiles.
- @andybaldwin Andrew J. Baldwin, MD, is a humanitarian worker and a U.S. Navy doctor in a family medicine residency program at Camp Pendleton’s Naval Hospital. He is an ardent supporter of military families and founded Got Your Back Network, providing services to families of fallen soldiers. A marathon runner and Ironman triathlete, he serves as an advocate for Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move! campaign, which targets childhood overweight and obesity. He also starred on the 10th season of ABC’s The Bachelor, which he described as “physically and emotionally challenging” and told an interviewer, “I feel so fortunate to have made it out of the experience with my sanity.” You can read and watch interviews with him, and follow his blog, at his Web site, AndyBaldwin.com.
- @drlindalee Linda M. Lee, MD, focuses on office primary care and helping patients achieve “physical, emotional, and spiritual health.” She calls her solo private practice, which is in Rochester, New York, part of a growing trend of practitioners who are “attempting to recapture the traditional values of the doctor-patient relationship in our ailing medical system.” She posts medical information, updates, and articles on her Facebook page.
- @myfamhealth Richard Saint Cyr, MD, is an American family medicine physician working at an expat clinic in Beijing, China. He has worked in rural community clinics, urgent care centers, and private clinics in California and Beijing, and he is working toward a masters degree in public health. He posts his articles at A Family Doctor’s Guide to Good Health.
- @Mamad Norman Oliver, MD, is an associate professor at the University of Virginia and a founding member and current director of the university’s Center on Health Disparities (CHD). He has extensive experience in the area of racial and ethnic disparities in health, particularly in cancer health, and his research focuses on these disparities. He is currently conducting a study “to assess the effect of unconscious racial stereotypes and biases on physicians’ delivery of clinical services.” His blog postings reflect serious health care issues affecting minority populations.
- @drcindyhaines Cindy Haines, MD, is s chief medical officer of HealthDay, managing editor of HealthDay’s Physician Briefing, which provides summaries from peer-reviewed medical journals, and is president of Haines Medical Communications, a consulting firm. She is a family physician and adjunct assistant professor at Saint Louis University’s School of Medicine. She has extensive experience in medical journalism, is a fitness expert, and hosts the syndicated HealthDayTV. Her first book, The New Prescription: How to Get the Best Health Care in A Broken System, will be released May 2011 by HCI Books.
- @davisliumd Davis Liu, MD, has been a family physician in Northern California since 2000. He gives educational presentations, has penned opinion pieces, and been quoted in national publications. He wrote Stay Healthy, Live Longer, Spend Wisely, a book that explores “both the medical and financial perspectives of staying healthy.” He posts his in-depth opinion pieces at his blog, “Saving Money and Surviving the Healthcare Crisis.”
- @EllenMD Ellen H. Kim, MD, works as a primary care physician at Wrightstown Family Medicine in Newton, Pennsylvania. She writes about pregnancy, children, health, and fitness on her “mommy journal with a medical and Christian perspective.”
- @doccottle Peter Beck Kim, MD, is a medical director, primary care physician, and health care IT consultant for electronic health records. He writes about food, dieting—“Wheatgrass juice … actually starting to taste good”—and health at his blog.
- @DrKateAtkinson Katherine J. Atkinson, MD, juggles practicing full time family medicine (including alternative modalities as indicated), and mothering 4 active kids. In her free time she is passionate about health care reform and is a national spokesperson on the plight of primary care in the US. Dr Kate uses twitter on her office website, Atkinson Family Practice, to keep patients and the community informed of healthcare and political topics. If she had more time she would blog more (if only there were more hours in the day!). Additionally she hosts a Facebook of happenings from the office and local news.
- @kpedmonds Kyle P. Edmonds, MD, is a family medicine resident physician at St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix. He has executive- and committee-level experience in organized medicine and medical policy. He won two outstanding medical student awards in 2009. “My patients, technology, and my wife are my life,” he writes.
If you know of family medicine practitioners who are worthy of attention on these pages, please nominate them. See how to Request a Profile.
Other blog entries featuring health professionals and patient experts:
Featured Orthopedic Surgeons
Featured Doctors: Psychologists
Featured Pediatricians, Part 1
Featured Obstetrician-Gynecologists, Part 1, Part 2
Featured Chiropractors, Part 1
Featured Neurologists, Part 1
Featured Cardiologists, Part 1, Part 2
Featured Dietitians, Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6
Featured Nutritionists, Part 1, Part 2
Featured Nurses, Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6
Featured Nurses, Part 7, Part 8, Part 9, Part 10, Part 11
Featured Oncologists, Part 1, Part 2, Part 3
Top Nephrologists on Twitter
Top Gastroenterologists on Twitter
Gluten-Free Diet Feature
Type 1 Diabetes Patient Experts, Part 1, Part 2
By Julie Bohlen, MBA-HCM, ELS
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