Glenn Wilson Award for Public Service

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Glenn Wilson, founding director of NC AHEC

The Glenn Wilson Award for Public Service honors the founding director of the North Carolina Area Health Education Centers Program. Glenn Wilson served as the director of the North Carolina AHEC Program from 1972 to 1977. Wilson assembled the team of faculty to write the initial federal AHEC grant and was successful in receiving one of the initial 11 AHEC awards in 1971. At that time, the AHEC grant was the largest federal grant ever received by UNC-Chapel Hill. Wilson worked in close collaboration with hospital and other community health leaders at the initial AHEC sites to develop university-community partnerships that remain fundamental to the success of the AHEC Program in North Carolina. In 1974, he successfully led the effort to obtain permanent funding for AHEC, which supported expansion to a statewide program with nine centers and built AHEC facilities across the state. After leading the AHEC program through its formative stage in the 1970s, Glenn Wilson stepped down as AHEC program director to become the founding chair of the Department of Social and Administrative Medicine, now the Department of Social Medicine, in the UNC School of Medicine.

Initiated in 2006, The Glenn Wilson Award for Public Service pays tribute to Wilson’s numerous contributions in founding the North Carolina AHEC Program, his leadership in establishing a structure of partnerships between communities and academic health centers as the basis for the organization of the AHEC program, and his lifelong commitment to social justice and improved access to quality health care for the state’s most vulnerable communities. The Glenn Wilson Award for Public Service is given every other year to an individual who has made significant contributions to improving access to health care for the people of North Carolina.

The following criteria are used in selecting the awardee:

  • demonstrated leadership in improving access to health care for the people in North Carolina;
  • involvement in teaching health sciences students, either directly or through the work of the individuals’ organization;
  • successful partnerships with other providers to improve health care for communities; and
  • a champion in improving health outcomes for all North Carolinians, particularly those who are most vulnerable.

AWARD RECIPIENTS

  • 2017: Lawrence M. Cutchin, MD, of Greenville, North Carolina, for his leadership as the first director of Area L AHEC and one of the original AHEC directors in the nation, for his service as chair of the Area L AHEC board and as a preceptor for the Brody School of Medicine, and his work with the Community Care Program of Eastern Carolina;
  • 2015: David M. Webb, EdD, of Wilson, North Carolina, for his leadership of Area L AHEC and his work to improve health care in North Carolina;
  • 2012: Eugene Maynard, MD, of Benson, North Carolina, for his work at the Benson Area Medical Center, with a particular focus on his work with migrant and seasonal farmer workers in Johnston County and the surrounding areas;
  • 2011: George T. Wolff, MD, of Greensboro, North Carolina, for educating family physicians to meet the primary care needs of North Carolina communities as director of the Moses Cone Family Practice Residency program;
  • 2009: Howard Loughlin, MD, of Fayetteville, North Carolina, for his service to the children of the Southern Regional AHEC region, statewide leadership in child advocacy and primary care education, and his service to the North Carolina AHEC program;
  • 2007: Olson Huff, MD, of Asheville, North Carolina, for his state and local advocacy for children, his service as a Mountain AHEC Board Member, and his work as a developmental pediatrician, clinician, and teacher;
  • 2006: Jane H. McCaleb, MD, of Jackson, North Carolina, for her career as medical director of Roanoke Amaranth Community Health Group, associate professor of family medicine at the UNC-Chapel Hill School of Medicine, preceptor for UNC-Chapel Hill and East Carolina University, and medical student clerkship director for Area L AHEC.

NC AHEC Locations

Find the North Carolina AHEC location that serves your region.

The NC AHEC program consists of the NC AHEC program office, based in Chapel Hill, a network of nine regional AHECs that collectively reach all 100 North Carolina counties, and the Duke AHEC program.

To find the AHEC that serves your region, view AHEC locations by county, a list organized alphabetically by North Carolina county. Useful links and general information about each AHEC are provided below.


Area L AHEC

Counties Served: Edgecombe, Halifax, Nash, Northampton, Wilson
Mailing Address: 1631 S Wesleyan Blvd, Rocky Mount, NC 27804
Phone: 252-972-6958
Fax: 252-972-0419
Website: arealahec.org


South Piedmont AHEC

Formerly known as Charlotte AHEC

Counties Served: Anson, Cabarrus, Cleveland, Gaston, Lincoln, Mecklenburg, Stanly, Union
Mailing Address: 5039 Airport Center Pkwy, Charlotte, NC 28208
Phone: 704-512-6523
Fax: 704-512-6568
Website: southpiedmontahec.org


Eastern AHEC

Counties Served: Beaufort, Bertie, Camden, Carteret, Chowan, Craven, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Greene, Hertford, Hyde, Jones, Lenoir, Martin, Onslow, Pamlico, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell, Washington, Wayne
Mailing Address: 2600 W Arlington Blvd, Greenville, NC 27834
Phone: 252-744-5221
Fax: 252-744-5969
Website: easternahec.net


Piedmont AHEC

Formerly known as Greensboro AHEC

Piedmont Ahec Logo

Counties Served: Alamance, Caswell, Chatham, Guilford, Montgomery, Orange, Randolph, Rockingham
Mailing Address: 1200 North Elm Street, Greensboro, NC 27401
Phone: 336-832-8025
Fax: 336-832-7591
Website: piedmontahec.org


Mountain AHEC

Counties Served: Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, Macon, Madison, McDowell, Mitchell, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, Transylvania, Yancey
Mailing Address: 121 Hendersonville Rd, Asheville, NC 28803
Phone: 828-257-4400
Fax: 828-258-2097
Website: mahec.net


Northwest AHEC

Counties Served: Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Avery, Burke, Caldwell, Catawba, Davidson, Davie, Forsyth, Iredell, Rowan, Stokes, Surry, Watauga, Wilkes, Yadkin
Mailing Address: Wake Forest School of Medicine, Medical Center Blvd, Winston-Salem, NC 27517-1060
Phone: 336-713-7700
Fax: 336-713-7701
Website: wakehealth.edu/nwahec


South East AHEC

Counties Served: Brunswick, Columbus, Duplin, New Hanover, Pender
Mailing Address: 2511 Delaney Ave, Wilmington, NC 28403
Phone: 910-343-0161
Fax: 910-762-3521
Website: seahec.net


Southern Regional AHEC

Counties Served: Bladen, Cumberland, Harnett, Hoke, Moore, Richmond, Robeson, Sampson, Scotland
Mailing Address: 1601 Owen Drive, Fayetteville, NC 28304
Phone: 910-323-1152
Fax: 910-323-4007
Website: southernregionalahec.org


Wake AHEC

Counties Served: Durham, Franklin, Granville, Johnston, Lee, Person, Vance, Wake, Warren
Mailing Address: 3261 Atlantic Avenue #212, Raleigh, NC 27604
Phone: 919-350-8547
Fax: 919-350-0470
Website: wakeahec.org


Duke AHEC Program

The Duke AHEC Program is affiliated with the Southern Regional AHEC and collaborates with all AHEC centers across the state.

Mailing Address: Hock Plaza 1, DUMC 2722, Durham, NC 27710
Phone: 919-684-8676
Fax: 919-681-7504
Website: dukeahec.mc.duke.edu

Passport to Health Careers

Get Prepared for Your Career in Health Care!

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Are you ready to take the first step in your health care career? Get your Health Careers Passport today!

As part of our mission to meet the stateā€™s work and workforce needs, NC AHEC created a pipeline for students across North Carolina to become academically prepared for careers in health care. We are navigators who engage, educate, and provide exploration opportunities to pre-college students, parents, educators, and community members to help you learn more about the many careers in the health care workforce.


The NC AHEC Passport to Health Careers (P2HC) Program

By participating in the NC AHEC Passport to Health Careers Program, you have a unique opportunity to gain academic and enrichment hours towards a Certificate of Completion,Ā recognized by academic institutions and employers in North Carolina, that sets you apart from other students in an increasingly competitive environment. NC AHEC’s Health Careers Passport to Health Careers Program curriculum offers you the chance to document and collectively report the health science, community service, and leadership activities you participate in as early as eighthĀ grade.


Request Your Passport to Health Careers Today!

To activate this passport, please contact and gain prior approval from your region’s NC AHEC director of health careers and workforce diversity. Your health careers director will be your tour guide to determining the best way to begin your journey through the many health careers programs offered by NC AHEC. Click on the AHEC region below that serves your county for more information about each region’s health careers program offerings.

Area L AHECĀ – Debby Futrell, debby.futrell@arealahec.org
Charlotte AHECĀ – Michelle Boyd, michelle.boyd@carolinashealthcare.org
Eastern AHEC – Blair Savoca,Ā SavocaB19@ecu.edu
Piedmont AHECĀ – Patricia Parrish, patricia.parrish@conehealth.com
Mountain AHEC (MAHEC) – Leslie Council, leslie.council@mahec.net
Northwest AHECĀ – Melanee Mills, mgmills@wakehealth.edu
South East AHEC (SEAHEC) – Cyndi Meredith, cyndi.meredith@seahec.net
Southern Regional AHECĀ – Tonya Burney, tonya.burney@sr-ahec.org
Wake AHECĀ – Heather Schafer, hschafer@wakeahec.org
Duke AHEC – Monica Taylor, monica.taylor@duke.edu

What We Do

Medical Training Starts Early with NC AHEC.

As part of our mission to improve the geographic distribution, retention, and quality of health care providers throughout the state, NC AHEC develops initiatives that introduce pre-college youth to the vast array of health care professions.


We educate, explore, engage.

We are navigators who engage, educate, and provide exploration opportunities so pre-college students, parents, educators, and community members can learn more about the many careers in the health care workforce.

Pursue a career in health care.

Working with colleges and universities, county school systems, regional health care agencies, and community organizations, we support pre-college students as they develop the skills they need to pursue careers in health care.

 


NC AHEC is vitally important in the education and careers of health care workers.

Emphasizing underrepresented minorities, rural communities, and economically/educationally disadvantaged populations, we identify gaps in the educational pipeline and work to foster interest in health care careers.

We help students interested in health occupations find enrichment activities and education programs before high school graduation. K-12 programs may include puppet shows, after-school clubs, workshops, summer programs, and special events in which participants visit health care facilities, college campuses, and health science programs; gain volunteer experience; shadow health care professionals; and learn about health careers professions and job requirements. Through NC AHECā€™s Passport Program, students can begin documenting and reporting service and educational activities as early as the eighth grade.

Once a student enters a college or university, NC AHEC student services continue through community-based student training; facilitating short-term lodging for health science students completing in-state, community-based rotations; locating preceptors; and more. To address the need for a more diverse cadre of health care professionals, in 2018, NC AHEC launched the NC AHEC Scholars Program. With an emphasis on underrepresented minorities, rural, and first-generation college students, the NC AHEC Scholars Program aims to improve the diversity and distribution of health professions and support health systems transformation across the state.


Health Careers and Workforce Diversity

Each of the nine AHECs, the Duke AHEC Program, and the NC AHEC Program Office at UNC Chapel Hill has a health careers and workforce diversity liaison who initiates the development of programs and activities that meet the needs of their region. To learn more about the resources in your region or to bring a program to your school or community, click on the NC AHEC location in the list below the map that serves your county.

Area L AHECĀ – Jordan Blake, jordan.blake@arealahec.org
South Piedmont AHECĀ (formerly Charlotte AHEC) – Michelle Boyd,Ā michelle.boyd@atriumhealth.org
Eastern AHEC – Blair Forde, savocaB19@ecu.edu
Piedmont AHECĀ (formerly Greensboro AHEC) – Patricia Parrish,Ā patricia.parrish@conehealth.com
Mountain AHEC (MAHEC) – Leslie Council, leslie.council@mahec.net
Northwest AHECĀ – Melanee Mills,Ā mgmills@wakehealth.edu
South East AHEC (SEAHEC) – Cyndi Meredith, cyndi.meredith@seahec.net
Southern Regional AHECĀ – Loyda Smalls,Ā loyda.smalls@sr-ahec.org
Wake AHECĀ – Becky Brady, bbrady@wakeahec.org
Duke AHEC – Monica Taylor, monica.taylor@duke.edu


Resources

To learn more about the hundreds of potential health science careers, visit the College Foundation of North Carolina at CFNC.org.