NACT UK Traveling Fellowship

National Association of Clinical Tutors, United Kingdom, Traveling Fellowship

In 1976, John Lister, MD, of the United Kingdom, and Christopher Fordham, MD, of the UNC-Chapel Hill School of Medicine, created the Traveling Fellowship—an exchange program whereby NC AHEC-based faculty from North Carolina spend a month studying aspects of the British medical education and health services delivery system. In return, NC AHEC hosts fellows selected by the National Association of Clinical Tutors (NACT) from the United Kingdom. In 1996, the American portion of the exchange became known as the Eugene S. Mayer Fellowship, thanks to contributions made in memory of the longtime NC AHEC director.

NACT UK Traveling Fellows

2020: Damian McKeon, MD, Anglesey, Wales
2019: Linda Hacking, MBChB, MA, FRCR, FAcadMED, Blackpool
2018: Adam Malin, MD, Bath
2017: Helen Waters, MD, Torquay
2016: Diarmuid Mulherin, MD, Brocton
2015: Cleave Gass, MD, London
2014: Alison Cooper, MD, Rotherham
2014: Andrew Jeffrey, MD, Northampton
2012: Bridget Lock, MD, Carshalton
2011: Christine Dainty, MD, Liverpool
2009: Kamal A. Nathavitharana, MD, Birmingham
2008: Penelope Gordon, MD, Portsmouth
2007: Vijay Hajela, MD, Lewisham
2006: Calum Macleod, MD, Randalstown, Northern Ireland
2005: Elizabeth Spencer, MD, Gloucester
2004: Sanjeey Sharma, MD, Liverpool
2003: Colin A. Campbell, MD, Stoke on Kent
2001: Kevin Kelleher, MD, Bromley, Kent
2000: Alistair Thomson, MD, Crewe, Cheshire
1999: David Laird, MD, Durham
1998: Andrew Long, MD, Orpington, Kent
1997: Andrew Whitehouse, MD, Atherstone, Warwickshire
1996: Barry Sellick, MD, Surrey
1994: Robin Salter, MD, Carlisle, Cumbria
1993: Alan John Rich, MD, Newcastle upon Tyne
1992: Desmond Abernathy, MD, Barnstaple, Devon
1991: Gifford Batstone, MD, Salisbury, Wiltshire
1990: Peter Wilkinson, MD, Ashford, Kent
1989: Kwee W. Matheson, MD, Bury St. Edmunds
1988: Irving Cobden, MD, Newcastle upon Tyne
1987: Richard Pusey, MD, Basildon, Essex
1986: Fred Woodroffe, MD, London
1985: Paul Dufton, MD, Merseyside
1984: Brian R. Silk, MD, Kettering, Northamptonshire
1983: Alfred Robinson, MD Chichester, West Sussex
1982: Iuuan J.T. Davies, MD, Inverness ( Scotland)
1981: John K. Wagstaff, MD, Brighton, East Sussex
1980: David P.M. Howells, MD, Burton upon Trent
1979: Michael Inman, MD, Plymouth
1978: F. Michael Elderkin, MD, Carlisle, Cumbria
1977: Michael Sanders, MD, Middlesborough
1976: Michael R. Geake, MD, Preston

Mayer Traveling Fellowship

eugene_mayerEugene S. Mayer Traveling Fellowship

In 1976, John Lister, MD, of the United Kingdom, and Christopher Fordham, MD, of the UNC-Chapel Hill School of Medicine, created the Traveling Fellowship—an exchange program whereby AHEC-based faculty from North Carolina spend a month studying aspects of the British medical education and health services delivery system. In return, NC AHEC hosts fellows selected by the National Association of Clinical Tutors (NACT) from the United Kingdom. In 1996, the American portion of the exchange became known as the Eugene S. Mayer Fellowship, thanks to contributions made in memory of the longtime NC AHEC director.

Eugene S. Mayer Fellows

PLEASE NOTE: Greensboro AHEC is now known as Piedmont AHEC. The organization’s name changed on February 1, 2023.

2019: Daniel Frayne, MD, Mountain AHEC
2018: Pascal Osi Udekwu, MBBS, MBA/MHA, FACS, Wake AHEC
2017: Rongrong Fan, MD, Mountain AHEC
2016: Karl Bertrand Fields, MD, Piedmont AHEC
2015: Joseph A. Pino, MD, MHA, South East AHEC
2014: William Hope, MD, South East AHEC
2013: Richard M. Wardrop, III, MD, PhD, FAAP, FACP, Wake AHEC
2012: Gregg Colvin, MD, Wake AHEC
2011: Marshall Lee Chambliss, MD, Piedmont AHEC
2010: Amina Ahmed, MD, Charlotte AHEC
2009: Michael F. Dulin, MD, PhD, Charlotte AHEC
2008: Christy L. Henry, MD, Wake AHEC
2007: Mary Rogers, MD, Charlotte AHEC
2006: David K. Gittelman, DO, Wake AHEC
2005: Dael M. Waxman, MD, Charlotte AHEC
2004: John Langlois, MD, Mountain AHEC
2003: William Hensel, MD, Piedmont AHEC
2001: John E.R. Perry III, MD, Wake AHEC
2000: Marcus Plescia, MD, Charlotte AHEC
1999: Brent Wright, MD, Coastal AHEC
1998: Howard Loughlin, MD, Southern Regional AHEC
1997: Wayne A. Hale, MD, Piedmont AHEC
1996: Suzanne Landis, MD, Mountain AHEC
1995: Ross Vaughan, MD, Wake AHEC
1993: J. Gary Maxwell, MD, Coastal AHEC
1992: Darlyne Menscer, MD, Charlotte AHEC
1991: Stewart Rogers, MD, Piedmont AHEC
1990: J. Paul Martin, MD, Mountain AHEC
1989: Docia Hickey, MD, Charlotte AHEC
1988: David Ingram, MD, Wake AHEC
1987: Lars Larsen, MD, Fayetteville AHEC
1986: Richard Olson, MD, Mountain AHEC
1985: Timothy Lane, MD, Piedmont AHEC
1984: Robert Schwartz, MD, Charlotte AHEC
1983: James Thullen, MD, Wake AHEC
1982: Richard Walton, MD, Mountain AHEC
1981: Peter Ungaro, MD, Wilmington AHEC
1980: J.C. Parke Jr., MD, Charlotte AHEC
1979: John Burnett, MD, Wake AHEC
1978: Martha Sharpless, MD Piedmont AHEC
1977: Marvin McCall, MD, Charlotte AHEC
1976: Bryant Galusha, MD, Charlotte AHEC

John Payne Fellowship

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAThe John Payne Fellowship honors the memory of John Payne and his nearly 25 years of contributions to the North Carolina AHEC Program. The fellowship enables non-medical faculty to further their professional interests and explore innovative educational efforts. The fellowship memorializes Payne’s leadership of AHEC and his lifelong commitment to community-based education, his love of travel, and his interest in exploring new ideas.

The fellowship is awarded annually to one or more North Carolina AHEC faculty. It provides support, allowing fellows to study an aspect of health professions education relevant to the AHEC program. Projects emphasize lifelong learning, involving experiences and activities that explore new models, new ways of thinking, and innovation. Fellows are expected to share what they learn with AHEC colleagues through discussion, publication, and/or presentation. The length of the fellowships may vary depending on the projects. Funding is intended to help cover the recipients’ travel and living expenses within the United States during the timeframe of their awarded fellowships. The individuals’ AHECs are expected to cover salary and other compensation costs during fellowship.

Eligibility

Full-time AHEC faculty in allied health, dentistry, mental health, nursing, ORPCE, health careers, library services, pharmacy, CME, quality improvement, and public health disciplines and other AHEC faculty who fulfill a significant educational role are eligible for the John Payne Fellowship. Physician faculty may apply to the Mayer Traveling Fellowship for similar educational travel. Applicants must have been employed at an AHEC for three years or longer. Applicants must state in writing, in no more than three (3) pages, how he/she envisions the fellowship to be professionally useful and related to the mission and goals of the North Carolina AHEC Program. The applicant must be willing to write a brief report within two (2) months of the completion of the visit and submit the report to the AHEC program director.

Application Procedure

Interested faculty should submit his/her written statement and curriculum vitae to his/her AHEC director. The AHEC director will review applications and transmit them to the AHEC program director along with a letter of support. Although there are no restrictions on the number of applications that can be forwarded by any AHEC director, it is requested that each AHEC try to limit itself to one nominee. Each AHEC director is asked to submit the names of nominees, together with their statements, curricula vitae, and supporting documents, to the NC AHEC program director by a date to be determined each year.

Selection of the Fellow(s)

Fellows will be chosen from the nominees by a committee appointed by the NC AHEC program director. The committee will evaluate applications based on the following criteria: a professional development opportunity, new or innovative educational activity, leadership development, benefits to the NC AHEC Program, and strength of the letter of support from the AHEC director. Selected fellows are expected to share their experiences via presentations at the subsequent Statewide AHEC Conference.

Arrangements for the Fellowship

Once selected, the fellow will discuss preliminary plans with his/her AHEC director. The stipend for the John Payne Fellowship is $2,500 per fellow and can be used for airfare, lodging, meals, and associated costs.

Previous Winners

2021

Ted Eby – Obtain a Healthcare Simulation Operations Specialist Certification

2020

Jennifer Bigger – Attend the Healthcare Improvement’s (IHI) Summit on Primary Care
Michelle Boyd – Become a trained facilitator for Bridges Out of Poverty and Bridges to Health and Healthcare
Lisa Guy – Attend the Association for Nursing Professional Development: Aspire to Envision Conference

2019

Chanyne Cupil – Attend a two-day course on advanced diversity and inclusion strategies at the Industrial Labor Relations School at Cornell University
Jessica Dietrich, MEd – obtain online certificates in eLearning

2018

Andrew M. Cundiff – Participate in a high-level conference featuring talented medical educators experienced in immersive technologies
Carrie Jackman-Hoyle, MHA – Become an Accreditation Council for Medical Education Surveyor
Lauren E. Honeycutt, MBA, CDP – Attend the Learning Solutions 2018 Conference and Expo
Frank Castelblanco, DNP, RN – Attend the 2018 Institute for Healthcare Improvement Change Conference – Radical Redesign in Complex Systems
Jessica R. Williams, BS – Attend a primary care redesign conference, either the Institute for Healthcare Improvement or one of the advanced medical home conferences

2017

Alice J. Schenall, MPH – Attend the MetaECHO 2017 Conference in Albuquerque, New Mexico to learn about ECHO
Gabriela Staley, MEd – Improve the training of interpreters in North Carola
Barbara Smith, RDH, MS – Visit working Medical Home models for the IDD population to learn more about how they function in practice
Tamela Yount, MSHAI, PCMH-CCE – Attend IHI meeting to learn about opiates, care management, and pay for performance
Matt Martin, PhD, LMFT – Address the opiate epidemic, develop integrated care approaches and improve personal skills at developing modules

2016

Sandie M. Coleman, MAED – Attend the 2016 CME as a Bridge to Quality accreditation workshop in Chicago, Illinois, to gain a better understanding of the American Board of Internal Medicine Maintenance of Certification requirements and become better prepared to design educational activities that integrate MOC and accredited Continuing Medical Education
Patty L. Collins, RN, BSN, MAEd – Visit the Veterans Administration in Palo Alto, California, to meet with individuals to learn more about the treatment and specific mental and medical healthcare needs of female veterans

2015

La-Lisa Hewett-Robinson, MA, and Robert Wilson, MA – Attend a national training symposium and work with expert consultants on strategic plans for effectively implementing interprofessional education and practice in behavioral health settings in North Carolina
Laura B. Leach, MLS – Support continuing education through the presentation of “Innovation and Lean Process Improvement Demystified” at the 2015 NC AHEC Statewide Meeting in Greensboro, North Carolina

2014

Ruby Brown-Herring, BSW, MEd – Become a certified instructor to conduct mental first aid certification trainings to a wide variety of audiences
R. Evan Richardson, MSN, CNM – Learn more about practice innovation through human-centered design to enhance knowledge and skills in this area

2013

Kelly Blasky, MPH – Attend the national meeting for Mental Health First Aid in order to gain the skills to offer a training in this area to the Charlotte AHEC region and statewide
Toni P. Chatman, MHA – Attend the Health Literacy Institute in Maine to add to her expertise in this area for the benefit of Wake AHEC and the entire NC AHEC system

2012

Susan M. Miller, PharmD, MBA, BCPS, FCCP – Develop an interprofessional education experience for students and residents in a variety of fields at the Family Medicine Center at Southern Regional AHEC
Michael Willet, MS – Develop new products and applications that can be used on mobile devices in support of the various missions of AHEC

2011

Karen Koch, MSW, LCSW – Address the shortage of clinical supervisors in the eastern part of the state, and develop new models for training by attending the Interdisciplinary Conference on Clinical Supervision at Adelphi University in June, followed by the creation of a number of training programs at Eastern AHEC to address this issue
Mary Lynn Barrett, LCSW, MPH – Attend training in the Trauma Resiliency Model (TRM) and interview the founders of TRM; participate in other educational experiences with the goal of becoming an expert in the use of TRM in the Family Medicine Residency Program at Mountain AHEC

2010

Diana K. Bond, PhD (c), RN, BC, and Sandie M. Coleman, MAEd – Study the CME process at two sites in the Houston area that have been particularly successful in developing exemplary CME systems in the new environment for professional development for physicians; apply lessons learned to their work at Wake AHEC, and inform AHEC efforts statewide to a more quality-focused CME that takes better advantage of technology and other new systems of educational delivery
Dawn Grant, MPH – Attend the World Conference on Quality and Improvement in St. Louis in May 2010; utilize the knowledge gained from the conference to incorporate quality issues and quality measurements in a broad array of educational activities conducted by Eastern AHEC and by AHEC statewide

2009

Monique Mackey, MLS – Study the issue of physician re-entry into the workforce after a period of being out of active practice; visit the state of Oregon to study the way in which that state has organized a formal process for providing a clinical skills refresher program and for approving physicians for re-entry into active practice
Joann Spaleta, MBA, MHA, MT, (ASCP) – Additional advanced level leadership education as part of the American College of Health Care Executives toward her activity in organizing and offering management and leadership training at both the Charlotte AHEC and throughout the state

2008

Isis Hanna, BA – Attend the IDI Certificate Course in Portland, Oregon to gain additional tools to use in building successful cultural diversity programs at Charlotte AHEC and for the entire NC AHEC system
Peter Koval, PharmD – Study robotic avatars and voice recognition software applications at Keele University in the United Kingdom and apply this new knowledge toward a greater use of technology into the pharmacy curriculum at Greensboro AHEC and across the state

2007

Elaine B. Owens, MPA – Visit the Connecticut AHEC Youth Health Service Corps program to learn more about the structure, specific training modules, and recognition offered to students; a similar program might then be applied to NC using this model
Tara D. Owens and Sherry Stafford, MEd – Attend the e-Learn 2007 conference in Quebec City, Canada, to learn about the research, development, diverse learning experiences, implementation, and technology needed to improve e-learning at AHEC

2006

Mollie Scott, PharmD, BCPS, CPP – Develop a pharmacotherapy curriculum for geriatric fellows by drawing upon the experience of specialists across the country
Amy Vega, MBA, MHA, RHEd – Research multiple connections between public health and animal care in North Carolina

2005

Libby Haile, MEd, MY, SH, CLS – Investigate Culture Clues™, an online informational resource on ethnic and racial groups served by the University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle, for the purpose of exploring potential for developing similar resources on major ethnic populations in North Carolina
Lyn Keating, MS – Develop the capability to teach bioethics curricula in continuing education courses offered by South East AHEC and elsewhere in North Carolina

2004

Sheryl Pacelli, MEd – Look at models for preparing for the psychological aspects of bioterrorism and other disasters
Deborah Ramey, MAEd – Explore tracking and evaluation models for health careers workforce programs.

2003

Karen Blicher, LCSW, CHT – Integrate mindfulness-based stress reduction into the programs and services of Mountain AHEC, including the Division of Family Medicine, OB-GYN and Regional Services
Karen Zeliff, MLS – Develop an instructional packet, protocols, and templates for CE staff to equip them with the concepts and tools needed to work with traditional classroom-based partners to help provide quality online continuing education

2002

Jean Hill, EdD – Review the recruitment and retention strategies implemented by four magnet hospitals and share strategies that could be replicated in facilities seeking to enhance the nurse work environment
Fern Paul-Aviles, Ms, RPH – Visit and meet with pharmacy faculty members at sites in Oklahoma and Virginia to observe how the universities support the development of progressive community pharmacy practices

2001

Patricia Hayes, MSN, RN, CNAA – Explore techniques in health behavioral management in Oregon that have proven to be effective and that could be taught to health providers in North Carolina
Michael Kennedy, MGA, CHES – Visit the Andrus Center at the University of Southern California and increase NC AHEC’s ability to create appropriate training programs in the field of geriatrics using effective teaching methods

2000

Nancy Harrison, MSN, RN – Meet with nurses in Colorado and work collaboratively with the Colorado AHEC to look at innovative models of nursing practice
Anita Pulley, MSN, RN – Study how the Massachusetts AHEC Program functions as an integral partner in the healthy communities movement within their state and apply the strategies to the NC AHEC Program

1999

Russet Hambrick, MLS – Participate in a two-week fellowship at Texas A&M University resulting in certification in distance education programming, and use the ideas gained to build stronger rural networks through telecommunication
Diane Leonard, RN, EdD – Visit a model site involved in the healthy communities movement to determine the collaboration strategies they use to assess the educational infrastructure and to determine how NC AHECs may be more involved in such efforts

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