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In This Issue:
Residency Spotlight:
Riverside Family Medicine Residency

Local & Associated Links

What To Do In Newport News

Dates & Reminders

News

Contact Us
The countryside just outside Fort Wayne
The shores of Newport News, VA
LOCAL LINKS: (Back To Top)
City of Newport News, VA Website City of Newport News, VA Website
Virginia State Website Virginia State Tourism Website
DATES & REMINDERS (Back To Top)

All meetings begin at 12 p.m. Eastern Time unless otherwise noted.

February 1
- Residents and Interns Sub-Committee Meeting. All trainees should try to attend. There will be a speaker from National Health Services Corps to give information about having student loans paid for doctors who practice in underserved areas.

February 8
- OGME Committee Meeting.

February 8
- Executive Committee Meeting at 1 p.m. Eastern Time.

February 17
- Grand Rounds. Dr. Thompson from LMU DCOM will present OMM for ENT and Allergies.

Fort Wayne in the evening
Every morning is beautiful in Newport News!
RESIDENCY SPOTLIGHT (Back To Top)
Riverside Family Medicine Residency Website Riverside Family Medicine Residency
(Click here to view website.)

Founded in 1971, Riverside Family Medicine Residency is one of the oldest family medicine programs in the country. Click here to find it on Mapquest. Riverside’s emphasis on information technology provides high quality care for the patients and the greatest access to evidenced-based knowledge for the residents.

Twelve Family Medicine residents per year.

Eleven Family Medicine faculty members, with three holding CAQs in OB or sports medicine. One is Director of Medical Informatics for the Health System.

Live Electronic Medical Records since 1997, with access from hospital, home, and wireless office.

Internet access throughout office and hospital.

PDA interface in the hospital allows uploading of patient lists and clinical information.

Onsite behaviorist.

Developer of Comp-E-Val, the web-based, competency-based Family Medicine evaluation tool, now provided by the American Board of Family Medicine.

Sport Medicine affiliations with The College of William & Mary and Christopher Newport University.
Joy N. Elliott, D.O.
American Osteopathic Association AOA OPPORTUNITIES
- Approved Internships and Residencies
 
PLENTY TO DO IN & AROUND NEWPORT NEWS (Back To Top)
The Downing-Gross Cultural Arts Center The Downing-Gross Cultural Arts Center houses the Ella Fitzgerald Theater, a 276-seat venue that honors the “First Lady of Song,” who was born in Newport News in 1917. Originally built as the Walter Reed School, this historic building has been restored and reopened to the public in October, 2008.
The Mariners’ Museum offers a captivating look at centuries of seafaring adventures from around the world. The dramatic USS Monitor Center brings to life the “Battle of the Ironclads,” and offers visitors the chance to walk the the deck of a full-scale Monitor replica. The Mariners’ Museum
living_museum The Virginia Living Museum allows you to explore the underwater world of the Chesapeake Bay and the underground realm of a limestone cave. Enjoy hands-on activities and observatory. Travel the universe in the state-of-the-art digital planetarium theater. Touch live spider crabs and fossilized dinosaur tracks. See fish with no eyes and frogs that change colors.
The Virginia War Museum showcases American military history. Outstanding collections of personal artifacts, weapons, vehicles, uniforms, posters, and much more trace the development of the U.S. military from 1775 through the present. See a section of the Berlin Wall and a portion of the outer wall from the Dachau Concentration Camp. Galleries include Women at War and Marches Toward Freedom, exploring the roles of women and African Americans in the military. War Museum
NEWS: (Back To Top)
JAOA • Vol 110 • No 12 • December 2010 • 695-701
EVIDENCE-BASED CLINICAL REVIEW

Nonpharmacologic Approaches to the Management of Insomnia R. Gregory Lande, DO; Cynthia Gragnani, PhD

From the Psychiatry Continuity Service at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, District of Columbia.

Insomnia is one of the more common complaints patients present to their physicians. Sleep problems affect up to one-third of all Americans, and the loss of workplace productivity and increased healthcare utilization result in costs approaching $100 billion a year. Patients with acute insomnia generally respond well to various sedative hypnotic medications, but chronic insomnia is a different challenge. Physicians and patients may raise concerns about the long-term use of sedative hypnotic medications. Even in light of these concerns, however, the chronic insomnia remains, ostensibly leaving the physician few choices. A number of promising nonpharmacologic strategies are available that physicians can easily implement. Through the use of self-rating instruments and a sleep log, physicians can bring the sleep problem into better focus and monitor the efficacy of clinical interventions. Certain behavioral techniques, such as sleep hygiene, stimulus control, and sleep restriction, can be effective remedies for chronic insomnia. The use of cranial electric stimulation for insomnia is also showing promising results. Through careful assessment and the adoption of simple nonpharmacologic strategies, the physician's interventions may result in a good night's sleep. (Click here to see publication.)

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