Tricia C. Elliott MD, FAAFP
Senior Vice President, Academic and Research Affairs, Chief Academic Officer, Designated Institutional Official, JPS Health Network, Fort Worth, Texas; Professor, Family Medicine, Burnett School of Medicine at Texas Christian University; Affiliate Professor, Family Medicine, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine; Adjunct Professor, Family Medicine, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TexasDr. Tricia C. Elliott is a specialist in family medicine based in Fort Worth, Texas, where she is Senior Vice President of Academic and Research Affairs, Chief Academic Officer, and Designated Institutional Official at JPS Health Network in Fort Worth. She is Professor of Family Medicine at the Burnett School of Medicine at Texas Christian University and Affiliate Professor at the University of North Texas Health Science Center Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine in Fort Worth. She is also Adjunct Professor at the University of Texas Medical Branch School of Medicine in Galveston, Texas.
Dr. Elliott's academic interests include graduate and undergraduate medical education, learner assessments, healthcare advocacy and policy, and leadership development and mentoring. Her clinical interests include primary prevention, chronic disease management, women's health, migraine management, ambulatory procedural training, patient education, and community medicine.
Recent Contributions to PracticeUpdate:
- Interventions for Knee Osteoarthritis: Meta-Analysis
- Benefit of Neonatal Circumcision
- Unmet Material Needs and Control of Diabetes Mellitus
- 2014 Top Stories in Primary Care: ACP Guideline on Screening Pelvic Examination
- Effects of Dietary Sodium and the DASH Diet on Headaches
- FDA Approves Gardasil 9 for Prevention of Certain Cancers Caused By Five Additional Types of HPV
- Cervical Cancer Screening: ACOG Guidelines Synopsis
- Only 3 in 10 People With HIV Have the Virus in Check
- Single Dose of Benzathine Penicillin G Effective in HIV-Infected Persons With Early Syphilis
- High Rates of Sleep Apnea in Type 2 Diabetes