Register by March 30 to save $100!
Member: $1,145 $1,045
Nonmember: $1,495 $1,395
Just like your patients, you have different needs. If you’re feeling burned out or overwhelmed, you may be drawn to lifestyle medicine and well-being support. If you’re feeling frustrated by workflow inefficiencies or culture issues, you may want tools that reduce friction in your day-to-day practice.
The new Whole Health Summit helps you work on a problem that prevents you and your team from thriving.
Here's a quick look at the three days you'll spend with us:
Whole Health Summit is where you face—and fix—what causes you stress, so you have stronger teams, smarter systems and healthier patients.
Margot Savoy, MD, MPH, FAAFP, Chief Medical Officer and Whole Health Summit Chair
Learn how this conference can help you in Dr. Savoy's new blog.
| Pre-Conference – Sunday, May 17, 2026 | ||
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| 7 a.m.–5 p.m. | Registration | |
| 8 a.m.–Noon | AAFP Educators $225 Laura Sejkora and Amber Holley |
Join us for a dynamic four-hour workshop designed to empower family medicine physicians with tools, strategies, and confidence to lead transformative educational sessions. Whether you’re presenting for the first time or passionate about sharing your expertise, this workshop serves as a supportive launchpad into the AAFP educator community. |
| 8 a.m.–Noon | Musculoskeletal POCUS $225 Deepak Patel, MD, FAAFP |
Want sharper MSK diagnoses and more confident procedures? This session is your practical on-ramp to musculoskeletal ultrasound—when to use it, what it can (and can’t) tell you, and how to scan the regions you actually see in primary care. You’ll get a clear tour of scanning approaches and learn how ultrasound guidance improves safety and accuracy for injections. It’s a “demystify the screen” experience that makes POCUS feel approachable, not intimidating. Come curious—leave capable. |
| 8 a.m.–Noon | Hackathon (non-CME) | Details coming soon. |
| 9 a.m.–Noon | A Hands-on Introduction to Osteopathic: Manipulative Treatment Clinical Applications $170 Joshua Cox, DO |
Roll up your sleeves—this is the OMT session where you actually practice. You’ll learn osteopathic fundamentals (philosophy, observation, palpation) and build confidence with high-yield techniques you can use for common conditions—plus indications/contraindications and the evidence base (including low back pain). The workshop is designed for skill-building: demonstration, guided practice, and practical planning so you can integrate OMT into real clinic flow. Bonus: it also speaks to real-world barriers like time, space, and confidence—so you leave with a plan, not just inspiration. |
| 9 a.m.–Noon | Lifestyle Medicine Bootcamp $170 Meagan Grega, MD, Charles Inniss, DPT, PCC, NBC-HWC, Anthony Lim, MD, and Beth Polk, MD, FAAFP |
If lifestyle change counseling feels like pushing a boulder uphill, this bootcamp is your reset—and your upgrade. You’ll get evidence-based foundations (nutrition, sleep, movement, stress, social connection, meaning/purpose) plus the real skills for helping people change without relying on willpower speeches. Expect frameworks for motivation, barriers, and practical “prescriptions” you can use with patients—and with yourself. This is not a lecture; it’s a toolkit. Leave ready to coach change with more hope, less friction, and way more effectiveness. |
| Day 1 – Sunday, May 17, 2026 | ||
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| 7 a.m.–5 p.m. | Registration | |
| 12:30–12:50 p.m. | Set The Stage With the Chair
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Kick off the conference with a session designed to welcome all attendees and set the tone for a meaningful experience. Together, we’ll explore why you’re here, how our team will support and walk alongside you, and what you can expect from the days ahead. This session will help you prepare by shaping your mindset and inviting you to view your personal journal through a new lens—one that encourages reflection, growth, connection, and activation. Go into the conference feeling ready to engage, learn, and make the most of your conference journey. |
| 12:50–1:00 p.m. | Welcome Shawn Martin, AAFP President and CEO |
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| 1–1:45 p.m. | Unfiltered Panel: What Gets in the Way Moderator: Shawn Martin Panel: Ronya Green, MD, MPH, FAAFP, Cleveland Piggott, MD, MPH, FAAFP, Jason Marker, MD, FAAFP, Michelle Owens-Kumar, DO, FAAFP and Beth Polk, MD, FAAFP |
This energetic panel pulls no punches as experts shine a light on the real-world barriers—like EMR headaches, workforce shortages, and equity challenges—that make practicing medicine harder than it should be. Expect a lively, honest conversation where panelists air their frustrations, share stories from the trenches, and unpack how these challenges fuel burnout and impact patient care. Come ready to listen in as the panel gets real about what’s holding us back—and what it will take to move forward. The goal is to acknowledge negative experiences, humanize challenges, and spark dialogue, but always with an eye toward how it can be changed. |
| 1:45–2 p.m. | Break | |
| 2–2:45 p.m. | Opening Keynote: The Case for Whole Health | |
| 2:45–3 p.m. | Break | |
| 3–3:15 p.m. | Hackathon Award | |
| 3:15–3:45 p.m. | Pulse Checks Circles 1: Meet Your Group | This interactive session sets the foundation for meaningful group work throughout the conference. Faculty and facilitators guide attendees in reflecting on their personal and professional purpose in family medicine, connecting it to daily practice, and sharing insights with peers. Through open dialogue and introductions, attendees identify shared experiences and challenges, fostering community and support. Faculty model emotional awareness and peer validation, helping groups build resilience, empathy, and engagement. |
| 3:45–6:30 p.m. | Innovation Studio Walkthrough Block Party (non-CME) | Details coming soon. |
| Day 2 – Monday, May 18, 2026 | ||
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| 6:30–8 a.m. | Breakfast + Networking in Innovation Studio | |
| 7 a.m.–3:30 p.m | Innovation Studio Open | |
| 7 a.m.–5 p.m. | Registration | |
| 8–8:45 a.m. | Morning Session with the Chair Margot Savoy, MD, MPH, FAAFP |
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| 8:45–9 a.m. | Break | |
| 9–10:15 a.m. | Workshops #1 - Choose 1 | AI as a Partner in Whole-Person Care: Empowering Clinicians, Enhancing Workflows Olusola Adegoke, MD, MPH, FAAFP and Lance Braye, MD, MPH AI is everywhere—so let’s make it useful, safe, and actually aligned with whole-person care. This session uses a live podcast vibe to cut through hype and show where AI helps now (workflows, documentation, cognitive load) and where caution matters (bias, privacy, decision support). You’ll get a practical framework for evaluating tools in real clinical settings with “human-in-the-loop” guardrails front and center. Expect clarity, real talk, and takeaways you can use whether you’re AI-curious or AI-skeptical. Leave ready to lead adoption thoughtfully—not reactively. |
| Thriving, Not Just Surviving: Building a Sustainable Whole Health Practice by Maximizing Billing/Coding Strategies Thomas Weida, MD, FAAFP and Meagan Grega, MD Let’s talk about the part nobody teaches you (and everybody needs): getting paid appropriately for whole-health care. This session makes billing/coding feel less like a maze and more like a strategy—covering time vs MDM coding, prolonged visit rules, add-ons, Medicare wellness visit structures, and how to make shared medical appointments workable and billable. You’ll walk through real cases and leave with practical takeaways that protect revenue integrity while supporting behavior change work. Translation: more sustainability, less “we can’t afford to do this.” |
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Practical Applications of Nutrition, Movement and Sleep for Whole-Person Health
We all know the big three matter—until life happens. This session bridges the gap between “I know” and “I actually do,” with actionable strategies for sleep, movement, and nutrition that don’t require a personality transplant. You’ll learn realistic sleep upgrades (hygiene, environment, circadian rhythm), build a personalized movement plan, and leave with simple nutrition principles that support sustainable change. Expect self-assessment, practical tools, and take-home talking points you can use with patients the very next day. This one is part refresh, part reboot, and all about momentum. |
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Rediscovering Your Why: From Burnout to Rockstar |
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| Practice Lab/Sponsored Ed (non-CME) | ||
| 10:15–10:45 a.m. | Break | |
| 10:45 a.m.–Noon | Workshops #2 - Choose 1 | Your Career - By Design: Intentional Pathways to Fulfillment in Family Medicine Through guided reflection, small-group dialogue, and case-based discussion, participants will explore the difference between career design—intentional growth and aligned work—and career opportunity, the reactive acceptance of roles. Generational perspectives from Baby Boomers to Gen Z will highlight evolving approaches to work and balance. Attendees will leave with a personalized framework and actionable steps to align future opportunities with purpose, adaptability, and joy in practice. |
Building the People-Centered Medical Home In this energizing session, we introduce the People-Centered Medical Home, a bold evolution of the traditional PCMH model that positions psychological safety, trust, and belonging as core infrastructure for high-performing teams. Burnout and turnover are not personal failures; they are design flaws. Through real-world scenarios and practical tools, participants will examine how small, intentional behaviors shape culture, strengthen teams, and improve patient outcomes. Attendees will leave with clear, actionable strategies they can implement immediately to build systems where both people and patients thrive. |
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The Art of Eliciting Change: Coaching and MI for Clinicians
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| "But I don't want to!" Leading in Challenging Situations Cleveland Piggott, MD, MPH, FAAFP and Olusola Adegoke, MD, MPH, FAAFP If you’ve ever thought, “I did not go to med school for this conversation,” this session is for you. Learn how to lead when things are messy—conflict, misalignment, resistance, feedback that’s overdue—without defaulting to the burnout-fueled “hero model.” You’ll practice leadership as a daily skill across three zones: leading self, leading teams, and leading systems, with frameworks you can use immediately. Come for the tools, stay for the relief of realizing you’re not the only one dealing with hard dynamics—and leave with a leadership commitment you can actually keep. |
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| Practice Lab/Sponsored Ed (non-CME) | ||
| Noon–1:30 p.m. | Lunch in Innovation Studio Lab (non-CME) | |
| 1:30–2:45 p.m. | Workshops #3 - Choose 1 | Supportive Leadership: An Interactive Discussion on How to Advocate with Heart, Humanity and Hope Jason Marker, MD, FAAFP, Michelle Owens-Kumar, DO, FAAFP and Charles Innis, DPT, PCC, NBC- HWC Advocacy isn’t just what you do out there, it starts with how you lead in here (yourself, your team, your system). This interactive session blends wholeness, boundaries, and optimism into a leadership style that’s sustainable—not self-sacrificial. Through guided reflection and pair/share, you’ll explore how to steward your energy, lead with integrity, and bring hope into hard rooms without ignoring reality. You’ll leave with one clear commitment you can start today—because supportive leadership is a practice, not a personality trait. |
| Know Your Own Stuff: How to Connect and Stay Calm Through Trauma-Informed Communication Tim Riley, MD and Maya Bass, MD, MA, FAAFP Ever leave a difficult visit thinking, “That escalated fast”? This session gives you a calm, confidence-building roadmap for high-emotion encounters using the Regulate–Relate–Reason framework. You’ll practice grounding and self-regulation tools (so your nervous system doesn’t get hijacked), then learn concrete communication strategies—emotional attunement, perspective-taking, shared decisions, teach-back—that help patients feel safe and seen. The best part: it’s not abstract theory; it’s the kind of skill that changes the tone of your next clinic day. Come get the tools to stay steady—especially when the room isn’t. |
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| Integrating Lifestyle, OMT, and POCUS for Whole-Person Assessment of Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain Deepak Patel, MD, FAAFP, Joshua Cox, DO and Meagan Grega, MD Chronic musculoskeletal pain is complex—but you can tackle it with a holistic, evidence-informed approach. In this interactive workshop, explore how lifestyle factors like movement, nutrition, sleep, stress, and social connection shape pain perception and persistence. Learn the role of OMT and point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) in assessment and management, then apply case-based strategies to integrate lifestyle interventions, OMT, and POCUS into patient-centered care. Leave with practical tools to improve outcomes and transform your approach to chronic pain. |
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| When Caring Becomes Costly: Creating Sustainable Ways to Give and Grow Mark Greenawald, MD, FAAFP and KrisEmily McCrory, MD, M. Ed, FAAFP This workshop is intended to help physicians recognize personal/professional boundary challenges, explore value–priority alignment, and develop strategies for negotiation and boundary maintenance. |
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| Practice Lab/Sponsored Ed (non-CME) | ||
| 2:45–3:15 p.m. | Break | |
| 3:15–5:15 p.m. | Pulse Checks Circles 2 | This session deepens group connection and supports integration of learning from the day’s workshops. Faculty and facilitators guide attendees through structured reflection, journaling, group sharing, and action planning, helping participants connect insights to their personal and professional goals. |
| Day 3 – Tuesday, May 19, 2026 | ||
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| 7:30–8:45 a.m. | Breakfast + Networking in Innovation Studio | |
| 7:30 a.m.–Noon | Registration | |
| 7:30 a.m.–Noon | Innovation Studio Open | |
| 8:45–9 a.m. | Welcome Back Margot Savoy, MD, MPH, FAAFP |
Start your final day with a brief session designed to energize and prepare you for action. We’ll set the tone for moving from reflection to activation, helping you focus on turning insights into concrete next steps as you head into the day’s sessions and your Activation Plan. |
| 9–10:30 a.m. | Physician Power Plays |
Building on the challenges surfaced in the Unfiltered Panel, this session features a curated series of short presentations by physicians who have turned obstacles into opportunities. Each speaker shares their “career power play”—whether leading policy change, transforming practice culture, or driving innovation at scale—highlighting what worked, what didn’t, and how they sustained meaningful change. By connecting real-world solutions to the issues discussed earlier, this session encourages attendees to see what’s possible and prepares them to create their own Activation Plans. Leave inspired by those who have overcome barriers and equipped with practical strategies to drive change in your own career and organization. |
| 10:30–11 a.m. | Break | |
| 11 a.m.–Noon | Pulse Checks Circles 3: My Activation Plan | This final Pulse Check Circle is designed to help attendees synthesize their learning, align insights with personal and professional goals, and create a concrete Activation Plan. Faculty and facilitators guide participants through reflection, sharing, and planning, ensuring everyone leaves with clear next steps and a sense of support. |
| Noon–12:30 p.m. | Lunch Provided | |
| 12:30–1:30 p.m. | Closing Keynote | |
| 1:30–2:15 p.m | Closing with Chair Margot Savoy, MD, MPH, FAAFP |
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Schedule times and details are subject to change.
The AAFP has reviewed 2026 Whole Health Summit and deemed it acceptable for up to 15.00 Live AAFP Prescribed credits. Term of Approval is from 5/17/2026 to 5/16/2027. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
The AAFP is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
The American Academy of Family Physicians designates this Live activity for a maximum of 15.00 AMA PRA Category 1 credits™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
CME activities approved for AAFP credit are recognized by the AOA as equivalent to AOA Category 2 credit.
We're hosting the Whole Health Summit at the Charlotte Convention Center. These hotels offer a discounted room rate for your room reservations.
601 South College Street
Charlotte, NC 28202
Across the street from the convention center.
Rate: $269* for Single/Double
*A room rebate of $5 per room per night, included in the room rate.
Reservation deadline: April 17, 2026
You can also call (866) 837-4148 to speak with a hotel representative and specify you're with the American Academy of Family Physicians.
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401 East Martin Luther King Jr.
Charlotte, NC 28202
1 block from the convention center.
Rate: $259* for Single/Double
*A room rebate of $5 per room per night, included in the $259 room rate.
Reservation deadline: April 17, 2026
You can also call (800) 774-1500 to speak with a hotel representative.
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650 S Caldwell Street
Charlotte, NC 28203
2-3 blocks from the convention center.
Rate: $189* for Single/Double
*A room rebate of $5 per room per night, included in the $189 room rate.
Reservation deadline: April 17, 2026
You can also call (980) 785-1900 and use the group code: AFP to speak with a hotel representative.
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222 E 3rd Street
Charlotte, NC 28202
1 block from the convention center.
Rate: $239* for Single/Double
*A room rebate of $5 per room per night, included in the $239 room rate.
Reservation deadline: April 17, 2026
You can also call (704) 377-1500 and use the group code: AAFP to speak with a hotel representative.
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You have so many responsibilities, and people assume you know how to do it all—from leadership and technology to practice operations and clinical guidelines. It’s overwhelming. And stressful.
Members have told us they want education on non-clinical topics to help them feel more confident in these areas. The Whole Health Summit is a conference focused on whole-person health for physicians, offering education and support on what you need to care for yourself, your team and, ultimately, your patients.
You'll have time to focus on:
This is your time.
I’m looking for help with stress and burnout. I loved the Physician Health and Well-being Conference you used to offer. Is this similar?
If you attended the Physician Health and Well-being Conference before, we know it had a big impact on your life. With all the stressors in your profession, you still need a place to acknowledge and process what you're carrying — and find real strategies to move forward.
So while this is a different conference, it still has a well-being element. You can opt into programming that focuses on lifestyle support and changes including nutrition, sleep and movement, repairing moral injury and finding professional fulfillment.
For example, “Rediscovering Your Why: From Burnout To Rockstar” is a session that explores the interconnected challenges of physician burnout and moral injury—what happens when we're forced to act against our core values in medical practice.
Does it have a lot of yoga, journaling or meditation? That's not my thing.
That can be your focus if it’s important to you! But it’s ok if it’s not your priority. We offer education sessions that help with technology, documentation and leadership challenges. For example, you can attend a session on "Building a Sustainable Whole Health Practice by Maximizing Billing/Coding Strategies" or "But I Don't Want To: Leading in Challenging Situations."
As Dr. Savoy puts it: "Even if yoga, journaling or meditation isn’t ‘your thing,’ you can still incorporate some of these lessons to make your day better. You can show up for people in a different way." So no, well-being doesn't have to be your thing to make your WHS experience valuable. This conference is built to help you remove stressors from your life. As you work with coaches and colleagues, you may find an unexpected way to make things better.
This conference isn’t at a convenient time and it’s expensive. Are there any discounts or other options to get this content?
We do offer registration discounts for AAFP members who register early. We know time away is just as hard to manage as cost. If attending in person isn't possible right now, keep an eye out for future opportunities to access this content.
But if you can make it work, physicians who attend consistently tell us the investment pays off in ways they didn't expect.
What kind of hands-on experiences will be part of the programming? How will I apply what I learn?
This conference is for finding solutions to your specific challenge. While that may include something that’s clinical in nature, we aren’t including specific clinical procedures. This is something you can experience at FMX 2026, where we offer procedural workshops.
At WHS, the hands-on experience looks different — think small-group coaching sessions, peer problem-solving conversations, and interactive workshops where you work through your specific challenges in real time. You won't just listen to speakers; you'll leave with an actual plan you can put into place when you return home.
Can you explain the practicality and what the details look like?
The conference schedule really helps you get a feel for what you’ll experience at the summit. In short, your days will move between focused learning sessions, small-group discussions, and dedicated time to work with coaches. It's structured enough to keep you on track, but flexible enough to let you dig into what matters most to you.
There are several things I need to change in my practice. I’m not sure where to start, so I’m on the fence about attending this conference.
We understand! You don’t have to have ONE thing in mind to attend WHS. Bring your ideas, listen to the panel and consult with the coaches. Something may emerge as the one issue to tackle while you’re at the conference.
You can then use that insight as your starting point—and leave with a concrete plan for making one meaningful change in your practice or your life.
Are we talking about the VA WholeHealthTM model?
We called it Whole Health Summit because we are really leaning into the idea that you cannot truly have whole-person health if you don’t also have a whole doctor practicing in a whole practice in a whole community.
Our conference isn’t a conversation about—or training on—the VA model. Instead, it’s a way to help you with the elements of whole health that impact the way you practice and improve your well-being. If you don’t feel whole, it’s difficult to help your patients be healthy.
You can earn CME at WHS, but it’s much larger than a CME course. It’s also smaller and more targeted than FMX. WHS offers immersive learning focused on strengthening teams and streamlining work so you have more time with your patients and families.
Olusola Adegoke, MD, MPH, FAAFP: LinkedIn
Dr. Olusola “Sola” Adegoke is a hospitalist, clinical informaticist, and quality improvement leader based in Minnesota. He practices in the Healthpartners Hospitals and serves as faculty with the Western Wisconsin Family Medicine Residency Program. Dr. Adegoke currently holds two statewide leadership roles: President-Elect of the Minnesota Academy of Family Physicians and Alumni Secretary for the University of Minnesota School of Public Health.
His professional work focuses on advancing clinician efficiency, strengthening documentation quality, and improving patient and clinician experience through evidence-based informatics and operational redesign. He leads several systemwide initiatives in Epic optimization, AI-enabled clinical workflows, partnered bedside rounding, and clinician well-being. Dr. Adegoke is also dedicated to mentoring trainees and early-career clinicians, and he actively contributes statewide and national efforts aimed at transforming care delivery and supporting the clinical workforce.
Maya Bass, MD, MA, FAAFP: LinkedIn | Chronic Conditions Forced FMX Presenter to Learn Resilience
Dr. Bass is an Assistant Professor and Program Director for the Cooper/CMSRU Family Medicine Program in the department of Primary Care at Cooper University, The Cooper University Graduate Medical Education Wellness Chair, Regional Clinical Leader for the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic region for the Reproductive Health Access Project, and the Co-Chair for the Reproductive Freedom Task Force for the Committee to Protect Healthcare. She earned a master’s degree in Stem Cell and Developmental Biology from Wesleyan University, Connecticut. She earned her medical degree from Jefferson Medical College (now Sidney Kimmel Medical College) at Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia. She completed her family and community medicine residency at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia. She completed her fellowship in the Leadership Training Academy through Physicians for Reproductive Health learning to be a physician advocate for Reproductive Rights and Justice. She is a certified yoga instructor, a certified trainer of Medication for Opioid Use Disorder through Providers Clinical Support System, and faculty for training of management for early pregnancy loss for both American Academy of Obstetricians and Gynecology and American Academy of Family Physicians. She is dedicated to providing compassionate care to stigmatized populations, incorporating social justice into medical education, and improving the overall wellness of her patients, learners and communities.
Lance Braye, MD, MPH: LinkedIn
Dr. Lance Braye, MD, MPH is a family medicine physician who practices in Greenwood, SC. He grew up in Walterboro, SC where he developed his interest in medicine as the son of a nurse. He received his undergraduate degree from The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina, before attending the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC). While at MUSC, he earned his Master's in Public Health in Health Behaviors and Health Promotion. After graduation, he completed residency at Lawrence Family Medicine Residency in Lawrence, MA with a concentration in Health Systems Leadership. He currently serves as the Director of Family Medicine for Carolina Health Centers, Inc. Professionally, Dr. Braye is interested in finding ways to improve the health system for all, addiction treatment, reproductive justice, mental health, and nutrition. Personally, he loves sports, gardening, cooking, and spending time with his wife, Paris, and their cat, Obi.
Lauren Brown-Berchtold, MD, FAAFP: LinkedIn | Physician Well-being Leader Driven to Help Peers
Dr. Lauren Brown-Berchtold is the program director for the Valley Consortium for Medical Education (VCME) Family Medicine Residency program in Modesto, California. She previously was a core faculty member and later program director of San Joaquin General Hospital Family Medicine Residency. She graduated from Keck School of Medicine of USC in Los Angeles, then joined John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth, Texas, to complete her family medicine residency and Maternal-Child Health fellowship equivalent training. Dr. Brown-Berchtold is a fervent advocate for physician mental health protections and burnout prevention and spends a lot of extracurricular time working on this topic. When away from the hospital, she loves to read as well as explore life with her husband and very active daughter!
W. Joshua Cox, DO, FACOFP, is the Executive Dean of the College of Osteopathic Medicine (COM) and Vice Provost for Medical Affairs at Kansas City University (KCU). He began his career as a family physician for the U.S. Army and in 2006 joined the KCU faculty. During his tenure at the university, he has served in a number of capacities, including Professor of Family Medicine, Chair of Primary Care, Associate Dean of Clinical Education, COM Campus Dean for Kansas City, and interim Director of campus health and well-being. He has also organized and participated in numerous global health outreach trips to Kenya, Dominican Republic, China, and India. Additionally he has served as a supervising physician for the Score One for Health program.
Dr. Cox earned a Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine from KCU-COM, and is residency trained and board certified in Family Medicine and Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment. He is a fellow of the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians (ACOFP), and has been awarded the Osteopathic Family Medicine Educator of the Year Award. Dr. Cox is a national faculty member for both the National Board of Osteopathic Medical Examiners and the American Academy of Family Physicians, and has given numerous invited presentations nationally and internationally. He received the Army Commendation Medal for his services in Family Practice and has received numerous other awards such as the Ingram’s magazine Heroes in Healthcare Award, the Missouri Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons Medallion Award, American Academy of Osteopathy Academy Award, and the KC Business Journal-20 Healthcare professionals to know.
He has served on multiple boards and professional committees, a few examples include the AACOM Board of Deans, Board of Directors of DO Care International, Missouri Society of the ACOFP Board of Governors, the American Association of Family Physicians (AAFP) Commission on Education, the AOA and ACOFP House/Congress of Delegates, Guadalupe Centers Board, Rockhurst University College of Business and Technology Helzberg School of Management Deans Advisory Board, and multiple National Board of Osteopathic Medical Examiners committees and standard setting panels.
Ronya Green, MD, MPH, FAAFP: LinkedIn | Direct primary care and health IT: How one family physician found fulfillment
Dr. Ronya Green is a distinguished, board-certified family medicine physician and healthcare leader dedicated to fostering improved health outcomes for diverse populations. She is the owner and operator of Rapha Healthcare, PLLC, a membership-based primary care practice integrated with behavioral health, which offers comprehensive, patient-centered care to individuals of all ages, delivered through both in-person and virtual services. Dr. Green is also the founder of Care Nexus, a beginning-to-end practice and patient management solution. She developed the Care Nexus model based on insights gained from running her own successful, membership-based practice—where she recognized the need for an integrated, patient-focused, HIPAA-compliant tech solution that cares for the entire patient journey. Drawing upon her clinical background and first-hand experience in practice management, Dr. Green has spearheaded marketing strategies that resonate with both patients and professionals. Under her leadership, Care Nexus has become a trusted brand known for its comprehensive patient journey model that reduces administrative burden and enhances the patient-provider relationship.
Mark Greenawald, MD, FAAFP: LinkedIn | Burnout Survivor Strives to Help Peers
Mark Greenawald, MD is Professor and Vice Chair for Academic Affairs, Well-being, and Professional Development in the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine (VTC) and Carilion Clinic. He also serves as the Medical Director for the Carilion Clinic Institute for Leadership Effectiveness (ILE). He is a former President of the Virginia Academy of Family Physicians and in 2016 was named the Virginia Family Physician of the Year.
Mark has served as the conference Chair for the 2018-2025 American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) Physician Health and Well-Being Conferences. In addition, he is part of the faculty for the AAFP Leading Physician Well-being leadership development program, which is now in its 5th year. He also served as the Director for the AAFP Chief Resident Leadership Development Program for 10 years and was on faculty for 25 years. Mark is trained as a leadership and executive coach and serves on the faculty for the Healthcare Coaching Institute, a coach training program that focuses on preparing professional coaches to work in healthcare.
In 2019, Mark launched the nationally acclaimed PeerRxMed program (www.PeerRxMed.org) which is intended to help healthcare professionals provide proactive support for each other on their professional journey away from distress and toward thriving, with the tag line “No One Should Care Alone.”
Mark and his wife Joanne, who is trained as an Adult and Child Psychiatrist reside in Roanoke, VA, which has been home for 30 years and they hope for many more. They have 3 adult children who still come and visit because they want to. In his spare time you will find Mark stand-up paddleboarding year-round, writing poetry and a weekly PeerRx blog, and perpetually trying to learn how to say “no” so he can say “yes” to the things he is most passionate about.
Meagan Grega, MD: LinkedIn | AAFP Chapter Leaders Reflect on Lifestyle Medicine Efforts
Meagan L. Grega, MD, is the Co-Founder and Chief Medical Officer of Kellyn Foundation (www.kellyn.org), a 501(c)3 non-profit dedicated to making the Healthy Choice the Easy Choice. Through the “Healthy Neighborhood Immersion Strategy”, Kellyn provides school-based healthy lifestyle education and “Garden as a Classroom” programs; supports access to nutrient-dense produce via the Eat Real Food Mobile Market; engages participants in hands-on, plant-based cooking classes in community settings and offers intensive therapeutic lifestyle change interventions for families, employers and community groups. She is a graduate of Bucknell University with a B.S. in Biochemistry/Cell Biology and earned her MD degree from the University of Pennsylvania Medical School.
Dr. Grega spent several years as a medical officer in the United States Navy and is currently the Managing Director of Llantrisant Retreat and Wellness Center (www.llantrisanteventvenue.com). She is honored to serve as faculty for the St. Luke’s University Health Network Anderson Campus Family Medicine and Internal Medicine Residency programs, Clinical Assistant Professor for the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University, faculty advisor for the LKSOM/SLUHN medical student Lifestyle Medicine Interest Group, as the current conference chair for the American College of Lifestyle Medicine (ACLM) Annual Meeting and as an ACLM representative to the American Medical Association House of Delegates. She is a member of the American Academy of Family Physicians, a Fellow of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine, serves on the governing Board of the American Board of Lifestyle Medicine and the American College of Lifestyle Medicine, and is board certified in both Family Medicine and Lifestyle Medicine.
Ruaa Hassaballa, MPH, Ph. D (c): LinkedIn
Ruaa Hassaballa, PhD(c), MPH, is a Health Equity Strategist at the American Academy of Family Physicians’ Center for Diversity, Health Equity, and Global Health. With over a decade of experience advancing equity and systems transformation, she leads national initiatives that strengthen primary care, advance health equity, and translate lived experience into meaningful systems change. In 2024, she served as President of the Kansas Public Health Association.
A skilled facilitator and behavioral scientist, Ruaa has led trainings on cultural humility and designing systems that support belonging, wellbeing, and whole-person care. She has partnered with organizations including the World Health Organization Regional Office for Africa and the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. Rooted in community and grounded in the Heartland, she brings clarity, compassion, and courageous leadership to advancing whole health for individuals, communities, and care teams.
Charles Inniss, DPT, PCC, NBC-HWC: LinkedIn
Charles Inniss, DPT, PCC, NBC-HWC is a Nationally Board-Certified Health and Wellness Coach and a Professional Certified Coach through the International Coaching Federation who earned his Doctorate degree in Physical Therapy at Boston University.
After spending the first half of his career working as a physical therapist and personal trainer, he was hired to be the onsite corporate wellness coach for employees at Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts. There he developed a passion for positive psychology, motivation, and behavior change.
He sometimes refers to himself as an Optimism coach because he believes that our ability to cultivate optimism and positivity is the most important skill connected to well-being and thriving.
In addition to being a professional speaker, he now teaches coaching theory to health professionals and aspiring coaches as a faculty member of Wellcoaches Corporation. He’s on a mission to help make the world a healthier and happier place.
Dr. Lim is the Medical Director of the McDougall Program, a lifestyle medical program based in Santa Rosa, California, that has helped thousands of patients to successfully transition to a whole-food, plant-based diet and radically improve their overall health and well-being.
He also teaches the plant-based classes offered by Kaiser Permanente Santa Rosa Medical Center. Dr. Lim is a graduate of Stanford University, Harvard Law School, and Boston University School of Medicine. He is board-certified in family medicine and lifestyle medicine, and completed his residency training at Santa Rosa Family Medicine Residency. He is also a bar-certified attorney in the state of California.
Dr. Lim lives in Santa Rosa with his wife, Jean, and their two children, Joshua and Julia, who bring them endless joy and laughter. His outside interests include playing out in nature, learning guitar, and continually growing in his Christian faith.
Jason Marker, MD, FAAFP: LinkedIn | FMX speaker played vital role in AAFP leadership programs
Jason E. Marker, MD, MPA, FAAFP is an Associate Director at the Memorial Hospital Family Medicine Residency Program in South Bend, Indiana. He also serves as the Clinic Director for the E. Blair Warner Family Medicine Center. Dr. Marker has been in these roles since 2017 after transitioning into full-time teaching following a 15 year career in solo, full-scope private practice in the farming town of Wyatt, Indiana.
Dr. Marker has been a leader in family medicine policy and advocacy, having served as a Past President of the Indiana Academy of Family Physicians, as a past New Physician member of the Board of Directors of the AAFP and as a Past President of the AAFP Foundation. He continues his work for the AAFP Foundation as the Faculty Chair of that organization’s Emerging Leader Institute. Dr. Marker is also the General Chair of the AAFP’s Leading Physician Well-being Certificate Program, and a co-host for the AAFP’s Inside Family Medicine CME On The Go podcast.
Jason describes himself as an optimist, leader, teacher, dreamer, writer, big-picture strategic thinker, philanthropist, and doting grandfather. He believes to his very core that family medicine is the antidote that will restore the health of our nation.
KrisEmily McCrory, MD, M. Ed, FAAFP: LinkedIn
KrisEmily McCrory, MD, M.S. Med Ed, FAAFP, is the Associate Program Director at the Cheshire Medical Center-Dartmouth Health Family Medicine Residency Program and an Assistant Professor at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth. A dedicated educator focused on practical solutions for the modern physician, she serves as faculty for the AAFP Leading Physician Wellbeing Certificate Course and has authored work specifically addressing how to tackle burnout in employed physicians.
Dr. McCrory brings extensive leadership experience to the challenges of team strain and practice complexity, having served as Board Chair of the New York Academy of Family Physicians and on the STFM National Taskforce on Competency-Based Medical Education. Recognized as the 2019 NYSAFP Family Physician Educator of the Year, her work emphasizes applying performance improvement and effective leadership strategies—including pearls for introverted leaders—to create sustainable change in everyday practice. She holds a Master of Science in Medical Education and is a Harvard Macy Scholar and faculty member.
Michelle Owens-Kumar, DO, FAAFP: LinkedIn | Palliative Care Doctor Found Her Voice As Well-being Expert
Dr. Owens serves as the Director of Integrated Professional Well-being & Lead Supportive & Palliative Care Physician working across the enterprise to advance clinician well-being, sustainability, and professional fulfillment—while continuing to provide compassionate, team-based palliative care to individuals living with a serious illness. Dr. Owens prioritizes policy, process development, and well-being initiatives. She was a former scholar of the American Academy of Family Practice (AAFP) Leading Physician Well-being Program and now serves as faculty in their Leadership track. She co-founded and co-chaired the American Academy of Hospice & Palliative Medicine (AAHPM) self-care community. She has been trained in facilitating Balint groups to tend to the clinician-patient relationship through exploration of challenging cases. Beyond her professional endeavors, Dr. Owens treasures family time with her spouse and two children. Her passions span live music, culinary experiences, and travel.
Deepak Patel, MD, FAAFP: LinkedIn
In addition to Dr. Patel’s academic affiliation, his primary work is his practicing family medicine and sports medicine in Aurora and Yorkville, IL, and is medical director for Rush Copley Sports Medicine. He has held GME teaching roles in Family and Sports Medicine since 2006.
Dr. Patel has published several articles and textbooks on sports medicine and musculoskeletal topics. Some notable examples are subsection editor for the 5 Minute Sports Medicine Consult 2nd, 3rd, 4th editions. In 2020, Dr. Patel was editor and author for a book on concussions and a second edition in 2025.
His presentation specialty topics are diverse across sports and musculoskeletal medicine and include exercise recommendations, concussions, joint specific (shoulder, elbow, wrist, finger, hip, knee, ankle and foot), joint examinations, pediatric overuse injuries, tendonitis/tendinopathy, musculoskeletal imaging, osteoarthritis, fractures, and stress fractures. He is a fellow of the American College of Sports Medicine. Since he also practices family medicine, he is able to deliver effective presentations to aid family medicine and primary care providers address sports medicine and musculoskeletal complaints. He says that staying current with medical advances and with evidence-based medicine is the most challenging aspect of family medicine. He has been a repeat presenter for AAFP CME courses, FMX, and other national conferences for several years. He has served as Chair for several AAFP programs such as 2019-2022 AAFP Musculoskeletal and Sports Care conferences, 2020-2026 FMX Musculoskeletal and Sports Medicine content. Recently he was also selected to serve as AAFP’s Education Advisory Panel Member for the clinical pillar on Emergency and Urgent Care starting in 2024.
With his passion for teaching and his combination of family and sports medicine experience, he’s uniquely able to deliver effective presentations to a primary care audience.
Cleveland Piggott, MD, MPH, FAAFP: LinkedIn
Cleveland Piggott, MD, MPH is a family physician at the University of Colorado Department of Family Medicine (DFM). He received his MD and MPH from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill and completed his residency training at the University of Colorado Family Medicine Residency. As a faculty member, he co-founded the Justice League, a working group on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) at Colorado's DFM, and was the inaugural Vice Chair for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion for Family Medicine.
Cleveland has worked on DEI and antiracism issues at the local, state, and national level both inside and outside of organized medicine. He has also been an active member of the academy since medical school starting as a regional coordinator for family medicine interest groups and eventually becoming the youngest president of the Colorado Academy of Family Physicians. Cleveland has a full panel of patients and teaches both at the medical school and residency program on various topics. In his free time, he enjoys visiting national parks, ballroom dancing, and spending time with friends.
Beth Polk, MD, FAAFP: LinkedIn | FP’s Quest to Improve Own Health Changed Her Practice
Dr. Polk graduated from the University of Virginia School of Medicine and completed residency in Family Medicine at Carilion Clinic. She completed her board certification in Lifestyle Medicine in 2017 and has been speaking locally and at state and national meetings about ways to integrate it into clinical practice, serving as faculty at AAFPs Family Medicine Experience (FMX) and the AAFP Physician Health and Wellbeing Conference. From 2023-2025 she served as a co-chair for the AAFP Lifestyle Medicine Live Course. She coauthored the “Incorporating Lifestyle Medicine into Family Practice” tool for AAFP members.
Dr. Polk is an Associate Professor at the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine and was the inaugural Family Medicine Clerkship Director, a position she held from 2011-2018. Dr. Polk has integrated Lifestyle Medicine into the medical school curriculum at VTC and continues to participate actively in teaching medical students. In 2022, after 25 years of clinical practice, Dr Polk transitioned to faculty in the Family Medicine residency program at VTC to bring Lifestyle Medicine into residency training by starting the Lifestyle Medicine Residency Curriculum as well as a focused LM practice where she works directly with patients with multiple medical conditions to apply lifestyle prescriptions to treat and reverse their disease states. She was recently appointed Director of Well-being for the Department of Family and Community Medicine. She is a passionate advocate for health and well-being starting with ourselves.
Tim Riley, MD: LinkedIn
Timothy D. Riley, professor and associate vice chair for wellness in the Penn State Department of Family and Community Medicine, hopes to share what he has learned from his journey through burnout. Unprepared for the emotional and logistical challenges of underserved community medical practice, Tim found himself thoroughly exhausted and cynical early in his career. With help from supportive colleagues, mindfulness practice, and voracious reading, he identified habits that contributed to his burnout and now finds himself in a much more balanced place in his professional and personal life. Tim teaches and writes about lessons learned for anyone who will listen and read. His efforts have included residency curricula in well-being, humanities, and practice management; teaching Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, mindfulness CME, and 1:1 stress reduction sessions with patients in his office practice; and multiple articles on clinician well-being, including physician depression and suicide, self-compassion, and use of self-determination theory in clinical practice.
Margot Savoy, MD, MPH, CPE, FAAFP: LinkedIn
Margot L. Savoy, MD, MPH, FAAFP serves as chief medical officer. Savoy oversees all organizational activities related to medical education and continuing professional development. She also serves as the organization’s champion for physician well-being, is the executive lead for the AAFP’s diversity, equity, and inclusion work, and directs the Center for Diversity and Health Equity.
Thomas Weida, MD, FAAFP: LinkedIn | Coding expert aims to help fellow family physicians get paid properly
Thomas Weida, M.D., a family physician, is Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs, Chief Medical Officer, and Professor at The University of Alabama, College of Community Health Sciences in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Previously he was in private practice for 13 years. He then served as a Professor and Medical Director for the family medicine faculty practice at Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey Medical Center until coming to the University of Alabama in 2015. He is board certified by the American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM), has an ABFM Certificate of Added Qualification in Geriatrics and is an American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) Fellow, an earned degree awarded to family physicians for distinguished service and continuing medical education. He is a former Speaker and Vice Speaker of the AAFP Congress of Delegates, the governing body of the American Academy of Family Physicians.
Weida has served as AAFP’s alternate delegate to the AMA Relative Value Update Committee (RUC) from 2013-2019 and has been serving as delegate since 2020. He served as a member of the AMA RUC Subcommittee on Practice Expense and since 2025 has been serving as Chair of the AMA RUC Research Committee. Since 2016 he has been serving as the RUC representative to the CPT Assistant Editorial Board.
Since 2021 he has been serving as Speaker of the Medical Association of the State of Alabama House of Delegates and is a member of the Subcommittees on Association Affairs, Third-Party Task Force and Governmental Affairs. He has been chairing the Bylaws Revision Subcommittee since 2024. He has been the Alabama Medical Association’s alternate delegate to the AMA House of Delegates since 2022.
His field of expertise is in practice management. Weida was a contributing author on a poster, “Impact of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ 2021 Outpatient Evaluation and Management Coding Guidelines on Family Medicine Residency,” accepted at the AAFP 2022 FMX. He presented an E&M Coding update at the AAFP 2024 and 2025 FMX and serves on the AAFP Education Advisory Panel. He has been a frequent speaker at the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine Practice Improvement Conference. He has several publications in Family Practice Management, including, “Outpatient E/M Coding Simplified,” and “G2211: Simply Getting Paid for Complexity.”
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