November 20, 2008
JAVETTE
ORGAIN, MD INSTALLED AS FIRST AFRICAN-AMERICAN PRESIDENT OF THE
ILLINOIS
ACADEMY
OF FAMILY PHYSICIANS
Chicagoans and
IAFP leaders gathered to give the next IAFP president a warm
welcome and salute as she takes the helm of the Academy for the
next year.
Javette C.
Orgain, MD,
MPH
was installed as president on November 18th by AAFP
past-president Warren Jones, MD, who was the first
African-American elected president of the American Academy of
Family Physicians (AAFP) in 2001.
Dr. Orgain is
a family physician at Mile Square Health Center (MSHC),
South
Shore
satellite office and the first African-American elected president
of IAFP.
Dr. Orgain, a
native Chicagoan, is a board-certified Associate Professor of
Clinical Family Medicine at the
University
of
Illinois
at Chicago College of Medicine (UICCOM) in the Department of
Family Medicine and Assistant Dean of the UICCOM Urban Health
Program. She serves as
Chair of the Illinois State Board of Health, where she was
appointed by Governor Rod R. Blagojevich in 2003.
She also served as the 100th President of
the National Medical Association (NMA) in 2000.
Dr. Orgain has
been an active leader with the Illinois Academy of Family
Physicians since she was a family medicine resident in 1982.
She has been a leader on urban health issues and an active
advocate in the Academy’s government relations activities.
In 2002, Dr. Orgain was first elected to the IAFP board of
directors.
Over 100
people joined in the celebration at the Harold Washington Library
in downtown
Chicago
. Some notable names
included Chicago Health Commissioner Dr. Terry Mason and state
representatives Marlow Colvin (D-33) and Constance Howard (D-34).
Rep. Howard had the honor of presenting a copy of the House
of Representatives Congratulatory Resolution (HR 1590) that she
introduced on November 14th to honor Dr. Orgain on the
House Floor.
IAFP leaders
past and present came to show their support, including outgoing
president Steven D. Knight, MD of
Harrisburg
, first vice-president Patrick Tranmer, MD of Chicago, second
vice-president David Hagan, MD of
Gibson
City
, resident board member Helen Williams, MD of
Chicago
. Past presidents on
hand were Ronald Johnson, MD of
Pittsfield
, Carolyn Lopez, MD of Chicago, Tim Vega, MD of
Peoria
and Ellen Brull, MD of
Glenview
.
Several
special guests provided personal tributes to Dr. Orgain during the
evening, including Willarda Edwards, MD president-elect of the
National Medical Association and NMA board chair Niva Lubin-Johnson,
MD.
With
a packed house of her family and friends and a gathering of health
care and policy leaders, Dr. Orgain renewed the call for family
physicians to redefine themselves and their place at the helm of
healthcare reform.
“Family physicians know our
patients and we know what must be done to make this nation
healthier again. We are always educating ourselves to become
better physicians, to practice smarter, and to help our patients
take better care of themselves.
We are reinventing the family
medicine practice, through the patient-centered medical home,
while remaining true to our mission to care for families… the
entire person… from cradle to grave. We are collaborative
leaders making the changes
Illinois
needs!”
More
about Dr. Orgain:
- In
2003 she received an IAFP President’s Award for her work on
the Campaign for a Healthy, Smoke-Free Chicago, which led to a
landmark increase in the
Cook
County
cigarette tax. Since
then, she has spoken at numerous press conferences and
government hearings advocating for tobacco prevention and
cessation programs along with responsible public health
policies at the local and state level.
·
Dr.
Orgain also received the award of a “Local Legend” from the
American Medical Women’s Association in 2004 after being
nominated by U. S. Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr..
- She
is the chairperson of the African American Health Care Council
in
Chicago
and has held various leadership posts in the Cook County
Physicians Association including the position of president.
- Dr.
Orgain served on the Advisory Board: for the Increasing
Outreach and Decreasing Disparities among African Americans (IODA)
project of the American Cancer Society; for the
UIC
College of Nursing Integrated Health Care at Thresholds
project; and for the University of the
Transkei
(
Umtata
,
South Africa
) Community Based Infrastructure Development Project.
- She
is a member of the Appointed Local School Council for the
CPS
Daniel Hale Williams Preparatory School of Medicine .
- She
has traveled extensively to lead health delegations and
examine other health systems, visiting
China
,
South America
, East, West and
Southern Africa
, the
Caribbean
,
France
,
Cuba
,
Laos
, and
Myanmar
(formerly
Burma
) and make a contribution through service to the healthcare
delivery systems in those nations.
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