Posts Tagged ‘Cara Christ’

Introducing Our New Licensing Director & Agency CMO

August 22nd, 2012

Please join me in welcoming Cara Christ, MD as our new Division of Licensing Services chief.  Cara has agreed to share her talents as the new Assistant Director for Licensing as well as serving as the Agency Chief Medical Officer.  Also, thanks a million to Colby Bower who’s been doing an excellent job serving as interim director for licensing since Alan passed away. 

Cara started her public health quest about a dozen years ago when she worked in our infectious disease epidemiology shop.  While there, she developed a passion for both medicine and epidemiology- so she left to study medicine with a goal of working as a CDC disease detective.  I can remember being disappointed when we lost her to medical school 10 years ago  but alas, she returned to us after graduating- and she’s been working in our Bureau of Epidemiology and Disease Control (EDC) for the last few years…  most recently serving as the EDC Bureau Chief (one of my old jobs). 

I think Cara will be perfect for this job- bringing value added from her solid leadership and management style to her eye for public health “leverage points”- and most of all her passion for improving outcomes and using public health principles to change lives and communities.  Our Licensing Division is perhaps our greatest leverage point for achieving these elements of our strategic map

Cara will also be providing Agency leadership in her new role as the ADHS Chief Medical Officer.  Dr. Nelson has been serving in the Agency CMO role for the last couple of years- doing an excellent job.  I’m certain that we can count on Cara to continue to carry that torch effectively for Arizona. 

Thanks!

ADHS’ Disease Detectives

July 25th, 2012

Awhile back, our epidemiology and licensing team of disease detectives including Jason Lempp, Cara Christ, Vinita Oberoi, Jessica Rigler, Ken Komatsu, Kathy McCanna, Connie Belden, Ken Komatsu, and Shoana Anderson learned of a severe case of a Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus  (MRSA) through our 24-hour disease reporting system.  Our team quickly contacted the county public health department which immediately began an investigation into the cause.  

Their investigation quickly uncovered more people with the infection who had been seen the same day.  The detectives also found that a single-dose vial of solution used for pain meds was diluted and used for more than one patient.  Medication shortages often push health-care providers to search for solutions to provide comparable care using limited supplies- which is what looks like happened in this case.  

Our work with the county led to an improvement in the clinic’s practices through discontinued use of mixed products; appropriate use of single dose vials; using personal protective equipment, such as face masks, during medication preparation and injections procedures; education of all staff on infection control practices; and the development of a plan to report further suspected infections.  This Arizona investigation was written up in this week’s CDC Feature Article and has added to the national picture on injection safety best practices. 

Note: Health-care-associated infections (HAI) affect nearly 100,000 people every year and result in over $30B in unnecessary health-care costs (HHS).  Our HAI Program works with partners across the state to rapidly identify and help prevent these infections. Traditionally, the focus of preventing HAIs has been in hospital settings, but more and more people are being identified outside of hospital settings.  They can happen at any health-care facility, but simple steps can help protect patients.

Acting Shmackting

September 2nd, 2010

I’m glad to announce that Rodgers Wilson, MD is our permanent Behavioral Health Medical Director. Dr. Wilson oversees the clinical/prevention and quality management/medical management areas of our behavioral health system.  He has spearheaded Quarterly Health Initiatives that address common physical health needs among individuals with behavioral health illnesses and is currently developing collaborative training programs for identifying individuals with traumatic brain injury and emergency room physicians treating behavioral health conditions. Don Herrington is now our Assistant Director for Public Health Preparedness and is responsible for EMS, the Lab, Vital Records, EDC and Emergency Preparedness.  Cara Christ, MD is now our Bureau Chief for Epidemiology & Disease Control and Chief Medical Officer for Public Health.

Please join me in congratulating them for shaking their “Acting” labels.