Still Moore to Do
Jim Kelsey
1–30th, acute care case, adult medicine, army 's family, assignment, Bardstown, battalion surgeon, Belvoir, bulk of Moore 's patient population range, burnout, care background, care case, care of combat casualty, care provider, Carolina-Chapel Hill, chi, chi saint, chief of family medicine, chronic disease management, clinical interest, clinical location, complex disease management, D., disease management, diverse patient care background, Egypt, Egyptian Sinai, Eisenhower army, enrolled population, faculty development fellowship, family medicine, favorite assignment, front line, front line of primary care, Ghana, great medical education, ground war, Group-Primary Care, image001 photo, initial ground war, Iraq, Joseph, Joseph health, Joseph medical Group-Primary Care, Joseph Medical-Primary Care, Kentucky, Kevin Moore, long-standing camp, medic, medical center, medical landscape, medicine, medicine residency, military career, military experience, military medical merit, military train program, missed time, Moore, Moore 's patient population range, multinational, multinational force, multinational peace-keeping force, north Carolina-Chapel Hill, order of the military medical merit, practice family medicine, primary care, residency, residency director, rise of extremist, rise terrorism, see patient, separate deployment, service university, Sinai, Sinai peninsula, take care of chronic disease, task force surgeon, tobacco, tobacco use, tobacco-related, traditional primary care provider, unexpected route, uniformed service university, university of north Carolina-Chapel Hill, wounded civilian
When Kevin Moore was growing up in Elizabethtown, Kentucky, he envisioned one day becoming a doctor. It’s fair to assume
Read more