Resources

Past Presentation

Monkeypox Update | September 19, 2022

Date of Presentation: September 19, 2022

Type: Past Presentation  

Audience: Clinical  

Program: Emergency Medicine with Rural and Indigenous Communities/IHS  

Keywords: #monkeypox  #MP  

In this presentation, Dr. Safia Rubaii and Dr. Jonathan Rozehnal discuss two cases involving monkeypox in the ED setting. Then, Dr. Miranda Durham, MD, provides an update on Monkeypox, including the history of the virus, current epidemiological trends, transmission, disease progression, symptoms, testing, treatment and the latest on vaccines.

Recording:

Presented by:

Dr. Miranda Durham, MD | Dr. John Rozehnal, MD | Dr. Safia Rubaii, MD

Dr. Miranda Durham, MD, is a Family physician who has worked at the New Mexico Department of Health since Nov of 2019 as the NW Regional Health officer and currently serves as the Infectious Disease Bureau Medical Director. Before joining the New Mexico Department of Health, she worked with the Indian Health Service for 22 years providing full spectrum family services, including pediatric, prenatal, adult and geriatric care.

Dr. John Rozehnal, MD, graduated from Icahn School of Medicine with both an MD and an MS in Clinical Research. He completed his residency in Emergency Medicine at Mount Sinai, as well as a fellowship in Administration and Operations. Dr. Rozehnal is taking a leadership role in developing a partnership between Mount Sinai and the Indian Health Service by working clinically and in operations at the Cheyenne River Health Center in Eagle Butte, South Dakota.

Dr. Safia Rubaii, MD, works as an IHS emergency physician at Gallup Indian Medical Center, in Gallup, NM. Born in Iowa, she has lived mostly in Florida, Colorado, and New Mexico. She started working in healthcare as a nursing home “kitchen girl,” then as a nurse’s aide, before completing nursing school at the University of South Florida. She worked as an RN in a variety of settings (education, urban and rural emergency, ICU, and OB at a large urban hospital; migrant health; and as a Boulder Community Hospital eye health volunteer in Mante, Mexico). She attended medical school at the University of Colorado, with electives in tropical medicine/infectious disease at Cayetano Heredia in Peru and in Costa Rica (LSU). She completed her internal medicine internship in Colorado, and her emergency medicine residency at the University of Florida. After working briefly at the Yukon Kuskokwim Hospital in Bethel, Alaska, she worked at the Navajo hospital in Tuba City and in rural Colorado before coming to Gallup Indian Medical Center. She completed the DTM&H program at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Besides under-served and native health care, compassion in healthcare, and the change process; she is passionate about languages, and has an MA in Linguistics from the University of South Florida. She loves to learn, hike, back-country ski, cycling, dance, and study Classical Literary Tibetan and the arts, especially ceramics.

Resources Provided:

Date added: September 9, 2022