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Excitement is building for the announcement of this year’s Telehealth Champion and Telehealth Ninja Award winners! Until then, take a look at last year’s winners!

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Center for Distance Health Founder, Director Honored

March 3, 2015 | University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ (UAMS) Curtis Lowery Jr., M.D., and Tina Benton, B.S.N., R.N., today at the South Central Telehealth Forum in Jackson, Mississippi were recognized for their work in telemedicine with the first Champion Awards from the South Central Telehealth Resource Center (SCTRC).

Tina Benton, B.S.N., R.N., left, holds the Champion Awards she and Curtis Lowery Jr., M.D., received March 2 in Jackson Mississippi. Sarah Rhoads Kinder, Ph.D., D.N.P., principal investigator for the SCTRC, center presented the awards to Benton along with a Telehealth Ninja award to Kristi Henderson, D.N.P., right.

Lowery is the founder and medical director of the UAMS Center for Distance Health (CDH) and chair of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology in the UAMS College of Medicine. Benton is the CDH oversight director. Each of them received a Curtis L. Lowery Jr., M.D., Telehealth Champion Award, which recognizes individuals who are essential to the success of a telehealth project or program.

“Dr. Lowery is an innovator and a leader in telemedicine,” said Erin Bush, SCTRC project director. “His forward thinking and concern for patients led to the creation of many life-saving telemedicine programs. He led the effort to make Arkansas one of the most connected states in the nation for telemedicine infrastructure. In Arkansas, if it’s telemedicine, Dr. Lowery had some hand in support of its creation.”

Award recipients are individuals who initiate and promote the utilization and sustainability of telehealth services and shoulder responsibility while sharing the spotlight with their teams. Awardees have shown an innovative spirit and vision and have spent years developing and promoting programs while inspiring others. Lowery and Benton have worked together at CDH to promote telemedicine for more than a decade.

Kristi Henderson, D.N.P., chief telehealth and innovation officer for the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, Mississippi, received the first Telehealth Ninja Award. A Telehealth Ninja is a telehealth professional who has mastered the system around them to provide medical attention to those in need, worked for legislation to allow provider reimbursement, and taken those actions within the American medical system.

The South Central Telehealth Resource Center serves Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennessee. It functions primarily through a website that works in partnership with the UAMS Center for Distance Health Training Center based at UAMS. The resource center website, www.learntelehealth.org, targets health care and health education groups that have an interest in using telehealth.

LearnTelehealth.org was also made possible by a grant from the Sustainable Broadband Adoption (SBA) Training Center grant project.  This grant was through Connect Arkansas and focused on telehealth training and awareness in the state of Arkansas.