EOAD_Fundraiser_ElevateMeD_TheSocialPhotog_20211002-1555.jpg

Events

 Upcoming Events

 

Back to All Events

ElevateMeD Talk: Native Health Disparities with Dr. Aaron Bia

An ElevateMeD Panel Discussion

2020-21 ElevateMeD Scholar, Dr. Aaron Bia leads us in a online conversation about health disparities affecting Native communities for Native American Heritage Month.

Dr. Aaron
Bia

Navajo Indian Health Service

Family Medicine Physician

Moderator & 2020-21 ElevateMeD Scholar

Dr. Aaron Bia, M.D. is a member of the Navajo Nation from Canyon De Chelly, AZ. Dr. Bia is a Family Medicine physician and completed his residency from the University of Utah in 2024. He has a great passion for rural and tribal medicine, which came from his grandfather who is a traditional healer. Throughout his medical journey, Dr. Bia always had a natural desire to grow with his patients and to care for families. Dr. Bia will be starting his medical practice with the Navajo Indian Health Service to heal and serve his native community.

Dr. Megan
Corn

Stanford University

OB/GYN Resident Physician

Panelist & 2022-24 ElevateMeD Scholar

My name is Megan Corn. Growing up I lived in Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and now my family calls Spokane, Washington home. I’m an enrolled member of the Chickasaw Nation with ancestry in the Cherokee and Choctaw Nations as well. I attended college at California Polytechnic in San Luis Obispo where I majored in Biology and minored in Biotechnology and Spanish. I then went on to the University of North Dakota for medical school. During medical school, I was able to focus on Indigenous health and work closely with the American Indian population of the state. My interests include identifying and mitigating health disparities among marginalized populations.

Dr. Blair
Matheson

Association of American Indian Physicians,
Board President

General Surgery & Emergency Medicine Physician
specializing in Trauma

Panelist

Dr. Thomas “Blair” Matheson (Cherokee) is a medical director for National Medical Resources, a firm that provides Locum Tenens physician, physician assistant, and nurse practitioner staffing. A North Dakota resident, Dr. Matheson primarily serves rural Native American populations. His practice is in general surgery and emergency medicine with a specialization in trauma. Dr. Matheson currently serves as the board president of the Association of American Indian Physicians, which his father, Dr. Thomas Matheson helped found in 1971, and as a member of the SAIO 50th Anniversary steering committee. Dr. Matheson both serves as an arena doctor and competes in team roping and senior breakaway for the Indian National Finals Rodeo. In addition to his Stanford degree, Dr. Matheson holds an M.D. from the University of Oklahoma. He completed his residency in general surgery at Maricopa County Hospital and the University of Tennessee, Knoxville and his residency in family practice at the University of Oklahoma.

Dr. Jennifer


Erdrich

University of Arizona Department of Surgery, Assistant Professor

Surgical Oncology Physician

Panelist

Dr. Erdrich is a practicing surgeon at the University of Arizona, specializing in operations for melanoma, sarcoma, and breast cancer. She completed her education and training at Stanford, Harvard, and Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. Her research is focused on cancer prevention and control, particularly for Native Americans. Her paternal family is Turtle Mountain Ojibwe. She strives to expand the surgical oncology resources available to local tribal communities through multidisciplinary approaches that leverage innovation and teamwork.

Earlier Event: September 24
ElevateMeD Day 2024