蹤獲扦

Skip to main content
Update Location

My Location

Update your location to show providers, locations, and services closest to you.

Enter a zip code
Or
Select a campus/region

Osteoporosis a focus as Orthopaedic Surgery looks to expand services

Bone health experts say theres an osteoporosis epidemic affecting men and women at alarming rates. More than 53 million Americans either have the disease or are at high risk due to low bone mass, and the numbers are expected to keep rising.

This trend, as reported by the National Institutes of Health, is being seen throughout Northeast Florida and Southeast Georgia. , a professor and chair of at the , has a plan to help address the issue.

Dougherty wants to develop a special one-stop 蹤獲扦 clinic that will provide comprehensive bone care for at-risk patients in the area. In addition to offering conventional orthopaedic services, specialties would also include radiology, endocrinology and internal medicine, among other disciplines. The idea is to house the clinic at , which is soon opening an inpatient bed tower to complement the existing medical office building.

I think itll be a really good clinic to set up in the north. Its something thats not available in Jacksonville, Dougherty said. Itll be a much-needed service to the city.

Another goal is to hire more faculty physicians. Within the next year, Dougherty plans to bring on three new faculty members one for each of the , , and subspecialities. Meanwhile, Dougherty, who directs the , wants to see more emphasis on training and research all in an attempt to further 蹤獲扦s educational mission.

is made up of an interdisciplinary team of 蹤獲扦 faculty physicians and other health care providers with expertise in arthroscopy, sports medicine, joint reconstruction and replacement, trauma and more. The orthopaedic surgeons treat children and adults who have conditions or illnesses involving bones, joints, muscles, ligaments and fascia.

More about Dougherty

Dougherty has been part of the 蹤獲扦 family since September 2016, coming to Jacksonville from the Detroit Medical Center and Wayne State University in Michigan, where he was a professor and director of its orthopaedic surgery residency program.

Dougherty said he was drawn to the 蹤獲扦 COMJ orthopaedics department because of, among other strengths, its faculty and existing training partnerships with other institutions in the region.

Im enjoying being here, he said. The department has a great foundation, and were just looking to build on whats already in place.

Originally from the San Francisco Bay Area, Dougherty served as an orthopaedic surgeon in the U.S. Army, a position that gave him the opportunity to treat wounded soldiers in Somalia and Afghanistan. During his second deployment to Afghanistan, he helped establish a new medical facility that provided comprehensive services to injured military personnel.

Dougherty, who retired from the Army in 2012 as a colonel, has taken a particular research interest in the care of military amputees. He conducted a nearly 30-year follow-up study of service personnel who lost limbs during the Vietnam War due to combat injuries.

Some of his notable research papers have examined how orthopaedic education for physicians is conducted in countries such as the United Kingdom, Germany, India and China. Hes now editing a book titled The Orthopaedic Educator, which explores differences in orthopaedic surgery training around the world. It details the history and progression of orthopaedic graduate medical education in the United States and outlines the elements that make for a successful training program.

Dougherty authored three of the 12 chapters of the book, which is set to be published later this year.

Share this story

For the media

Media contact

Dan Leveton
Media Relations Manager
daniel.leveton@jax.ufl.edu (904) 244-3268