PM&R – UofL News Fri, 17 Apr 2026 17:45:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 UofL Health – Frazier Rehab Institute among 2025-26 Best Rehab Hospitals /post/uofltoday/frazier-rehab-institute-among-2025-26-best-rehab-hospitals/ Wed, 06 Aug 2025 20:03:39 +0000 /?p=62642 UofL Health – Frazier Rehab Institute has been named by U.S. News & World Report a 2025-2026 Best Hospital.

Frazier ranked No. 40 in Best Hospitals for Rehabilitation in U.S. News’ latest edition of the annual Best Hospitals report. This year, U.S. News announced across 49 states and 95 metro areas that have demonstrated superior outcomes.

“We could not be more honored to receive this recognition,” said Dan Hudson, CEO, UofL Health – Frazier Rehabilitation Institute. “Being named a U.S. News Top Rehab Hospital and the No. 1 rehab hospital in Kentucky reflects the exceptional patient care our team provides. They truly care about what they do and about the patients they serve – you don’t find that everywhere.”

U.S. News evaluated more than 4,400 hospitals across 15 adult specialties and 22 procedures and conditions; only 13% of evaluated hospitals earned a Best Hospitals designation.

“Helping patients regain their lives with hope and dignity is the focus for our providers and employees, and we get some pretty amazing results,” said Darryl Kaelin, MD, medical director at Frazier Rehab Institute. “Being a part of UofL Health, Frazier Rehab is part of a larger academic environment encouraging a greater focus on more aggressive research and cutting edge-treatment.

To determine the , U.S. News analyzed each hospital’s performance based on objective measures such as risk-adjusted mortality rates, preventable complications and level of nursing care. The Best Hospitals and measure patient outcomes using data from over 800 million records of patient care.

“For more than three decades, U.S. News has been an invaluable guide for patients,” said Managing Editor and Chief of Health Analysis Ben Harder at U.S. News. “With a ‘Best Hospital’ recognition, Americans, in consultation with their medical providers, can confidently choose a regional hospital known for providing superior care for their specific illness or condition.”

Recently, UofL’s School of Medicine, the academic partner of UofL Health, also ranked among the best in the nation through the U.S. News & World Report 2025 edition of Best Graduate Schools.

For more information about patient services, visit .

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UofL medical school graduate trades New York City stage career for chance to treat people with spinal cord injury /post/uofltoday/uofl-medical-school-graduate-trades-new-york-city-stage-career-for-chance-treat-people-with-spinal-cord-injury/ Mon, 09 May 2022 14:20:25 +0000 /?p=56066 When Felicia Wilkins was 13, she saw an issue of “People” magazine with Christopher and Dana Reeve on the cover. Christopher Reeve had died nine years after suffering a severe spinal cord injury, and his wife, Dana Reeve, also had died recently. Wilkins was concerned for their son, Will, who is close to her age.

“I thought, ‘He must be so sad! Both of his parents have died. What could I do to make him feel better?  If I cured spinal cord injuries, that would make him feel better, I bet,’” she recalled.

Thus was born her interest in spinal cord injury rehabilitation. After graduating from the University of Louisville School of Medicine this spring, Wilkins will follow that passion as a physical medicine and rehabilitation resident with Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland.

Before embarking on a path to becoming a physician, however, Wilkins earned an undergraduate degree in her other passion, theater and music, and she spent three years working as an actor and a singer in New York City.

“I’m a really people-oriented person, a love-oriented person. In theater you are trying to get people to feel things. You are bringing people into space that they might not feel comfortable or that they had forgotten about or just helping them understand their own experiences about life,” she said. “But when the curtain closes, I don’t actually get to see how they experienced it and ask them, ‘Do you feel better? Is there anything I can do to make you feel better?’ A way to do that would be in medicine.”

Felicia Wilkins, left, in costume during a New York City production of “Into the Woods”
Felicia Wilkins, left, in costume during a New York City production of “Into the Woods”

So, as she was navigating the bustling world of auditions and theater productions, she also was completing science requirements and applying to medical school.

“I had always loved science. I said, I’ll give it one shot and if I get in, that’s the path I’ll take. If I don’t, I’ll just continue to be an actress and it’ll be fine,” she said.

“I ended up getting in and I chose Louisville because of the work with spinal cord injury.”

Just a week after the wrap of her third New York production, in which she played one of the stepsisters in a production of “Into the Woods,” she moved to Louisville to start classes. But the dramatic life transition caused her to wonder if she was making the right choice.

“I had a big identity crisis,” she said. “Am I abandoning theater because I’m giving up? Am I truly excited and feel like I’m called to go do this other thing?”

The crisis resolved a few months into her first year of medical school when, with encouragement from her instructor, Jennifer Brueckner Collins, she joined a community theater group. The weekly classes with the Commonwealth Theater Company allowed her to stay connected with music and acting.

“I loved doing it! It was a great addition to my life here in Louisville.,” Wilkins said. “It just helped me kind of merge my two personalities. I was able to say, ‘OK, I can be both things. I can still consider myself an actress, too.’”

It also helped that she was able to connect with UofL’s spinal cord injury researchers, starting with Susan Harkema, who leads UofL’s groundbreaking research in epidural stimulation with the Kentucky Spinal Cord Injury Research Center.

“She met with me, she got me plugged in to a research position with Dr. Max Boakye’s lab and I met a bunch of people that way,” Wilkins said.

“I could not have gone to a more supportive place, a better place for what I’m interested in. I cannot say enough great things about the UofL School of Medicine and Frazier Rehab. They’re very inclusive and excited to get students involved.”

In her third year at UofL, however, Wilkins faced another personal challenge. She already was frustrated as the pandemic limited students’ clinical activities when her father was diagnosed with cancer. COVID restrictions meant she was unable to visit him in the hospital and he died just a few months later.

“It was very, very difficult. I was wondering if I should take a leave of absence, if I should go home to Atlanta,” she said.

But she persevered.

“My dad and my mom and all of the faculty and professors here were really integral to me deciding that I could stay, I could finish on time and match on time.”

Felicia Wilkins learns her residency program on Match Day at UofL
Felicia Wilkins learns where she will do her residency training on Match Day at UofL

On Match Day this year, with a photo of her dad in hand, she learned she would be spending her four-year residency at Case Western Reserve University and MetroHealth Medical Center in Cleveland, pursuing specialty training in physical medicine and rehabilitation.

“I’m so excited! I’m in PM&R for life now. I’m over the moon,” she said.

Wilkins plans to continue participating in music and theater, but as she pursues her goal to cure spinal cord injury, she appreciates the ability to have the more personal connections with the people she will treat as a physician.

“I’m still there with people in dark moments, but I actually get to hold their hand and be with them throughout the whole process.”

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UofL medical resident draws on personal experience to help college students facing illness and disability /post/uofltoday/uofl-medical-resident-draws-on-personal-experience-to-help-college-students-facing-illness-and-disability/ Mon, 31 Jan 2022 15:56:38 +0000 /?p=55583 When she was growing up, Shannon Strader experienced constant pain and nausea. When she was a senior in high school, she was diagnosed with a rare kidney and vascular disease, Posterior Nutcracker Syndrome, in which the vein from her left kidney is anatomically displaced and compressed between her spine and aorta.

During the summer between high school and college, Strader underwent the first of three surgeries to treat her condition. As a college sophomore, struggling to sustain her college education and social life while navigating her health issues, she looked for ways to connect and share support with other students with similar experiences.

“There was no national organization to support people with all types of disabilities – only specific types of illnesses,” Strader said. Because it is extremely rare, no support group exists specifically for her illness.

So Strader, now a second-year medical resident at UofL, created a blog to share her experience and to connect with other college students with long-term health problems. She went on to establish , a non-profit organization to provide scholarships and emotional support to students facing chronic illness or disability. Strader assembled a board of directors that included college classmates and other advisers, established the 501(c)3 corporation with support from family, friends and her school – the University of Wisconsin – Madison, and began accepting donations.

Bella Soul awarded the first three scholarships in 2013.

“Since then, we have awarded 50 scholarships to young adult students to help with medical bills or other expenses related to their illness or disability,” Strader said. Strader said Bella Soul receives 50-to-100 scholarship applicants for every scholarship available and has given between 2 and 10 scholarships each year, depending on funds raised that year.

Reviewing all the applicants is time consuming, Strader said, but she is glad to be able to connect with each of the students, who apply by sharing their stories and proof they are students.

“It is exhausting, but all very amazing,” she said.

Shannon Strader, now a UofL physical medicine and rehabilitation resident, and her twin sister, Lauryn.
Shannon Strader, now a UofL physical medicine and rehabilitation resident, and her twin sister, Lauryn.

As an undergraduate, Strader studied neurobiology and stem cell sciences and worked in the regenerative biology lab of James Thomson at the Morgridge Institute for Research at UW – Madison. Her interest in stem cells is motivated by her own illness as well as that of her twin sister, Lauryn, who had cerebral palsy and died when they were 8 years old.

After graduating from UW – Madison, Strader obtained a master’s in biomedical sciences and received her medical degree from Lincoln Memorial University – DeBusk College of Osteopathic Medicine in Knoxville, Tennessee. She chose UofL for her residency training in physical medicine and rehabilitation because of the extensive inpatient opportunities available to the residents at UofL Health – Frazier Rehab Institute. She hopes to pursue clinical care as well as conduct biomedical research into neurological disabilities such as cerebral palsy.

“I came to UofL because the program was one of only a couple of places that offer good inpatient experience caring for individuals with complex disabilities,” she said. “My main goal is to figure out better treatment options for these individuals. Their treatment options have not changed in 20 years.”

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UofL faculty member recognized for improving health care for adults with intellectual disabilities /post/uofltoday/uofl-faculty-member-recognized-for-improving-health-care-for-adults-with-intellectual-disabilities/ Mon, 16 Dec 2019 16:50:21 +0000 http://www.uoflnews.com/?p=49158 For Priya Chandan, MD, MPH, creating an inclusive world for individuals with intellectual disability is a life mission. Inspired by her older brother, who has Down syndrome, Chandan is leading efforts to ensure all health care professionals are trained to treat adults with intellectual disabilities.

The American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (AAPM&R) has presented Chandan the Distinguished Public Service Award at the organization’s annual assembly in San Antonio, Texas. Chandan, assistant professor in the University of Louisville’s Division of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (PM&R) and the Department of Health Promotion and Behavioral Sciences, was selected thanks to her efforts at ensuring inclusive health through innovations in medical education and her work with Special Olympics.

In a ceremony last month, Chandan received the award, established to honor individuals who, in the course of public service activities, have significantly contributed to the growth and development of services that directly impact the specialty of PM&R. Previous winners of the award include Michelle Obama, Judith E. Heumann, an international disability rights activist, and numerous members of Congress.

Chandan is committed to inclusive health, the intentional inclusion of all people, including people with intellectual disabilities, in mainstream health services, training programs, research, funding streams, policies and laws.

“Intentional inclusion of people with disabilities in the spaces physicians occupy — clinical, research and teaching environments — is critical for repairing trust with marginalized communities, including the one-in-four American adults with a disability,” Chandan said. “Historically, medicine has been part of the problem, which means we have a responsibility to be part of the solution moving forward by engaging in advocacy efforts together with the patients we serve.”

Chandan’s personal experience with her brother has given her a personal understanding of the need for physicians who can provide equitable care for people with ID. She led AAPM&R’s Inclusive Health Innovation grant from the Special Olympics, which involved policy, education and advocacy activities, including the creation of an AAPM&R Intellectual Disability Member Community.

“Dr. Chandan is taking her personal experience and has turned it into a passion that she uses every day in her career,” said Darryl Kaelin, MD, chief of the UofL Division of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. “She is making better care for individuals with intellectual disability a local and national goal. She represents the University of Louisville well.”

Chandan directs the , a partnership between Special Olympics International and the American Academy of Developmental Medicine and Dentistry to ensure future physicians receive training to care for individuals with ID across their lifespan. For this program, she oversees inclusive medical education efforts at 18 medical schools nationwide and led UofL’s participation in the program, partnering with Special Olympics Kentucky and Lee Specialty Clinic.

Chandan also received funding from to further develop medical education in the form of a standardized patient experience for PM&R residents using actors from .

Chandan is involved in Special Olympics International’s Inclusive Health movement, where she serves as a content expert for the Center for Inclusive Health, an online resource for health care providers and other audiences for ways to intentionally include people with intellectual disability in mainstream health care services, training programs and research. She also is a global clinical advisor for MedFest, the Special Olympics Healthy Athletes program that provides free pre-participation sports physical exams to athletes with ID. She has engaged residents and faculty in MedFest efforts in Virginia, North Carolina, and .

Chandan was a member of the 2018-19 cohort of the faculty leadership program at UofL, Leadership and Innovation in Academic Medicine (LIAM). As part of the year-long leadership curriculum, she and her group colleagues piloted interactive, online topic tournaments to increase active, self-directed learning opportunities in the medical school curriculum.

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UofL resident physicians provide physicals for Special Olympics athletes /post/uofltoday/uofl-resident-physicians-provide-physicals-for-special-olympics-athletes/ /post/uofltoday/uofl-resident-physicians-provide-physicals-for-special-olympics-athletes/#respond Tue, 20 Nov 2018 13:39:34 +0000 http://www.uoflnews.com/?p=44863 More than 300 Special Olympics athletes and students from Jefferson and Bullitt Counties received free athletic physicals and health screening exams at University of Louisville’s Cardinal Stadium on Oct. 17.

University of Louisville physical medicine and rehabilitation resident and faculty physicians provided the service as part of MedFest, an event organized by  in partnership with Jefferson County Public Schools.

MedFest, part of the Special Olympics Healthy Athletes Initiative, is an annual event providing free pre-participation physicals for SOKY athletes and individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities in the community age 8 through adult. The physicals are required for the athletes to compete in Special Olympics activities or unified track or bowling through the Kentucky High School Athletic Association. Optional dental, vision and hearing screenings also are offered to the students and athletes.

“It’s so important for our athletes to receive the medical screenings that they need. We know that through MedFest screenings, underlying conditions a lot of times are determined,” said Kim Satterwhite, senior director of field and athlete services for SOKY.

Priya Chandan, MD, MPH, assistant professor in the UofL Division of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation who serves as clinical director for the event, said participation in MedFest is not only a service to the community, but also a learning opportunity for the providers.

“Individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities experience health disparities, partly because many physicians in the community are not trained to provide care for them,” Chandan said. “It’s important for our trainees – medical residents and students, nurse practitioner and nursing students, and other providers – to have this opportunity to interact with this population.”

Maria Janakos, MD, a resident physician in physical medicine and rehabilitation, was one of 10 UofL physicians who volunteered to provide pre-participation physical exams at this year’s event.

“The athletes are amazing individuals who have tremendous motivation and determination to succeed,” Janakos said. “It is rewarding to have the opportunity to interact with them. One of the individuals I met loves to play basketball. He told me his favorite athlete was LeBron James.”

UofL PM&R medical residents and faculty at MedFest
UofL PM&R medical residents and faculty at MedFest

MedFest has been held every year since 2005. The location alternates between Louisville and Lexington, however UofL PM&R physicians and trainees provide the screenings every year.

Dallas Derringer, one of the athletes at the event to obtain a physical for bowling, basketball and softball, expressed gratitude for the service:  “This physical is going to help me be ready.”

Check out video from Special Olympics MedFest 2018. 

 

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