Our division marries the study and practice of medicine across a broad spectrum of care: General Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine. Really, though, it’s simply about care for adults. In the past, the division has consistently ranked among the top 50 programs in the nation for geriatric care by U.S. News & World Reports. We promote healthy and functional lives for all adults—whatever their stage in life—through comprehensive programs in research, education and training, and clinical care...

Mindy J. Fain, MD
Chief, Division of General Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine

General Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine

The Division of General Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine is an amalgam of three distinct areas of medical study and practice who coordinate as a team to work with adult patients with simple and complex conditions to help ensure they get the best care possible. Click on the photo at left below to see our team.

General Internal Medicine

[Composite photo of faculty physicians and practitioners in the Division of General Internal Medicine, Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine at the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson]For General Internal Medicine, we focus on general medical care provided to all adult patients of any age in a clinical or outpatient setting. In this case, our physicians are known as internists. Their internal medicine counterparts in inpatient care are known as hospitalists. For general internal medicine, our focus of care is always comprehensive, preventive and collaborative with the patient at the center of all we do. That includes the primary provider, our various specialists and other health-care professionals inside and outside of our department and across the community.

Geriatrics

For Geriatrics, we focus on the unique and ever-changing health-care and lifestyle interests of a group of aging individuals generally known as older adults, senior citizens and the elderly. Once, these folks may have been thought of as more sedate and in their declining years. Not anymore. Today, older adults are often healthier and live longer. Many Baby Boomers are at retirement age and Gen X-ers are rapidly approaching it. As a result, older adults remain active well into their golden years and represent a more vibrant group than ever before.

Still, living extended lifespans means addressing more health care issues that can arise. As we reach advanced ages, those issues can range from orthopedic to rheumatic to metabolic to cardiovascular and neurological — including Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases and general dementia. We strive to promote independence by moving discoveries and breakthroughs in our understanding of geriatric care from the lab to the community, integrating questions and observations of our patients into how we approach innovative solutions of the future.

Palliative Medicine

Palliative Medicine is a specialty focused on care for people with serious medical illnesses.  Palliative Care is for patients and their families and emphasizes the relief of suffering, treatment of symptoms, and whole-person support regardless of the age or stage of disease.  The overall goal of Palliative Medicine is to improve quality of life for people with serious illnesses such as cancer, end stage organ failure, degenerative neurocognitive disorders, severe trauma and critical illness.  Palliative care can help with serious illness by treating symptoms such as pain, nausea, or anxiety as patients undergo sometimes difficult medical treatments such as surgery or chemotherapy. 

News

Lupus Research Alliance Celebrates U of A’s Dr. Kent Kwoh for Native American Heritage Month

A story published online by the Lupus Research Alliance spotlights the Rheumatology division chief and U of A Arthritis Center director’s involvement with indigenous populations in Southern Arizona. Coming during Native American Heritage Month, this recognition serves as a wonderful tribute to the work being done to advance arthritis care throughout Native American populations.


Study identifies potential new drug for Parkinson’s-related cognitive decline, dementia

Parkinson’s disease causes difficulty in movement and balance, but its cognitive symptoms receive less attention and have no good treatments. A U of A College of Medicine – Tucson team, including Lalitha Madhavan, MD, PhD, a neurology associate professor with a dual appointment in the Division of General Internal Medicine, Geriatrics & Palliative Medicine, hopes to change that.


Infectious Diseases fellows get chance at rotation in Bolivia in 2025

The Division of Infectious Diseases and U of A GME office signed a 5-year letter of agreement with the Hospital Clínico Viedma in Cochabamba, Bolivia, for a four-week elective rotation there led by assistant professor Monica Jordan Hinestroza, MD, this February. Apply today!