UNTHSC physician assistant makes A house calls for disabled adults

 UNTHSC-Vic-Holmes-PA
Vic Holmes MPAS, PA-C

Twice a month, Vic Holmes, MPAS, PA-C, gathers his medical examination instruments and makes the 20-mile drive from UNT Health Science Center to a two-acre camp for adults with disabilities in Mansfield.

As goats, horses and a mule graze outside, Holmes spends four hours inside an examination area with camp attendees, measuring blood pressures, testing glucose and listening to heartbeats. Holmes knows each patient’s name, personality and health ailments.

This may seem like an unusual setting to practice medicine, but it allows Holmes, a Physician Assistant Studies instructor and clinician, to fulfill the UNTHSC mission to provide effective primary care in the community. Autistic and intellectually and developmentally disabled patients can grow upset during visits to unfamiliar clinical settings at UNT Health, making them difficult to treat.

“It’s basically a house call,” Holmes said. “The familiar setting makes it much more comfortable for patients and much easier for me to meet their basic medical needs and keep them healthy.”

Holmes started making the trek to Mansfield about one year ago. The camp, which offers outdoors activities and cooking and fitness lessons, is operated by A-Trinity HCS Services. Some camp attendees live in residential support homes around North Texas. Others live with their families or independently in the community.

Camp administrators converted a room into a sterilized exam area with an exam bed, a weight scale and a sink. Generally, Holmes sees eight to 16 patients during each visit.

The experience has intrigued UNTHSC physician assistant students who seek experiences with underserved communities and who occasionally request to visit the camp. An A-Trinity administrator says this arrangement has made a difference in individuals’ lives.

“Instead of having any anxiety about traveling to a clinic, our individuals just walk to the other side of the building,” A-Trinity President Allen Gould said.

Recent News

Community Health Worker Week
  • Our People
|Apr 19, 2024

Recognizing the important role of community health workers

In recognition of the important role of community health workers, their leadership and their impact on communities, Community Health Worker Week 2024 is being celebrated nationally April 22-28. The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth School of Public Health’s State Hea...
Mtawndy2mze
  • Our People
|Apr 18, 2024

TCOM’s Dr. Lisa Nash honored with the 2024 Special Lifetime Achievement Award by AOGME

It has been a lifetime of service to osteopathic medicine and graduate medical education for Lisa Nash, DO, MS-HPEd, FAAFP, and that remarkable career was honored by the Assembly of Osteopathic Graduate Medical Educators as she received their 2024 Special Lifetime Achievement Award as part of the Am...
Cervantes 20240117 143815
  • Our People
|Apr 17, 2024

Protecting quality of life for senior living residents through HSC’s ICARE initiative

Through HSC’s ICARE – Infection Control Advocate and Resident Education - program, Dr. Diana Cervantes and School of Public Health students are helping to protect the quality of life for residents in nursing home communities. Dr. Cervantes is an associate professor, population and community hea...
Uyen Sa Nguyen Scaled[58]
  • Our People
|Apr 12, 2024

Faculty Highlight: Dr. Uyen-Sa D. T. Nguyen

Dr. Nguyen is an associate professor, population and community health, at The University of North Texas Health Science Center’s School of Public Health. She recently received a new pilot grant and donation from an HSC Foundation donor to support her research. Here, she talks about this new funding...