Core Faculty
Ryan Paulus, DO
Dr. Ryan Paulus is a core faculty member at the University of North Carolina (UNC) family medicine residency program. He directs the point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) teaching for the residency and is a faculty instructor for POCUS education at the UNC medical school. Clinically, he works as a hospitalist and ER physician in a rural critical access hospital in addition to attending on the residency inpatient service.
His first exposure to POCUS was in medical school at Ohio University, but he wasn’t trained in POCUS until his time as a resident at UNC. He gained further experience by focusing on POCUS during his rural fellowship program after residency. Through networking and communication with other colleagues, Dr. Paulus realized the need to develop a longitudinal training program in family medicine that focused on teaching POCUS. Combining that recognized need with his desire for POCUS and passion for teaching, the idea for the certificate program was born. Dr. Paulus, who serves as our Program Chair, hopes to create residency POCUS champions across the country with the certificate program.
Outside of work, Dr. Paulus takes advantage of all the outdoor offerings North Carolina provides. He particularly enjoys heading to the mountains for hiking, camping, fly fishing, and biking or exploring new areas of North Carolina with his wife.
Juana Nicoll Capizzano, MD, FAAFP
Dr. Juana Nicoll Capizzano is an Associate Professor at Michigan Medicine, Family Medicine Department. She grew up in Lima - Peru and graduated from medical school at Ricardo Palma University in Lima - Peru. She subsequently completed her residency in Family Medicine at the University of Iowa, she also completed a Fellowship in Geriatric Medicine. She practiced at the University of Iowa before moving to Ann Arbor with her family in 2018. She is Board certified in Family Medicine and Geriatric Medicine.
Dr. Capizzano completed an advanced Emergency Medicine Ultrasonography Fellowship program at Michigan Medicine in June 2021 and developed the Point of Care Ultrasound (POCUS) curriculum for family medicine residents, and Faculty/ Dr. Capizzano currently serves as the Director of Family Medicine’s Clinical Ultrasound program, as well as the Program Director of the Advanced Primary Care Ultrasound Fellowship.
Dr. Capizzano has a strong interest in POCUS education and is a POCUS advocate for family physicians and primary healthcare providers. She teaches ultrasound to medical students, residents, fellows, and faculty. She has a strong belief that POCUS can improve health care access. She has published several articles on point-of-care ultrasound.
Dr. Capizzano lives in Ann Arbor Michigan, she has twin girls and 2 yellow labs. She enjoys spending time with her family, traveling around the world, dancing and riding her bike.
Ben Clements, MD
Ben Clements is a Family Physician and Assistant Professor at the University of Vermont Medical Center and University of Vermont, Larner College of Medicine. He completed both family medicine residency and medical school at the University of Vermont. He is a 2004 graduate from Bates College (Lewiston, ME) with a B.A. in English. He practices both inpatient at UVMMC and outpatient medicine at UVMMC FM-Colchester, caring for patients from birth to death. He serves as the Director of Point of Care Ultrasound for the Department of Family Medicine and is the Curricular Lead for POCUS in the UVMMC Family Medicine Residency. Additional clinical interests include diabetes care, end of life communication skills, migrant health, office-based procedures, and treatment of opioid use disorder.
He is a Fellow of the Ultrasound Leadership Academy and a Fellow of the Academy of Wilderness Medicine (FAWM). He serves as a board member of the Vermont Academy of Family Physicians and is a member of the Gold Humanism Honor Society.
Ben lives in Burlington, Vermont with his wife and two children. He enjoys any opportunity to cycle or ski in Vermont’s Green Mountains.
Ben participates as Core Faculty for the POCUS Educator Certificate Program because he knows how daunting it can be for a practicing clinician to learn a new skill such as POCUS. Through the POCUS Educator Certificate Program, he hopes to make learning POCUS for practicing family physicians a task that becomes manageable and a thrilling addition to existing clinical skills.
Puja Dalal, MD, FAAFP
Dr. Puja Dalal (she, her, hers) is a board-certified family physician who currently serves as an Assistant Program Director and Director of Point-of-Care Ultrasound at the Novant Health Family Medicine Residency Program in Cornelius, North Carolina. Dr. Dalal earned her medical degree at the University of South Carolina School of Medicine and completed her residency at Swedish Family Medicine First Hill in Seattle, Washington. After working for a CHC in the greater Seattle area and internationally in New Zealand, Dr. Dalal returned to South Carolina to complete a Primary Care Ultrasound Fellowship at Prisma Health/USCSOM in Columbia, SC. She
Her academic interests include point-of-care-ultrasound, social justice in medicine, medical education and care of underserved populations. She is passionate about teaching medical students, residents and practicing physicians POCUS as a tool to help them serve their patients to increase access to high quality medical care for all.
When not working, you can find her catching the sunset on a hike, making s'mores when camping, asking for directions in another country, attempting not to fall into the water when paddleboarding or trying salsa moves on the dance floor.
John Doughton, MD
Dr. John Doughton is a Clinical Assistant Professor at the University of North Carolina Family Medicine Program. He is originally from Birmingham, AL, and after completing medical school at UAB he came to UNC for his Family Medicine residency. Dr. Doughton began his POCUS journey in residency, initially while doing Global Health work in Uganda, and then realizing the parallels and benefits of POCUS as a tool to care for patients at his home rural FQHC. Dr. Doughton completed a career development fellowship at UNC with a focus on point of care ultrasound and procedural care. He now directs the 4-year longitudinal ultrasound curriculum for the UNC School of Medicine. Clinically he continues to work at a rural FQHC affiliated with the UNC residency program, directs an outpatient procedural clinic, and attends on the inpatient Family Medicine service.
Outside of work, Dr. Doughton enjoys spending time with his wife and 3-year-old son. He loves traveling, live music, playing and watching sports of all types, and especially cheering on Notre Dame football.
Noah L. Furr, MD (Major, USAF)
Dr. Noah Furr is a Clinical Assistant Professor in the F. Edward Hébert School of Medicine of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS), practicing full-scope Family Medicine as Core Faculty of Nellis Family Medicine Residency in Las Vegas, NV. Noah is North Carolinian, born and raised, and was commissioned as a US Air Force Captain at graduation from the University of North Carolina School of Medicine. His circuitous path to doctoring, including years in industrial scaffolding, magnetized him to bedside medicine in all facets – enter POCUS. In his residency at Eglin Air Force Base, FL, he developed the POCUS curriculum for his program, with an Area of Concentration granted. His exposure and training include mentorship by Academy of Ultrasound in Medicine (AIUM) fellows, Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) training courses, and a hands-on learning under a myriad of gracious ultrasound educators of all specialties and levels. He was able to train colleagues in eFAST & pulse-check echos for out-of-hospital arrests while deployed as clinical lead to a Role 1 facility, exemplifying POCUS’ critical role in casualty/field care in theater or downtown Las Vegas. Dr. Furr is the POCUS Curricular Lead at Nellis FMR, kneading the boon of modern bedside medicine into the dough of the next generation.
Aside from medicine, as time allows, he’s either with his wife and 3 kids hiking/camping in the desert, dancing/playing music, concocting & enjoying delights in the kitchen, or listening to audiobooks for pleasure (the only way he can read books these days).
Hiten Patel, MD
Hiten Patel is a family medicine clinician educator. He is currently assistant professor and assistant program director at the Ohio State University Family Residency Program. In his role he directs the inpatient service and leads POCUS education for the residency and department. He completed his residency at Ohio State, followed by being the first family medicine POCUS fellow at Ohio State. Since then, he has also served as assistant director of the ultrasound fellowship within the emergency medicine department, helping educate family medicine fellows. He helps teach POCUS to medical students, residents (of all specialties), and practicing faculty. Hiten believes that POCUS is an essential tool of the future that helps with diagnosis and management in clinical care, with the potential to save time, healthcare costs, and improve patient satisfaction. His goal as a faculty instructor is to provide high quality education on how to teach POCUS, so that residency faculty have the tools and confidence to integrate POCUS into their respective curriculums. His professional interests include medical education, technology in medicine, clinical reasoning, and point-of-care ultrasound. Hiten lives in Columbus Ohio, and enjoys hiking, spending time with his wife and young daughter, and following buckeye football!
Brandon Williamson, MD, FAAFP, RDMS
Dr. Brandon Williamson is a Clinical Associate Professor and Associate Program Director at the Texas A&M Family Medicine Residency. He completed his training at John Peter Smith Family Medicine Residency, spending an extra year completing a Maternal-Child Health Fellowship as well as dedicating extensive time to endoscopy and POCUS.
He currently practices the full spectrum of Family Medicine, including inpatient adult and pediatric medicine, surgical obstetrics, and outpatient clinic care, including MOUD, endoscopy, and extensive obstetric sonography.
His academic interests include clinical pedagogy, with a focus on remediation and feedback, primary care cardiology, and narrative medicine. He is passionate about lowering the perceived barrier of entry into ultrasound education and hopes to make this a reality through the STFM POCUS Educator’s Certificate Program.
When not in the hospital, you can find him cheering his kids on from the sidelines of various sports, wrenching on his car, or absorbed in conversation over coffee.
Nicole Yedlinsky, MD, CAQSM, FAAFP, RMSK
Dr. Nicole T. Yedlinsky is Associate Professor at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, KS. She is the program director for the KUMC Sports Medicine Fellowship and core faculty for the Family Medicine Residency. Dr. Yedlinsky earned her medical degree from Tulane University School of Medicine and completed her residency at Womack Army Medical Center. She completed a fellowship in sports medicine at Virginia Commonwealth University Fairfax Family Practice as part of the National Capital Sports Medicine Consortium. She teaches POCUS to medical students, residents, fellows, and practicing physicians. She offers a wide variety of procedures within the primary care setting and focuses on women’s health, reproductive health, obstetrics and newborn health. She also practices sports medicine and is registered in musculoskeletal ultrasonography. Dr. Yedlinsky believes in care that is patient-centered, cost-effective, and accessible; POCUS is an invaluable tool in a clinician’s toolbox across a variety of settings to meet this aim. She wants all faculty to feel confident in their ability to teach POCUS to learners and incorporate POCUS in their practice and curriculum. Dr. Yedlinsky lives in the Kansas City area with her spouse and 3 children and spends her time trail and ultra-running, playing the flute in a community orchestra, and volunteering for veteran organizations.