| Stacey Marie Kerr, MD: Author's Bio |
Author's Bio
During the 1970s and early `80s, Dr. Kerr lived on The Farm, an intentional spiritual community in Summertown, Tennessee, that was known for its midwifery skills. While there, she collected statistics for Ina May Gaskin's groundbreaking book, Spiritual Midwifery, which revealed that women at The Farm had a remarkably low rate of Cesarean or other technical intervention and a high rate of healthy babies. Watching these skilled midwives, as well as an older country doctor who provided a style of personal care rarely seen in these days of large clinics and HMOs, Dr. Kerr became inspired to become a physician.
Dr. Kerr graduated from the University of Missouri, Columbia, in 1971 with a BS and a credential in elementary and special education. She taught on The Farm and worked with emotionally disturbed adolescents at Fulton State Hospital in Fulton, Missouri, in the 1970s and early `80s.
Dr. Kerr writes about current issues in medical practice and has published extensively in medical journals, including JAMA, California Family Physician, and Sonoma Medicine. She writes a monthly health column for the Santa Rosa Press Democrat. She has been active in outreach to the medically under-served through her private practice, providing free medical care to patients who have no insurance coverage, and providing medical information at minimal cost through her Web site (www.the-doctors-inn.com). She has served in leadership roles in medical societies, including two years as State Chair of the Public Outreach Committee for the California Academy of Family Physicians, and two years as chair of the credentialing committee at her local hospital, a position that allowed her to credential midwives for hospital staff privileges. Dr. Kerr's passion outside of medicine and writing is her cobalt blue Harley-Davidson motorcycle. She currently lives in Santa Rosa, California. Please feel free to contact me
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