Resources

Past Presentation

Telehealth in Tribal Settings: Case Studies Overview | January 20th, 2026

Date of Presentation: January 20, 2026

Type: Past Presentation  

Program: Virtual Care Implementation  

Keywords: #telehealth  #VCI  #virtual  #virtual care  

In this presentation, Dr. Iwasaki, Dr. Whitfield, and Brenna Torres, use a case based approach to discuss best practice for the use and implementation of telehealth in Tribal settings, review the definition of virtual care, describe frameworks for implementing new telehealth programs, and identify facilitators, as well as barriers, to implementing health care programs broadly and in tribal health settings. 

Presented by:

Dr. Jessica Whitfield
Dr. Jessica Whitfield
Program Director

Jessica Whitfield, MD, MPH, has served as the Director of Education for the Virtual Care Implementation ECHO since its launch in 2021. In this role, she tailors the speaker schedule in response to audience feedback to bring the VCI community up to date information on telehealth models, implementation strategies and new directions. She brings to this role several years of experience as a practicing psychiatrist using telehealth across a variety of settings, from outpatient specialty health to integrated primary care. She also has expertise in implementation science, having graduated from the Integrated Care Training Program Fellowship at the University of Washington, and currently serves as a Psychiatric Consultant coach at the Advancing Integrated Mental Health Solutions (AIMS) Center. She is an Assistant Professor in the Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences at the University of Washington School of Medicine and received her medical degree from Saint Louis University School of Medicine and her Master of Public Health from Columbia University. She completed her residency in General Adult Psychiatry at Brown University.

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Dr. Justin Iwasaki
Dr. Justin Iwasaki
Program Coordinator, Program Director

Dr. Justin Iwasaki, MD, MPH, serves as the Chief Medical Officer for Tribal Health Connections. He has worked in multiple communities around the world developing innovative solutions to complex health problems. Dr. Iwasaki worked for the Lummi Nation for eight years in multiple executive level roles, and as a primary care physician, leading the Lummi health programs through significant organizational change. He completed a family medicine residency at the University of Washington with concentrations in bioinformatics and global health, where he continues to hold a clinical faculty position. Prior to that he graduated from the University of Utah’s combined MD/MPH program, where he was involved in the start-up and impact investing community. He has designed and led projects with funding from the CDC, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation among others. His work in international development and, most recently, the opioid epidemic has been developed into case studies by Harvard Business School and the Stanford Design School (d.school) respectively. 

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Resources Provided:

Date added: January 15, 2026