Jennifer Frank is a family physician, health care leader, wife and mother who has been practicing family medicine for over 20 years. She was a physician leader in multiple organizations with multiple roles over a fifteen year period of time which included medical directorship of Army medical clinics and academic/residency clinics, as well as primary care leadership at ThedaCare, a nationally known healthcare organization committed to Lean Improvement methodology, and she served as chief medical officer before returning to full-time clinical practice. As an academic family physician, her research interests included female sexual dysfunction, conscientious objection in medical training, and group visits for prenatal care delivery. She has written a number of articles and book chapters on a variety of family medicine topics ranging from syphilis to teething. Additionally, she blogged for about a decade for Physicians Practice with her articles frequently appearing in Medical Economics. She also blogged on work-life balance for Medscape. Her passions include the use of narrative medicine for both patient and clinician and she has had a number of medical essays published in journals including Journal of the American Medical Association and Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine.