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We’re here to help.

Our compassionate and knowledgeable team is here to address your unique needs and provide the best possible care for your child’s neurodevelopmental journey.

Learn more

Teaching for a stronger community.

We are here to equip learners with the essentials skills needed to create positive change in the lives of people with developmental differences.

Learn more

Researching for a better tomorrow.

Our goal is to unlock discoveries that will revolutionize the lives of individuals with autism and other neurodevelopmental diagnoses.

Learn more

Thompson Center for Autism & Neurodevelopment

205 Portland Street, Columbia, MO 65211

573-884-6052

August 31, 2015

Sohl to hand off medical director duties to expand autism care network

By Emily Morrison

By Adrienne Cornwall

 

COLUMBIA, Mo. (Aug. 31, 2015) — After seven years as medical director of the Thompson Center for Autism and Neurodevelopmental Disorders at University of Missouri, pediatrician Dr. Kristin Sohl will transition away from her administrative duties as of August 31 to expand the growing ECHO Autism program, which launched in March, to an additional 10 sites. Her patient care duties will continue unaffected.

“I am excited to be focusing my efforts on changing the landscape for autism care across North America and working to improve the health system so centers of excellence in autism can improve throughput for more children to enhance quality of life for more families,” Sohl said.

Sohl’s ECHO Autism project will be the centerpiece of a recent grant renewal through the federal Health Services Research Administration’s Autism Intervention for Physical Health initiative. The $15 million award is shared among 14 autism centers in North America.

ECHO Autism is based on a telehealth specialist network model developed by a hepatologist at the University of New Mexico, Sanjeev Arora, to serve the needs of hepatitis C patients who had no access to treatment where they lived and were dying on the growing waitlist for his clinic.

Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes (ECHO) pairs specialist centers, such as those at the Thompson Center, with community providers to help them manage cases and empower them with knowledge to help their patients locally.

Sohl’s pilot cohort for ECHO Autism, the first ECHO-based project for autism care in the U.S., included 15 providers from all over the country, including rural and underserved areas in Missouri.

With a goal to develop 10 additional centers of excellence in autism care through this program, Sohl’s new efforts will bring this specialty knowledge about common medical issues in children with autism and barriers to diagnosis and treatment to an exponentially larger group of physicians.

“Dr. Sohl is a gifted physician who is passionate about caring for children, and we are so grateful to have had her leadership in medical services for seven years,” said Thompson Center Executive Director Dr. Stephen Kanne. “Her efforts to close the gap in access to quality medical care so that children with autism can have the best outcomes possible are vital to extending our center’s work to help kids beyond our local and regional communities.”

Most importantly, patients served by providers in the ECHO Autism network have the chance to be treated in their own community, without waiting or traveling to see a specialist.

“The ECHO Autism model will improve early identification of autism and increase screening and treatment of common co-occurring conditions in the primary care setting, particularly in underserved communities,” said Sohl.

Sohl will pass leadership for the center’s diagnostic and clinical services for children with autism to a new medical director. Leadership for the medical clinics will be absorbed internally until a new or interim medical director is appointed.