A champion for expanding family medicine
Scott Strayer is training the doctors of tomorrow to 'take care' of their communities.
March 24, 2025
By Nan Johnson
Growing up in Southeast Asia and Latin America, Scott M. Strayer, M.D., developed a worldview that still guides his life.
“My first memories are being raised in Thailand by people who helped my mom nurture and care for us,” he said.
The family moved to Peru and traveled extensively in Latin America and Southeast Asia while overseas. Those multicultural experiences led to his interest in medicine and a desire to take care of people.
“Having an open-minded view of people from various backgrounds has really been incredibly important in my life,” he said. “I’m so thankful that I had that upbringing.”
His father’s job led the family from Peru to Chicago then to Abbott Laboratories in Canada where the elder Strayer worked with infant and adult nutritional products. While that journey exposed young Strayer, as he puts it, “to a little bit of a pharmaceutical and food manufacturing background,” it was a later teenage experience that set the stage for his future in family medicine.
“I like to say that I discovered family medicine twice,” he explained. “Our family physician in Canada would spend every bit of one hour for a visit once or twice a year. Out of that hour, 40 or 50 minutes were spent talking. It was amazing how much he was able to draw out in terms of social history, how we were doing in school, career goals and being able to influence in a gentle way. It was a big part of what really attracted me to family medicine.”
While others may be drawn to the field because of a personal medical experience, Strayer is thankful he had no major medical issues.
“My interest was more in the biopsychosocial model and how you can be a positive influence in a teenager’s world,” he said. “Honestly, I thought, ‘Well, that’s what doctors do.’”
He discovered family medicine the second time as a medical student on the MCV Campus.
“I loved everything about every rotation,” he remembered. “I think that’s a typical family doctor story. And I particularly like procedures. I was leaning toward a surgical specialty or subspecialty, but I started to think about what drew me into medicine and about that early teenage influence of my family physician.”
Today, as the Harris-Mayo chair of the Department of Family Medicine and Population Health at Virginia Commonwealth University’s School of Medicine, Strayer draws upon those early experiences to help shape his current role as leader, mentor, counselor and educator for future generations of family practitioners.
A catalyst for improved quality of care
When he learned early in his career that Samuel M. Jones, M.D., a graduate of VCU School of Medicine and former program director of the VCU affiliated family medicine residency program in Fairfax, was credentialed in tympanostomy and tonsillectomies for many years, Strayer was intrigued.
“Sam was still surgically placing ear tubes well into his career as a family physician,” he said. “It gave me the idea that if you were really interested in a particular procedure, you could get that additional training and expertise. And, depending upon where you were practicing – if there’s a need for your expertise – you could do that.”
Obstetrics, a specialty focused on pregnancy, childbirth, and postpartum care, is another example of the far-reaching benefit of advanced training. While it’s not unusual for family physicians to see OB-GYN patients, many go on to become trained in surgical obstetrics procedures not only because of their procedural interest, but also to improve maternal outcomes, particularly in rural areas where patients may have less access to specialists.
After residency in Richmond, Scott Strayer, subsequently served as a founding faculty member for a military-civilian residency at Scott Air Force Base in Illinois. He later earned a master’s of public health at St. Louis University. Now this retired Air Force Colonel and William & Mary alumnus has come home. (Contributed photo)
Strayer’s own interests in diagnostic procedures, in fact, led to additional training.
“I actually did a deep dive into endoscopy and became proficient and credentialed,” he said. “I’ve been doing that for 20-plus years and helping to train family docs who then go into underserved areas where there is no one to do an endoscopy. Essentially, we are saving people’s lives by providing access to this critical service for cancer screening.”
When more family physicians are in a geographic area, Strayer said, there’s less maternal and cancer morbidity, and mortality — and improved quality of life.
In July, the department welcomed its inaugural cohort to the VCU Health Community Memorial Hospital residency program in South Hill, Virginia. Near the North Carolina border, the residency program helps attract practitioners to a region with one of the highest rates of colon cancer disparities in the country.
“Our new family medicine residency in South Hill is going to be a major catalyst for improving health outcomes in that part of the state,” Strayer said.
A living, breathing example
A prolific researcher, Strayer already has plans to “figure out what’s going on” in the 26 counties east of South Hill with one of the highest colorectal cancer death rates in the country.
In this part of the state, many residents may not be getting screened for colorectal cancer at all. For those that do, a positive stool-blood screening result could mean over an hour’s worth of travel for an endoscopy — a distance that Strayer suspects presents additional barriers for residents, such as taking time off work for further testing and follow-up care.
“If we can find some of the causes and some of the treatment interventions, that’s great,” he said, “but at the end of the day, you need to have folks who can help screen patients to identify the disease early and take care of it before it kills you.”
Strayer is dedicated to ensuring that there are enough physicians to take care of screening and follow up to make up for the lack of access to specialists in the region. The new family medicine residency lays the groundwork to make that promise a reality.
Building a legacy
Since its creation, the Department of Family Medicine and Population Health has trained nearly 2,000 physicians. They currently see patients from every ZIP code in the commonwealth. The four years of Strayer’s tenure as chair have seen the department’s footprint grow from two main practice sites to 15, and the new residency program in South Hill is the first new VCU-sponsored training site at VCU Health in more than two decades. The department is ranked fourth nationally among family medicine departments in NIH research funding.
“Our department was founded in 1970 due to projected workforce shortages in primary care,” Strayer said. “Fast forward to today and those shortages are still there but have been stable. I can’t imagine what they would be without the support that we have received from the Virginia General Assembly. Our ongoing partnership with the state and support of the school and health system is essential to continue the training that we’re doing to ensure adequate primary care for the commonwealth.
“I go back to the mission of the department,” Strayer said. “To take care of the citizens of Virginia. To provide primary care, yes, but ultimately to take care of them.
“I inherited a wonderful legacy to build on.”
A version of this story was originally published by VCU School of Medicine
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