New faculty spotlight: Kelly Cawcutt, M.D.

Kelly Cawcutt, M.D.

Kelly Cawcutt, M.D.

  • Name: Kelly Cawcutt, M.D.
  • Hometown: Cloquet, Minn.
  • New title and department at UNMC: Assistant professor, UNMC Department of Internal Medicine, division of infectious diseases (also working in critical care)

Research/professional interests: Dr. Cawcutt’s research interests are on prevention and management of infections in critically ill patients, with a focus on Clostridium difficile. She will be working on infectious diseases’ general hospital service in the outpatient clinic and also will be attending in the intensive care units.

Specialty:
Critical care and infectious diseases

Degrees:

  • M.D., University of Minnesota
  • Internal medicine residency completed at the University of Minnesota
  • Critical care and infectious diseases fellowships completed at Mayo Clinic.

How I fell in love with science:
I loved science from an early age, and this, combined with my love of working with people and serving my community, led me to medicine. I trained in internal medicine, but my passion has always been with the sickest patients — those in the hospital and intensive care units. I love that both critical care and infectious diseases are two disciplines that are closely intertwined and in which any organ system may be involved with the underlying illness.

Memberships:

  • American College of Physicians
  • Society of Critical Care Medicine
  • Infectious Diseases Society of America

Three things people may not know about me:

  • I have a collection of bone china teacups that I started collecting over a decade before I ever drank tea or coffee.
  • I have studied for all major exams since medical school with the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy
    playing in the background.

  • I am so Scandinavian that my family still makes lutefisk every Christmas Eve.

1 comment

  1. sue anson says:

    Interesting reading; my dad was 100% Swedish, so I have memories of lutefisk (a.k.a. stinkfish) cooking on the stove……..

Comments are closed.