Brown Announces Formation of Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center

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Brown Announces Formation of Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center

Brown Medicine has announced the formation of a new Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) Center as part of its Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

“Our Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center aims to deliver and coordinate care for patients with IBD, particularly with a focus on serving adults, pediatric patients transitioning care into adulthood, and pregnant women. Our goal is to provide a well-functioning center where patients’ clinical and educational needs are met with the expertise and commitment from a multidisciplinary treatment team within our Brown Physicians network.  This level of comprehensive care for people of all ages is unique to our community, and can eliminate the need for people to travel to Boston for care,” said Dr. Sean Fine, Brown Medicine IBD Center director and assistant professor of medicine with the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University.

The Center

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The IBD Center is located at the Brown Physicians Patient Center, 375 Wampanoag Trail, Suite 202A in East Providence and is run by two physicians with specialized training in IBD:  Dr. Sean Fine and Dr. Abbas Rupawala. Dr. Fine trained at Brown University and gained further experience in IBD at the University of California San Francisco and an IBD apprenticeship at Beth Israel Deaconess.

Dr. Rupawala completed his training at UMass Worcester and an IBD apprenticeship at the University of Pittsburgh.

The Center’s care team consists of a nurse practitioner, nutritionist, and social workers along with other medical specialists the team works closely with to play an important role in delivering holistic care to patients diagnosed with the disease.

Inflammatory Bowel Disease

The Centers for Disease Control estimates that Inflammatory Bowel Disease, an inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract, affects an estimated 1.6 million Americans.

Although it can strike at any age, it is typically diagnosed when a person is as young as two years old, or when a person is in their 20s or 30s.

Major categories of IBD are Ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease.  It is not to be confused with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS). IBD is less common than IBS and requires more aggressive medicine and treatments.

Symptoms include diarrhea with nighttime awakenings, abdominal pain, blood in stools, fever, weight loss and poor appetite. IBD can impact the ability to function, go to college or work, and ranges from mild to severe or debilitating.


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