UW Wyoming Family Practice Awarded Funding to Expand Substance Use Treatment
Published January 13, 2026
The University of Wyoming Family Practice Residency Program and Clinic at Casper, also known as Wyoming Family Practice, has been awarded $255,236 to expand integrated substance use disorder treatment, harm reduction resources and preventative care services in central Wyoming.
This funding is made available due to the One Wyoming opioid settlement fund sponsored
through the city of Casper and the Wyoming Department of Health.
Funding is to be expended during a one-year period, with the completion of specific
goals toward expanding and enhancing a comprehensive, integrated model of care aimed
at addressing substance use disorders; increasing harm reduction resources; and improving
access to essential primary and preventative services for vulnerable populations across
central Wyoming.
Beth Robitaille, a board-certified family physician and designated institutional operator
with the Graduate Medical Education Department in the UW College of Health Sciences,
will serve as the primary investigator (PI) for the project. Robitaille outlines major
goals she and her team hope to accomplish with this additional funding to support
and expand substance-use treatment services.
“The opioid epidemic was instigated by misinformation regarding prescription opioid
medication safety from the pharmaceutical industry in the early 2000s and is now further
propelled by nonprescription substances such as fentanyl and kratom,” Robitaille says.
“It affects all communities and families from all walks of life. Evidence-based treatment
with medications, such as suboxone, helps patients get their lives back. Our physicians
in training receive excellent experience in MOUD (medication for opioid use disorder)
and will be able to continue these services in their future practices after graduation.”
Dr. Caroline Kirsch, an associate designated institutional operator and a clinical
professor with GME, and Jaime Hornecker, a clinical professor with the UW School of
Pharmacy, will serve as co-PIs, each with over 20 years of academic health care education
and community health center practice experience with vulnerable populations.
“In addition to expanding services for vulnerable patients and improving community
health, this award will support team-based training for physicians, pharmacists, nurses
and other health professionals to improve care for people with substance use disorders,”
adds Hornecker. “By bringing multiple health disciplines together, this collaborative
approach can expand medication access; promote safe prescribing and use; and help
patients stay engaged in treatment and recovery.”
“This award reflects the University of Wyoming’s commitment to addressing one of the
most pressing public health challenges facing our state,” says Patrick Hardigan, dean
of the College of Health Sciences. “By expanding integrated, evidence-based substance
use disorder treatment and harm reduction services through Wyoming Family Practice,
we are strengthening access to care for vulnerable populations while preparing the
next generation of health professionals to deliver compassionate, team-based care.
This investment will have a meaningful and lasting impact on the health of individuals,
families and communities across central Wyoming.”
Operating since 1977, Wyoming Family Practice has served as an academic medical training
site for family medicine and geriatric physicians. Wyoming Family Practice has been
a vital health care safety net for Natrona County and the surrounding rural and frontier
communities for nearly 50 years.
Wyoming Family Practice’s MOUD and addiction services are led by a board-certified
addiction psychiatrist with over 30 years of practice and complemented by the family
medicine team, an addiction counselor, a peer support specialist and a licensed clinical
social worker.
Since launching its MOUD and addiction services in 2019 with Health Resources and
Services Administration Substance Use Disorder-Mental Health grant support, Wyoming
Family Practice has developed a robust, multidisciplinary team that integrates primary
care, addiction and mental health services, oral health and social services. The MOUD
team provides intake visits; three weekly MOUD clinics; and weekly team care plan
meetings to discuss and coordinate care.
For information on health care services offered through Wyoming Family Practice, visit https://www.uwfmrpcasper.com/.

