Lindsey Dahl, MD, FACP
Lindsey attended the University of Colorado for undergraduate training with a degree in Kinesiology and Applied Physiology. She earned her MD from Creighton University Medical School in Omaha Nebraska and completed Internal Medicine Residency training at Washington University/Barnes Jewish Hospital in St. Louis Missouri. She received her Board Certification in Geriatrics after completing a year of Geriatric specialty training while at Barnes Jewish. Lindsey worked for 2 years as a hospitalist physician at Missouri Baptist Medical Center in St. Louis where she was integral in the planning of a specialized ACE unit (acute care for the elderly). Since moving and starting her primary care practice at Sanford Health in Fargo, North Dakota she has implemented and served as medical director of the multidisciplinary balance and stability clinic. Her mission is to improve the care of the oldest adult population in the region. She has a special interest in fall prevention and exercise as well as caring for geriatric syndromes such as dementia and frailty. She is a Fellow of the UCSF Tideswell Leadership program in Geriatrics. She is a mother to two wonderful children and has a great husband who is also a physician. She enjoys spending time with her family outdoors. She loves downhill skiing, running, biking, hiking, and paddle boarding. She is an avid traveler and enjoys learning about new cultures. She enjoys cooking and trying new cuisines.
Kirsten Juhl, MD, FACP
Kirsten graduated from Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter, MN with a BA in chemistry and biochemistry. She attended medical school at the University of North Dakota and completed her Internal Medicine Residency at the University of Minnesota. After residency she spent a year as chief resident at the VA Hospital in Minneapolis. She subsequently joined an outstanding group of Internists at Sanford Health in Fargo, ND. She is an Associate Professor of Medicine for the University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences, and a core faculty member for the UND Internal Medicine residency. Her passion is caring for adults and older adults with chronic disease; she enjoys supporting her patients as they strive toward their health goals. She also values helping educate the next generation of physicians. Kirsten and her amazing husband have four vivacious children and a clumber spaniel. As a family they enjoy spending time outdoors hiking, bicycling, paddling, and skiing. Kirsten also enjoys jogging, reading, listening to podcasts, and playing bassoon.