Caroline Sloan is a primary care physician, health services researcher, and Assistant Professor of Medicine in Duke University’s Division of General Internal Medicine. She is Core Faculty at the Duke-Margolis Institute for Health Policy. Clinically, she works at a primary care clinic that mainly serves patients enrolled in Medicare and Medicaid. Many of her patients struggle have complex medical needs and struggle to afford the care that is prescribed to them. In her research, she studies the causes of financial barriers to care among patients with multiple chronic conditions (e.g., high out-of-pocket costs, administrative burden of applying for financial assistance programs) as well as the consequences of those financial barriers (e.g., poor disease control, medical debt). She currently has NIH funding to study the impact of recent out-of-pocket price transparency regulations on patient access and outcomes. She recently completed the Health and Aging Policy Fellowship, which is a year-long, part-time health policy fellowship for clinicians and health services researchers whose work focuses on older adults. As a HAPF fellow, she interned at the Assistant Secretary for Technology Policy, where she helped write a regulation that will improve clinicians’ ability to view out-of-pocket cost estimates for prescription medications in real time, via the electronic health record.