About The Authors

Lance L. Davis, MD, MPH
Lance is a native North Carolinian who currently lives and works in Charleston, SC. He attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for a BS in Biology, a Master's in Public Health and his Medical Doctorate. His residency training is in Family Medicine through the Medical University of South Carolina. He is board certified in Family Medicine and has extensive experience in Emergency Medicine. Holding the rank of Lieutenant Commander, Lance also serves in the US Naval Reserve Medical Corps, and is a veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom where he served with the US Marine Corps. His interest in care of the dying began in medical school and was honed in residency when he began to have responsibility for the care of seriously ill patients. He was mentored by the co-author, Bert Keller, DMin, and is a member of Circular Congregational Church. He has helped guide countless patients and families through the dying process and has taught medical students and resident physicians to do the same. He sits on several advisory committees for end-of-life care organizations, and spent almost four years as a medical director of a large hospice. Lance enjoys athletics, outdoor activities, Spanish language and culture, singing and guitar.
General Medical Credentials
- Curriculum Vitae (Medical Resume')
- South Carolina Medical License-Online Look-Up Link
- Family Medicine Certification
- Family Medicine Board Certification-Original
- Family Medicine Board Certification-Renewal
- North Carolina Medical License
- UNC Medical School Diploma
- UNC Master of Public Health-Nutrition Diploma
Albert H. Keller, DMin
Bert was born and grew up in Birmingham, Alabama. He went to Davidson College in North Carolina and Union Theological Seminary in Virginia, spent a year studying theology in France and earned a Masters Degree in Ethics at Yale. His Doctor of Ministry degree is from Princeton Theological Seminary. After teaching for three years in the Congo, Bert came to Charleston, SC, to do campus ministry. From that responsibility he moved into the two positions he continues to hold: Associate Professor of Family Medicine (Ethics) at the Medical University of South Carolina, and Pastor of Circular Congregational Church (UCC), Charleston. His teaching and research interests are largely in spirituality, the conversation between science and theology, and bioethics. As an outgrowth of both teaching doctors and pastoring an active congregation, he was instrumental in organizing the first hospice organization in the Charleston area (1980) and helping train hospice volunteers. He and his wife Lucille, an actress and high school theater teacher, have three sons.


