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By Nancy
Kinnally
November 28, 2001
FSU COLLEGE
OF MEDICINE NAMES DR. PAUL MCLEOD ASSISTANT DEAN FOR ITS REGIONAL
CAMPUS IN PENSACOLA
TALLAHASSEE,
Fla. – A family physician from rural Milton, Fla., will serve as the
assistant dean for the FSU College of Medicine’s regional campus in
Pensacola.
The college announced Monday that it has
appointed Dr. Paul McLeod to lead the development of the first of
several regional medical campuses it will establish throughout the
state.
McLeod, who spent 21 years in rural family
practice and 10 years as an assistant clinical professor for the
University of South Alabama, is currently national medical director
for MED3000 Health Solutions. He will begin his new position Jan. 1.
Dr. Joseph E. Scherger, dean of the College of
Medicine, said McLeod has all of the qualities needed for the job.
“He is a highly respected primary care
physician and has served a rural population in Milton for many
years,” Scherger said.
“He is recognized by his peers as a talented
leader who will be able to put together a quality education program
and get other doctors committed to teaching. And he will be a great
mentor for our students because he is truly excited about helping
develop the next generation of doctors.”
McLeod said the Pensacola area is an ideal
place for the new campus, one of several regional medical campuses
the college is establishing by forming partnerships with existing
community hospitals and practices for the clinical education of
third- and fourth-year medical students.
"The Pensacola community has a rich tradition
of medical education,” McLeod said. “We have supported and benefited
from residency programs for many years. The FSU program builds upon
this foundation with an educational model that has already been
eagerly embraced by our physicians and hospitals, both urban and
rural. The result will be the well-trained, caring physicians needed
to meet Florida’s most pressing health-care needs."
Three Pensacola hospitals – Baptist Health
Care, Sacred Heart and West Florida Hospital – will be involved in
the education of FSU medical students, as will several local
practices. Scherger said the collaborative approach of the Pensacola
medical community made it a natural for the first regional medical
campus.
“The leaders of all three Pensacola hospitals
are committed to working together to bring quality medical education
to the community,” he said.
Dr E. Coy Irvin, the Escambia County Medical
Society’s representative on the initial board for the school’s
Regional Medical Campus - Pensacola, said the presence of the FSU
College of Medicine will have a positive impact on Pensacola and the
surrounding rural communities.
“Bringing the resources and students of the FSU College of Medicine
to our hospitals and community practices will enrich the practice
environment for our physicians and help us move forward with the
adoption of new technologies and practice models to improve patient
care,” Irvin said.
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