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CONTACT:
Nancy Kinnally
Phone:
(850) 644-7824
Cell: (850) 443-7110
August 2002
DR. ALMA LITTLES APPOINTED CHAIR OF FSU'S DEPARTMENT OF FAMILY
MEDICINE AND RURAL HEALTH
TALLAHASSEE, Fla.-An award-winning family physician with roots in
rural Gadsden County has been appointed chair
of the department of
family medicine and rural health at the Florida State University
College of Medicine.
Dr. Alma Littles will be responsible for directing the development
and implementation of the college's family medicine education
program.
"Dr. Littles is a wonderful family physician role model for our
students," said Dr. Joseph E. Scherger, dean of the medical school.
"She has demonstrated a tremendous degree of dedication to her
patients, to her community, to teaching and to the medical
profession."
Named Family Doctor of the Year by the Florida Academy of Family
Physicians in 1993, Littles had a solo private practice in her
hometown of Quincy, Fla., from 1989 to 1994 and went on to serve as
medical director for Quincy Family Practice and Quincy Medical
Group.
"Having come from one of Florida's most medically underserved, rural
communities and returned there to practice, Dr. Littles has a deep,
personal understanding of the health-care needs of rural Floridians,
making her an ideal leader for a department that will focus heavily
on addressing the state's rural health needs," Scherger said.
Littles comes to FSU from Tallahassee Memorial Healthcare, where she
had served as director of the Family Practice Residency Program
since 1999 and had been a member of the faculty since 1996.
Board certified in family practice, Littles has held a number of
leadership positions in both the Florida Academy of Family
Physicians and the American Academy of Family Physicians and served
as president of the Capital Medical Society in 1996.
"I'm excited about the opportunity to become involved in the
building of a medical school from the ground up, especially one
whose primary mission is to train primary care physicians who will
be equipped to practice in rural areas," Littles said. "Based on my
own experiences, I believe this school will be a large part of the
answer to improving access to care for the citizens of rural North
Florida and other areas of the state in need of primary care
doctors."
With the appointment of Dr. Littles, the medical school now has 54
full-time and 104 part-time faculty.
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