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March 18, 2002
FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE HIRES INNOVATORS IN MEDICAL EDUCATION
Leaders in the development and use of virtual reality technology,
the Internet and other multimedia resources for medical education
are among the recently hired faculty at Florida State University’s
new College of Medicine.
“We’ve been especially successful at bringing in people interested
in innovations in medical education and will soon be known
nationwide for our leadership in the field of medical information
technology,” said Dr. Joseph E. Scherger, dean of FSU’s medical
school. ”The opportunity to be involved in the development of a new
medical school has been a tremendous draw.”
Among those innovators is Dr. Richard Usatine, developer of an
online case-based dermatology program that has been adopted by a
number of U.S. medical schools. Usatine, who is coming to FSU from
the UCLA School of Medicine, will begin serving as associate dean
for medical education in July.
Usatine was recognized by the Association of American Medical
Colleges in 2000 with its Humanism in Medicine Award for his work
with the homeless and medically indigent, but he also is a
nationally recognized expert in the education of clinical faculty,
known in academic medicine as preceptors. He will be working closely
with Tallahassee physicians involved in teaching basic clinical
skills to first- and second-year medical students.
Usatine and his FSU colleague, David Steele, Ph.D., are participants
in a $1.75 million federal grant project that is developing a model
four-year family medicine curriculum for use nationwide. Steele is
the author of several recent publications on computer-aided
instruction in medical education.
Another of the college’s recent hires, Andrew Payer, Ph.D., worked
on the National Library of Medicine’s Virtual Human Project and with
the virtual reality program at NASA’s Johnson Space Center. There he
developed methods for applying the virtual reality technology used
to train astronauts to the training of medical students. A medical
educator for 30 years, Payer will serve as course director for the
first-year curriculum.
Dr. Edward Klatt, a pathologist with more than 20 years of
experience in medical education, also brings to FSU a wealth of
experience in medical information technology. Klatt is widely known
in academic medicine for developing WebPath, a popular multimedia
resource for pathology education that is distributed worldwide. He
also has been a director of autopsy services at two academic medical
centers as well as a deputy medical examiner for the County of Los
Angeles. At FSU he directs the second-year curriculum.
The college’s most recent hires include:
• Dennis Baker, Ph.D., who will direct faculty development both at
FSU’s Tallahassee campus and at its regional campuses around the
state. Baker, who comes to FSU from Ohio University, will work to
increase the educational effectiveness of faculty in the basic
science program and to ensure the quality of education being offered
by the community physicians who will be hired to provide clinical
training to third- and fourth-year medical students.
• Dr. Anthony Costa, who will serve as assistant dean for the
regional medical school campus in Orlando. Costa is coming to FSU
July 1 from Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine,
where he is associate dean for clinical education. He brings 16
years of experience in medical education to FSU and was named
Educator of the Year by the Ohio Academy of Family Physicians.
• Graham Patrick, Ph.D., who will coordinate the pharmacology
curriculum. Patrick has 29 years of teaching experience in health
professions schools at Virginia Commonwealth University/Medical
College of Virginia, where he earned numerous teaching awards.
• Philip Posner, Ph.D., an internationally recognized
electrophysiologist who will coordinate and direct instruction in
physiology and pathophysiology. Posner has had research funding from
the National Institutes of Health and the American Heart
Association. He taught physiology at the University of Florida for
28 years before moving to Auburn University in 1999 as head of the
department of anatomy, physiology and pharmacology. While at the
University of Florida he was the recipient of three Teacher of the
Year Awards.
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