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By Nancy Kinnally
July 10, 2003
FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE LAUNCHES REGIONAL CAMPUSES IN TALLAHASSEE, PENSACOLA AND ORLANDO
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – The Florida State University College of Medicine
is launching its first three regional medical school campuses this
week in Tallahassee, Pensacola and Orlando.
The first new medical school to be established in the United States
in 20 years, the FSU College of Medicine also is one of only a few
medical schools in the country to operate multiple community-based
campuses.
The 30 students in the medical school’s inaugural class are
beginning their third-year clinical rotations in doctors’ offices,
hospitals and other medical facilities in all three cities and
surrounding areas.
Five of the students will spend their third and fourth years of
medical school at the Tallahassee campus, while 14 have been
assigned to the Orlando campus, and 11 to the Pensacola campus.
All 30 students completed their first two years of medical school on
the FSU campus in Tallahassee.
In all, more than 250 practicing physicians and 10 hospitals, as
well as a number of outpatient facilities, have been selected to
participate in the clinical education of FSU medical students.
In the third and fourth year, FSU medical students train one-on-one
with physicians in eight clinical specialties: family medicine,
internal medicine, pediatrics, geriatrics, obstetrics/gynecology,
psychiatry, surgery and emergency medicine, as well as a variety of
fourth-year electives.
As the medical school’s enrollment continues to increase, as many as
40 students (20 third-year students and 20 fourth-year students)
eventually will be assigned each regional campus, and additional
campuses in Ft. Myers, Jacksonville and Sarasota will be developed.
“The medical school is a great benefit to our community,” said
Richard Morrison, regional vice president of Florida Hospital, one
of the medical school’s clinical affiliates. “Not only will it be a
prime source for recruiting residents to our family practice
teaching program, but it also strengthens our quality of care.
Teaching students brings out the best in physicians and hospitals.”
Sharon Roush, CEO of Tallahassee Community Hospital, believes the
partnership between the hospital and the medical school will advance
health care in the region.
“As we embark on the opening of our new hospital, which, like the
medical school, will be equipped with the latest technology, we
believe there will be a lasting impact on our area through the
training of medical students who will go on to provide quality
health care in the communities we serve,” Roush said.
The medical school’s 21st century approach to medicine also is
appreciated by the community physicians who have been selected to
serve as faculty for the students’ third and fourth years.
“The information technology available through FSU will help students
and faculty alike stay abreast of the rapid advancement of medical
science,” said Jeff Chicola, M.D., surgery clerkship director for
the Pensacola campus.
The college was established in 2000 with a mission of educating
physicians to care for Florida’s rural, geriatric, minority, and
other medically underserved populations. It received initial
accreditation from the Liaison Committee on Medical Education in
October and recently received another positive review from
accreditation officials.
Currently three classes are enrolled at the FSU College of Medicine
with a total of 115 students. For more information about the
college, visit the Web site at
http://www.med.fsu.edu
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