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CONTACT: Doug Carlson
(850) 645-1255
doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu
By Doug Carlson
Dec. 18, 2006
FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE NAMES DEANS
FOR DAYTONA BEACH, FORT PIERCE REGIONAL CAMPUSES
TALLAHASSEE, Fla.--Two longtime Florida physicians have been
selected to lead new Florida State University College of Medicine
regional campuses in Daytona Beach and Fort Pierce.
Dr. Luckey Dunn, a private-practice family doctor and medical
director for the city of Daytona Beach, will serve as regional dean
of the FSU College of Medicine's Daytona Beach regional campus. Dr.
Randall Bertolette, a Vero Beach pediatrician since 1979, will be
the regional dean in charge of the Fort Pierce regional campus.
The campuses will open in July 2007. Eventually they will be home to
40 third- and fourth-year medical students, who will complete
clinical education requirements at area hospitals and medical
facilities.
First- and second-year students at the FSU College of Medicine
complete basic science requirements at the school's main campus in
Tallahassee before being assigned to one of six regional campuses
for the final two years of medical school.
The College of Medicine, with 287 students, also has campuses in
Orlando, Pensacola, Tallahassee and Sarasota. Over the next four
years, enrollment at the College of Medicine will increase to 480,
prompting a need for these additional campuses, which are intended
to accommodate a maximum of 40 students each.
"We are fortunate to have two new regional-campus deans who have
been active in medical education and who also have strong,
longstanding relationships within the local medical communities in
which they will serve,'' said Dr. J. Ocie Harris, dean of the FSU
College of Medicine.
Dunn, a distinguished graduate and valedictorian at the U.S. Air
Force Academy in 1976, has been an attending physician with the
Halifax Medical Center family medicine residency program since 1993.
He also is a United States Soccer Federation-certified referee and
coaches the boys' and girls' soccer teams at Warner Christian
Academy. Dunn, 52, spent 21 years in the Air Force Reserve.
"I see this as an opportunity to impact both the physicians and the
future of medicine in Florida,'' Dunn said. "The community-based
model of medical education really hits home for me. It's an exciting
way of educating medical students and training them to be
outstanding physicians.''
Bertolette, 58, a former president of the Indian River County
Medical Society and current Florida Medical Association board
member, is vice chief of staff at Indian River Memorial Hospital. He
has been in private practice since 1991 in Vero Beach and has served
as senior staff pediatrician for the Florida Child Protection Team
as a certified expert with the Florida Attorney General's office of
victims' assistance.
"I've always been interested in teaching and always thought about
going into academic medicine all the way back to when I was doing my
residency," Bertolette said. "This is a great opportunity for me to
fulfill that dream. I was interested in being involved right from
the beginning. I'm looking forward to working with FSU's future
physicians."
The regional deans will begin work on a part-time basis Jan. 2 and
transition into full-time roles as they leave their practices.
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