CONTACT: Doug Carlson
(850) 645-1255
doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu
By Doug Carlson
June 2006
GRANT BENEFITS GERIATRIC EDUATION AT THE FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - Elderly people consume almost 40 percent of
all health care services in this country, but in most cases, the
elderly do not see a geriatrician when they visit the doctor.
That’s one reason the Florida State University College of
Medicine strives to instill the principles of geriatric medicine in
all of its students, regardless of their likelihood of specializing
in geriatric health care. Now, with a $2 million grant from the
Donald W. Reynolds Foundation, the College of Medicine plans to
expand its curriculum to teach principles of geriatrics care that
can be applied across the lifespan.
The college is one of 10 medical schools nationwide to win a
Reynolds Foundation grant this year. The Donald W. Reynolds
Foundation is a national philanthropic organization founded in 1954
by the late media entrepreneur for whom it is named. Headquartered
in Las Vegas, it is one of the largest private foundations in the
United States.
The foundation launched its Aging and Quality of Life Program in
1996 with the goal of improving the quality of life for America’s
elderly by preparing physicians to provide better care for them.
“What most of us in geriatrics have understood for a long time is
that the principles of care that we believe in are not unique or
only supposed to be applied in older populations,’’ said Dr. Lisa
Granville, associate chair and professor in the college’s department
of geriatrics, and principal investigator for the Reynolds Foundation
grant.
In order to help patients of all ages, the FSU medical school
plans a curriculum that doesn’t label the principles being taught as
geriatric. This curriculum will start the moment medical students
set foot on campus, allowing broad acceptance and application of
geriatric concepts in all disciplines of medical education,
Granville said.
For example, a common tool in geriatrics is functional
assessment, focusing on a patient’s ability to perform tasks such as
walking unaided or driving. While geriatricians routinely employ
functional assessment, the concept applies to patients of all ages.
Establishing quality communication between a doctor and patient is
another practice emphasized in geriatrics that all physicians should
regard as essential, she said.
In part, the goal will be accomplished by working with clinical
faculty for third- and fourth-year students, extending the training
to the more than 800 physicians throughout Florida who work with FSU
medical students.
Teaching the concepts across a four-year curriculum will result
in doctors better trained in geriatric care as they enter practice
in a variety of fields and encounter patients who would benefit from
such care regardless of age, Granville said. She noted that this is
especially important in Florida, a state in which 18 percent of the
residents are elderly - the nation’s largest population of elderly
residents - and at a time when life expectancy for Americans is at
an all-time high of 77.6 years.
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