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CONTACT: Doug Carlson
850) 645-1255
doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu
By Doug Carlson
October 2008
FSU MEDICAL SCHOOL AMONG NATION’S BEST IN
PRODUCING FAMILY DOCTORS
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- The Florida State University College of
Medicine is ranked fourth in the nation for the percentage of its
graduating doctors who choose to specialize in family medicine,
according to the American Academy of Family Physicians.
Over a three-year period, 17.9 percent of FSU College of Medicine
graduates entered family medicine residencies. No other medical
school in Florida ranked among the top 60. The University of Kansas
was ranked No. 1 with 21.2 percent of its graduates entering family
medicine residencies.
The AAFP tracks the success of U.S. allopathic and osteopathic
medical schools in producing doctors who select family medicine
residencies, and the journal Family Medicine publishes the results
annually.
Between 1997 and 2005, the number of medical school graduates
entering primary care fields, such as family medicine, decreased by
more than half as more graduates chose specialties with higher pay
and more control over work hours. The AAFP tracks the success of
medical schools in producing family medicine residents, in part, to
highlight the need for more family physicians and to shed light on a
problem confronting the American health care system.
The FSU College of Medicine, which graduated its first class in
2005, joined the University of Kansas as the only medical schools in
the nation to remain in the top four of the survey each of the past
two years. Part of the college’s mission is to answer the call for
more primary care physicians in Florida, where there is an
increasing shortage especially in rural areas. Florida will need an
additional 12,000 primary care physicians by 2020 because of
population growth and changes in the state’s physician workforce,
according to an AAFP study.
“As a medical school, we can’t necessarily control what our students
choose for a specialty, but through our admissions process and
educational program we try to identify and influence students likely
to care for the medically underserved populations that are so much a
part of our mission,’’ said Dr. Daniel Van Durme, professor and
chair of the department of family medicine and rural health at the
FSU College of Medicine. “This is an important confirmation that our
efforts are producing successful results.’’
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