CONTACT: Nancy Kinnally
(850) 644-7824;
nancy.kinnally@med.fsu.edu
By Nancy Kinnally
Feb. 20, 2008TALLAHASSEE MEMORIAL HEALTHCARE,
TWO LOCAL PHILANTHROPISTS
FUND INNOVATIONS AT FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- Two local retired physicians have joined
forces with Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare to provide $2.5 million
worth of enhancements to the Florida State University College of
Medicine, including a new center where medical students will learn
using high-tech patient simulators.
The Charlotte E. Maguire, M.D. and Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare
Center for Clinical Simulation is equipped with mannequins that can
simulate a variety of conditions, from wheezing to a heart murmur to
cardiac arrest, enabling students to learn how to react to the
unexpected in a no-risk environment.
“This new center represents a significant advancement in our
clinical skills education and will serve to complement our
outstanding and innovative Clinical Learning Center,” said Dr. J.
Ocie Harris, dean of the College of Medicine. “We are so grateful to
Dr. Maguire and to TMH for making this possible.”
The center, which goes into operation this week, honors Maguire, a
benefactor of both the hospital and the medical school, and was made
possible through a $750,000 gift from the TMH Foundation that was
matched by the state of Florida for a total gift of $1.5 million.
“The Maguire-TMH Clinical Simulation Center will offer the residents
in the TMH Family Medicine Residency Program and -- in any future
additional TMH residency programs -- the opportunity to learn
advanced procedures and protocols in a no-risk environment,” said
Paula Fortunas, president and CEO of the TMH Foundation.
Dr. Maguire’s friend and colleague, Dr. Laurie L. Dozier Jr., has
funded a $2 million charitable remainder annuity trust for the
ultimate benefit of TMH and the College of Medicine. When the funds
are received, FSU will establish the Laurie L. Dozier Jr., M.D.
Endowed Professorship. Under present state of Florida provisions,
the Dozier Professorship will be eligible for state of Florida
matching funds.
A Leon County native, Dozier earned his medical degree from Duke
University in 1955 and practiced internal medicine and cardiology in
Tallahassee from 1960 to 1991. He was co-founder of Cardiology
Associates, which later became Southern Medical Group.
The Laurie L. Dozier Jr., M.D. Endowed Professorship will serve as a
tribute not only to his work, but also to that of his daughter,
Sarah Dozier Sherraden, director of the Clinical Learning Center,
where medical students learn patient interviewing and examination
skills by working with people who have been trained to portray
specific medical cases.
“We have been so fortunate since our founding to have Sarah
Sherraden as the director of our Clinical Learning Center, and we
want to thank Dr. Dozier for ensuring the continuation of the
tradition of excellence Sarah has helped establish for clinical
education at the FSU College of Medicine,” Harris said.
The Charlotte E. Maguire, M.D. and Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare
Center for Clinical Simulation is directed by Dr. Stephen Quintero,
assistant professor of family medicine and rural health.
“This yet another outstanding example of the positive partnership
between TMH and the FSU College of Medicine,” said Mark O’Bryant,
TMH president and CEO.
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