CONTACT: Doug Carlson
(850) 645-1255
doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu
By Doug Carlson
December 2008FIRST GRADUATES OF FSU COLLEGE OF
MEDICINE NOW PRACTICING PHYSICIANS
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- Fourteen members of the first class of
students to graduate from The Florida State University College of
Medicine recently completed the journey to becoming full-time
practicing physicians.
When the students arrived at the College of Medicine as part of the
inaugural class in 2001, they were taking a calculated gamble by
choosing to be part of the first new medical degree program created
in the United States in nearly a quarter-century. Since their
enrollment, physician workforce estimates in the United States have
shifted dramatically from talk of a potential surplus to current
projections of a severe physician shortage. In June 2006 the
Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) called for a 30
percent increase in medical school enrollment by 2015.
The AAMC based its position on several factors, including population
growth, a doubling of the number of people over age 65 between 2000
and 2030 and an aging U.S. physician workforce in which one of every
three active doctors is older than 55 and likely to retire by 2020.
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Class of 2005 |
Twenty-seven members of the original College of Medicine class
graduated in May 2005. Because the length of residency program
training varies depending on specialty, 13 members of the class
continue in residency training in specialties ranging from internal
medicine to pediatric neurology and surgery.
The 14 others completed residency training in July and now are part
of the first group of practicing physicians to have studied and
trained at the College of Medicine. Ten of the 14 (71 percent) are
practicing in Florida, with five of those practicing in rural,
medically underserved areas. Four of the 10 Florida physicians are
practicing family medicine.
Witnessing the transition is especially rewarding for faculty
members who helped recruit the College of Medicine’s first class.
“The charge I gave to the admissions committee was to look for
people who were ready to be pioneers,” said Myra Hurt, who served as
interim dean and director of the admissions process when the first
class was admitted. “We didn’t have facilities, and we didn’t yet
have accreditation, but these students believed in the mission and
wanted to be a part of this medical school. As much as anything,
they were our partners.”
Six of the college’s 14 alumni practicing physicians are working in
or near Tallahassee. Two of those -- Drs. Christie Sain and Alex Ho
-- have joined the College of Medicine as part-time faculty members
who teach medical students.
“We are deeply proud of the academic and professional success of our
students,” said Dr. Alma Littles, senior associate dean for academic
affairs. “We knew we had an educational model that would create the
exemplary, compassionate, caring physicians that are now practicing
in communities of need in the state of Florida and other areas of
this country.”
The College of Medicine’s first alumni practicing physicians are:
- Dr. Kerry Bachista, emergency medicine, Winter Haven (Fla.)
Hospital
- Dr. Mark Bochey, emergency medicine, University Medical
Center, Austin, Texas
- Dr. Natosha Canty, family medicine, Capital Health Plan,
Tallahassee
- Dr. Shayla Gray, family medicine, Madison, Fla.
- Dr. Fawn Grigsby Harrison, pediatrics, DeSoto Hospital,
Arcadia, Fla.
- Dr. Michael Hernandez, internal medicine/hospitalist, Shands
Jacksonville
- Dr. Alex Ho, emergency medicine, Tallahassee Memorial
Hospital
- Dr. Joda Lynn, emergency medicine, staffing emergency rooms
in Perry, Apalachicola and hospitals in North Florida and South
Georgia
- Dr. Adam Ouimet, emergency medicine, Tacoma (Wash.)
Emergency Care Physicians
- Dr. Kevin Raville, emergency medicine, University of
Rochester (N.Y.) Medical Center
- Dr. Neil Rodgers, emergency medicine, Leesburg (Fla.)
Regional Medical Center
- Dr. Christie Sain, family medicine, Patients First,
Tallahassee
- Dr. Lorna Stewart, family medicine, TMH Hospitalist Group,
Tallahassee
- Dr. Amanda Sumner, emergency medicine, Carl R. Darnall Army
Medical Center, Fort Hood, Texas
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