CONTACT: Doug Carlson
(850) 645-1255
doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu
By Meredith Fraser
Sept. 29, 2009COLLEGE OF MEDICINE AMONG
NATION’S TOP PRODUCERS OF FAMILY DOCTORS
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Dr. Daniel Van Durme
Chair, Department of
Family Medicine and Rural Health
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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- For the third year in a row, The Florida
State University’s College of Medicine ranks among the top five
schools in the United States for percentage of graduates choosing to
specialize in family medicine, according to an American Academy of
Family Physicians annual report.
Over a three-year period, 16.8 percent of FSU College of Medicine
graduates entered family-medicine residencies. That meant FSU was
tied for a ranking of fourth in the nation. The University of North
Dakota claimed the top spot, with 20.3 percent. The next-highest
Florida school was the University of South Florida, ranked 65th,
with 8.0 percent.
“We remain proud of our high ranking but recognize the need to do
much more in order to meet the health care needs of Floridians,”
said Daniel Van Durme, M.D., chair of the department of family
medicine and rural health. “All of the scientific evidence shows
that populations with a strong primary care base of health care have
much better health outcomes, and that is certainly what we all want
for ourselves and our communities.”
The AAFP tracks the success of U.S. allopathic and osteopathic
medical schools in producing doctors who choose family medicine
residencies, and the medical journal Family Medicine publishes the
numbers annually. The percentage of graduating U.S. medical students
entering family medicine residencies declined again over the latest
three-year period of study, continuing a slight downward trend.
Among factors the report cited in the declining number of graduates
entering primary care are lower pay than other specialties, less
control over work hours, the cost of malpractice insurance and
student debt.
“In spite of the modest tuition and costs of a medical education
here at Florida State University, we are still seeing our graduates
complete their training with an average debt of $145,000,” said John
Fogarty, M.D., dean of the College of Medicine. “To ensure that we
produce the kind of doctors Florida needs most, it is critical that
we have loan repayment opportunities for students choosing to go
into primary care specialties or underserved areas.
Addressing reimbursement inequities and valuing the role of the
primary care physician in providing a medical home for patients
will, in the long run, reduce overall medical costs and improve
quality.”
The FSU College of Medicine uses outreach programs and mission-based
admissions policies in an attempt to identify and prepare more
students likely to work in primary care. Through five graduating
classes, roughly 60 percent of the college’s graduates have entered
primary care, which includes family medicine, internal medicine,
pediatrics and obstetrics/gynecology. Of the first 21 College of
Medicine graduates to complete residency training and enter
practice, 10 are now primary care physicians in Florida, six of them
in rural areas.
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