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Date/Publication Headline/Description
07/18/2012
Diabetes Forecast Magazine

The Florida State University College of Medicine pediatric psychologist, Kimberly Driscoll, PhD, is studying the way children use insulin pumps trying to understand why kids don’t always get the most out of the high-tech devices. With the help of an American Diabetes Association grant, Driscoll will collect a year’s worth of data from the insulin pumps of young people from 10 to 16 years old then give the  kids intensive coaching on how best to use the insulin pump. 

07/12/2012
Thomasville Times Enterprise

Archbold Memorial Hospital is proud to welcome family physician Elving Colon, MD.

06/29/2012
Tallahassee Democrat

Marshall Kapp, director of the Center for Innovative Collaboration in Medicine and Law at Florida State University, comments on the Supreme Court's ACA ruling.

06/22/2012
Explore Magazine

UF CTSI’s collaboration with Florida State University to create Health IMPACTS for Florida to integrate medical practice and community-based translational science. UF and FSU are partnering with primary care practices in Gainesville, Jacksonville, Orlando and Tallahassee to conduct two pilot studies focused on concussions and health risks among youth.

06/21/2012
TCPalm

The director of a Stuart clinic, Dr. Howard E. Voss, serving Martin County residents without access to traditional medical care has received national acclaim for his volunteer work and compassionate attitude in mentoring area medical students. He was was inducted into the Gold Humanism Honor Society.

06/13/2012
The Calhoun-Liberty Journal

Shermeeka Hogans-Mathews, a formerly under served Medicaid patient who has just completed  her first year at the Florida State University College of Medicine, is one of 13 recipients of a 2012 Minority Scholars Award from the American Medical Association Foundation. She will receive a $10,000 scholarship.

06/12/2012
TCPalm

FSU College of Medicine Ft. Pierce Regional Campus recently honored its fourth graduating class. 18 members of the class of 2012 are moving on to their residency programs.

06/06/2012
TCPalm

After more than 50 years of practicing medicine, Dr. Howard E. Voss, medical director of the Volunteers in Medicine Clinic, has a wall full of honors and accolades. But the one he cherishes most is the Gold Humanism Honor Society he recently received for “exemplary service, integrity, clinical excellence and compassion.”

05/31/2012
FSView

Nation’s youngest medical school offers more than just a degree to U.S.’s future physicians

05/12/2012
Tallahassee Democrat

Thanks to a new $20,000 grant from Florida State University's medical school, the local nonprofit's youth bereavement services will be able to help about 300 young people this year who are coping with a loss.

05/01/2012
PBS NewsHour

An alumnus from the College of Medicine’s Class of 2007 is right in the middle of a prominent news story. Stephen W. Patrick, M.D., was the lead author of a new study in the Journal of the American Medical Association about the increasing number of babies born addicted to opiates. He’s doing his fellowship now in the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program at C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital/University of Michigan Health System. Dr. Patrick discussed the study with Ray Suarez on  “PBS NewsHour.”

04/13/2012
Tallahassee Democrat

The FSU College of Medicine is a major economic force in Tallahassee and Florida because of its direct mission to get its students training in communities throughout the state while developing a base for biomedical and biotech research. Having such a prominent institution in this community is important, not only for its commitment to helping to provide training for the next generation of medical professionals locally and statewide, but also for the economic benefits it generates for the local economy.

04/12/2012
Tallahassee.com

During the past two weeks, Dr. Julie Jacobson, the senior program officer in the Global Health Program at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, has spent time in Haiti, Ethiopia, Nigeria and Switzerland. Oh, and don't forget to add Tallahassee to the mix. Jacobson arrived here Wednesday afternoon in advance of a noon-hour lecture she will give today at Florida State University's medical school. Without question, she chose the path less traveled after completing the Tallahassee Memorial Family Medicine Residency Program in 1998. The University of South Florida graduate didn't enter the program at TMH the traditional way, either.

04/11/2012
Tallahassee.com

Speaking Tuesday morning at the Health Care/ Health Sciences Roundtable of the Economic Development Council of Tallahassee-Leon County, Dr. John Fogarty, dean of the college, gave highlights of its first decade. He drew upon statistics about the graduates, the areas of medical practice they have pursued, and the college’s economic impact on the region. Having remained true to its original mission, the College of Medicine at Florida State University today can see the results of its efforts to train physicians for communities that desperately need them.

04/09/2012
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE Dr. Niharika Suchak, an associate professor in the Department of Geriatrics, has been named Clinician of the Year by the American Geriatrics Society (AGS). She will receive the award in May at the group’s annual scientific meeting.

03/24/2012
The Gainesville Sun

Dr. Curtis Stine, associate chairman and education director in family medicine at the Florida State University College of Medicine, said the emerging data shows that detecting cancer early doesn't always translate into fewer cancer deaths.

03/19/2012
Tallahassee Democrat

The 117 graduating students at Florida State University's medical school had plenty to celebrate on Match Day, the primary system for pairing physicians with available positions at teaching hospitals in the United States. It is a joyous occasion for students who have spent at least eight years earning undergraduate and medical degrees. FSU, which is more focused on training primary care doctors than most medical schools, had 72 (62 percent) of its 117 fourth-year students go into primary care programs, about 50 percent above the average medical school.

03/16/2012
WCTV News

Today, the 117 members of the Florida State University College of Medicine Class of 2012 found out where they will receive residency training - a defining moment in their medical careers - during a Match Day ceremony, but one young man proposed a more permanent match during the ceremony. 
Patrick Mickel asked Kristina Seeger to marry him during the match ceremony. She will do her residency at MAYO Clinic in Jacksonville. Seeger said yes.

03/14/2012
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE Few events hold more drama, or have more impact, in the life of a medical student than Match Day. For many, the sealed envelope holds the key to the future.

03/08/2012
med.fsu.edu

The Florida State University College of Medicine, one of the nation’s leading educators in geriatric medicine, now also has the nation’s top geriatrician of 2012.
 
Dr. Niharika Suchak, an associate professor in the Department of Geriatrics, has been named Clinician of the Year by the American Geriatrics Society (AGS). She will receive the award in May at the group’s annual scientific meeting.

03/06/2012
South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Doctors in Florida are increasingly getting some legal training to more effectively address all the health carerelated needs their patients may have. FSU created a Center for Innovative Collaboration in Medicine and Law to help improve collaboration between the two professions. The center provides training to medical and law students on such issues as patient confidentiality, end-of-life medical decisions and informed consent for disabled patients. "Our aim is not to make doctors into lawyers," said Marshall Kapp, a law school professor who directs the FSU program. "Our aim to create doctors who are sensitive to the law and understand the importance of interacting with lawyers."

03/05/2012
Across the Spectrum

1945 alumna Louise Cason, M.D., remembers her alma mater with a $500k gift. The gift, the M. Louse Cason M.D. Endowment, will equally fund two named endowments, one of which is in the College of Medicine.

03/05/2012
Tallahassee Democrat

John Thomas, a second-year medical student at Florida State University, has big plans for spring break. Thomas, president of FSUCares, is one of dozens of Tallahassee college students traveling as far as El Salvador and Ghana and as near as the Gulf Coast and South Florida this week to immerse themselves in different cultures and provide goods and services to people in need.

03/05/2012

Across the Spectrum

03/05/2012
Across the Spectrum

With people living longer than ever before, the need for new discoveries to promote health and quality of life in old age has never been greater. FSU’s new Institute for Successful Longevity addresses the 21st century challenge of unlocking the secrets of aging well.

03/01/2012
WCTV News

Florida State University medical students are going to give back to those less fortunate over spring break. On Saturday March 3 through Saturday March 10 students will travel to Immokalee Florida, the Texas-Mexican border or the country of Panama. Students at Florida State in the college of medicine and the group FSU Cares will be practicing medicine and bringing much needed medicine and other items that many Americans take for granted. Watch video

02/27/2012
The Gainesville Sun

The ninth induction into UF’s chapter of the national Gold Humanism Honor Society, the Chapman Society, also included an announcement that will stand for generations. A classroom in the medical education building now in the works will be named for neurologist Dr. Robert Watson, a former senior associate dean of the UF College of Medicine who was instrumental in starting the Chapman Society.

02/20/2012
Tallahassee Democrat

Lisa Phelps played four square on Friday night and paid absolutely no attention to the score, or even to the rules of
the playground game. She and her three other friends were just passing time during Florida State University’s 17th annual dance
marathon. Phelps, an 18-yearold FSU sophomore, was at the event with Alpha Chi Omega Sorority and said she
was confident she could keep her energy up throughout her 20-hour shift. Funds from the marathon are donated to Shands Hospital for Children in Gainesville, the Children’s Miracle Network and FSU’s College of Medicine.

02/15/2012
Tallahassee.com

Florida State University has selected a physician who previously practiced law to take over its proposed internal medicine residency program at Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare. 
Dr. Gregory Todd, senior associate program director of the Department of Medicine & Internal Medicine Residency Program at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, N.Y., is expected to arrive in Tallahassee in May — one month before the first medical school graduates arrive to begin their residency.

02/14/2012
Tallahassee.com

Dr. Kenneth Brummel-Smith, the Charlotte Edwards Maguire Professor and chair of the Department of Geriatrics at the Florida State University College of Medicine, discusses why he thinks that qualified pharmacists should be allowed to administer vaccinations for pneumonia and shingles.

02/11/2012
The Gainesville Sun

University of Florida officials say they want to expand the existing self-insurance plan that covers Shands employees and their dependents, GatorCare, to include all UF employees and their dependents. The change would allow GatorCare to be tailored to the particular needs of the UF and Shands workforces, UF officials say. Dr. Les Beitsch, an associate dean for the Division of Health Affairs at Florida State University's College of Medicine, comments on UF’s plan to administer its own health-care insurance program for its employees.

02/11/2012
Tallahassee Democrat

Erwin Jackson and his parents, Stefanie and Erwin Jackson, are sponsoring a Valentine's Day dinner and show at the University Club to raise money for the Dystonia Medical Research Foundation.

02/06/2012
Tallahassee.com

The Council on Graduate Medical Education reports that fewer than 20 percent of all U.S. medical school graduates are choosing primary care specialties, but 55 percent of the 450 graduates of FSU's College of Medicine have gone into primary-care residency programs. FSU includes obstetrics-gynecology when it reports primary-care numbers, arguing that the battle to improve infant mortality in North Florida falls under primary care. 
Laura Davis is a third-year medical school student at Florida State University. She is, by all accounts, a poster child for the still-young College of Medicine and its particular mission to produce primary-care physicians working in under-served areas.

01/30/2012
Journal for Minority Medical Students

Dr. Alma Littles, Senior Associate Dean for Medical Education and Academis Affairs, career profile.

01/26/2012
Tallahassee Magazine

Medical errors during hospital stays make headlines, but far more common are problems that occur after patients — especially older ones – go home. Dennis Tsilimingras, M.D., M.P.H., Director, Center on Patient Safety and Assistant Professor of Family Medicine & Rural Health at the Florida State University College of Medicine, has been awarded a two-year, $908,000 grant from the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. 
With the participation of the Tallahassee Memorial Hospitalist Group, this study will monitor approximately 600 patients – half of them rural – for three weeks right after they’re discharged. “Ultimately the goal is to recommend ways to reduce post-discharge problems, which often involve medications,” said Dr. Tsilimingras.

01/25/2012
The Tallahassee Memorial Healthcare Foundation Community Update

The Tallahassee Memorial Clinical Genetics Center will provide genetic services for both pediatric and adult patients. The Center, the first of its kind in the area, will use the latest clinical practice in the use of genetics to diagnose and treat a variety of illnesses, including heart disease and cancer.

01/24/2012
HealthyState.org

HealthyState.org investigates the economic impact that inadequate health care access has on a community and how the state of Florida could be missing out on an opportunity for growth. 
Dr. Paul Baroco, director of medical education at Sacred Heart Health System, located in Florida’s panhandle, is quoted.

01/16/2012
The Daytona Beach News-Journal

Dr. Eboni Ellis answers some questions on sleep apnea. What is it and what are some concerns that go along with having this condition. 

01/12/2012
Tallahassee Democrat

Once a year, more than 150 high schools and colleges across the country participate in Dance Marathon, a fundraiser where students dance for up to two straight days to raise money for the Children’s Miracle Network Hospital in their region. Both Florida State University and the University of Florida host student-run Dance Marathon events to benefit Shands Hospital for Children. Half of the money raised by FSU goes to Shands Hospital for Children and the other half goes to the FSU College of Medicine’s Pediatric Outreach Program, which benefits children in Gadsden County.

12/11/2011
Tallahassee.com

With the opening of a new center in Tallahassee, patients will have the advantage of genetics in diagnosing diseases they are likely to have and in planning the best treatments. Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare's Clinical Genetics Center will provide genetic services for both pediatric and adult patients. Medical director, Dr. Lea Kristin Parsley is dedicated to improving treatment through genetic testing — and dedicated to this area. A native of North Florida, she was with the FSU College of Medicine, then went to Denver for training with the goal of coming back to North Florida to offer genetic services.

12/11/2011
Tallahassee.com

One major advance in medicine is the use of DNA analysis to help diagnose diseases or even warn patients about diseases they might not even have yet. Tallahassee has taken a big step forward with the opening of the Clinical Genetics Center at Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare. Medical director, Dr. Lea Kristin Parsley is dedicated to improving treatment through genetic testing — and dedicated to this area. A native of North Florida, she was with the FSU College of Medicine, then went to Denver for training with the goal of coming back to North Florida to offer genetic services.

12/04/2011
Naples Daily News

Florida State University, in partnership with other agencies, plans to promote the use of community-based arts in a rural area that is scarce of art to improve access to health care, community involvement, health literacy and education, and disease prevention. "Our hope is that through the different art programs we will increase access to health care, as well as enhance the community's heath and health literacy," said Javier Rosado, assistant professor of Florida State's College of Medicine.

11/21/2011
Herald-Tribune

Marshall B. Kapp, director of the Florida State University Center for Innovative Collaboration in Medicine and Law, discusses the state’s initiative to adopt a policy for the POLST – short for Physician Order for Life-Sustaining Treatment.  

11/15/2011
WCTV News

Mary Daly and Matt Scherer are intereviewed about The Great American Smoke Out.
The Great American Smoke Out is an event to encourage smokers to quit smoking for this one day, in turn free counseling with a Certified Tobacco Treatment Specialist, free nicotine replacement therapy (patches, gum or lozenges) will be provided. 
Watch Video

11/09/2011
Tallahassee.com

Bio-technology companies looking for the next great idea rely increasingly on the talent and innovations of university researchers, so much so that today's Ph.D. scientists are more likely to work in industry than in academia. "The point here is that science has changed," neuroscientist Richard Nowakowski told the audience at Tuesday's symposium on "The Business of Life Sciences." Today, only about 15 percent of U.S. scientists with doctorates remain in academia. The rest work in some industry somewhere, said Nowakowski, chairman of biomedical sciences at the Florida State University College of Medicine.

11/03/2011
LeeMemorial.org

The shortage of primary care doctors, it's a national trend hitting close to home. Three million Floridians have inadequate access to basic health care. Training doctors locally is a step in the right direction. 
"The statistics nationally would suggest that the majority of students who do residencies will stay within 50 to 75 miles of their program," says Dr. John Fogarty, dean of FSU College of Medicine. 
In August, Lee Memorial Health System partnered with the FSU College of Medicine, forming a family medicine residency program.Watch video [wmv] Watch video [rv]

11/02/2011
Tallahassee.com

Neighborhood Health Services will benefit from $100,000 worth of free marketing help in the coming year, assistance the local nonprofit hopes will increase awareness of its various programs. Faculty and students from the Florida State University College of Medicine care for NHS patients.

11/02/2011
Tallahassee.com

Florida State University's medical school has cashed in once again, thanks to the university's annual Dance Marathon. 
The Dance Marathon and Children's Miracle Network at Shands Children's Hospital at the UniversityofFlorida on Tuesday presented a check for $232,630 to FSU's College of Medicine.

11/01/2011
WCTV News

Children throughout Gadsden and Leon Counties will get additional assistance in health care thanks to funds raised by a group of people who have caring hearts and rhythm. Who knew dancing could be so caring and lucrative? The Dance Marathon at FSU and Children's Miracle Network at Shands Children's Hospital is presenting a check to the College of Medicine. The check is for $232,000 for the benefit of children throughout Gadsden and Leon counties. Watch LIVE Broadcast - WCTV Watch 11PM Broadcast - WCTV

10/31/2011
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE Dance Marathon at Florida State University and Children’s Miracle Network at Shands Children’s Hospital at the University of Florida will present a $232,000 check to the Florida State University College of Medicine for the benefit of children throughout Gadsden and Leon counties.
 
The proceeds are part of the record $487,000 raised in 2011 by Dance Marathon, the largest student-run philanthropy on the Florida State campus. Children’s Miracle Network at Shands Children’s Hospital at UF distributes part of the money raised to the Florida State College of Medicine for use in pediatric outreach programs.