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10/28/2011
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE Affectionately known as the mother of the Florida State University College of Medicine, Senior Associate Dean Myra Hurt has used her leadership skills to make numerous contributions to education, science and research in Florida.
 
Hurt was recognized for her efforts this week when she received the FL CURED Jim King Leadership Award in Tampa

10/20/2011
Tallahassee Democrat

Florida State's 10-year-old medical school has successfully been reaccredited, which means it will continue to receive federal grants and its students will be eligible for federal loans. FSU's College of Medicine becomes the first new medical school of the 21st century to be reaccredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME).

10/19/2011
WCTV News

The FSU College of Medicine has been granted a maximum eight-year accreditation by the sanctioning body of U.S. medical schools. Florida State becomes the first new medical school of the 21st century to be reaccredited.

 

Watch video

10/13/2011
ABCNews.com

Marshall Kapp, director of the Center for Innovative Collaboration in Medicine and Law at Florida State University, comments on the sentencing of Raj Rajaratnam, the Galleon Group hedge fund founder. 
A defendant’s health condition is one factor that judges can consider when handing down sentences. A 2005 decision from the U.S. Supreme Court mandated that federal judges adhere to specific sentencing calculations, which can be influenced by other factors, such as a defendant’s health.

10/01/2011
The Florida Bar News

The van’s paint job said “Florida State University College of Medicine,” but the eight students who piled out at the Neighborhood Health Services clinic were law students. These law students are trailblazers in a new clinic at FSU College of Law’s Public Interest Law Center called the Medical Legal Partnership. “The idea is that you have lawyers and doctors and law students and med students having a meeting of the minds and working together collaboratively on their same patients and clients,” said program Director Wendy Adelson. “We are going to have grand rounds, where medical students will come to the class and where they will interact and discuss whatever joint problems their clients are facing.”

10/01/2011
VIRES Magazine

The Florida State University College of Medicine has been granted a maximum eight year accreditation by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education, the sanctioning body of U.S. medical schools.

09/22/2011
TCPalm.com

Two prestigious awards were given out Tuesday, Aug. 30, when the Fort Pierce regional campus of the Florida State University College of Medicine gathered its faculty members for a night of appreciation and academic updates. One, titled Guardian of the Mission, is for a physician whose activities have furthered the college’s mission: to “educate and develop exemplary physicians who practice patient-centered health care, discover and advance knowledge and are responsive to community needs, especially through service to elder, rural, minority and underserved populations.” The other award, Outstanding Community Faculty Educator, is for exemplary achievement in meeting student educational needs, working collaboratively, dedication to the curriculum principles and enthusiasm for teaching.

09/14/2011
Tallahassee Democrat

In 2009, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, there were 6.7 million grandparents acting as caregivers for children under age 18. Ashley Webb, who runs a program for this special demographic at the Tallahassee Senior Center, said that number is only growing. In 2000, one out of every 12 grandparents was acting as a primary caregiver to their grandchildren, she said. In 2010, that number had jumped to one in 10. Webb coordinates the Grandparents as Parents program, which meets monthly and offers support to grandparents in the form of health consultations, referrals to additional community resources and tips on how to be a new parent — again. Dr. Alice Pomidor, a professor in the Department of Geriatrics at Florida State University, emphasized the importance of a support system for grandparents raising a second set of children.

09/14/2011
Tallahassee.com

Dr. Jonathan Appelbaum, director of internal medicine education at the Florida State University College of Medicine, tells us about the white lies they hear the most, and why it’s OK — and important — to fess up

09/11/2011
WTXL.com

Teams of bikers worked up a sweat for Parkinson's disease at Sweat Therapy in Midtown. The event was a 6 hour, non-stop Cycle-a-Thon put on by 14 FSU College of Medicine students. More than 200 riders participated, including 15 patients with Parkinson's disease. The main goal was to promote awareness and raise funds to help fight the disease. All proceeds will help fund research at the Tallahassee Memorial Hospital Foundation's NeuroScience Center. View the interview with event organizer, Jilliane Grayson. View the WTXL video.

09/10/2011
Tallahassee Democrat

From its inception 124 years ago, Florida A&M University has made its mark producing significant numbers of graduates in fields such as business, allied health and pharmacy. Now, the university seeks to help reverse the lack of routine dental care available in Florida's poor rural and underserved communities by opening its own dental school. The proposal has gained the support of two critical health partners: Florida State's College of Medicine and Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare and its foundation. Dr. John Fogarty, dean of FSU's medical school, said the college could partner with FAMU in many ways: identifying minority students interested in dental careers, possibly sharing facilities, such as labs, and possibly offering its biomedical faculty to teach.

09/01/2011
The New Physician - American Medical Student Association

The Florida State University Colege of Medicine is featured in this article about medical schools who extend patient contact through all four years to keep students focused on what matters.

08/18/2011
ABCNews.com

Marshall Kapp, director of the Florida State University Center for Innovative Collaboration in Medicine and Law, comments on the story of Armond and Dorothy Rudolph of Alameda, FL. The Rudolphs, married for 69 years, decided to refuse food and water to end their lives.

 This article also appeared in the International Business Times [pdf] http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/200219/20110818/elderly-couple-evicted-after-refusing-food-drink.htm

08/18/2011
Tallahassee Democrat

The proposed new internal medicine residency program at Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare cleared a major hurdle Wednesday. 
The federal body that funds residency programs nationwide, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), announced that the program will receive funding for 39 slots. 
Plans to launch the internal medicine residency program, a joint effort between Florida State University's College of Medicine and TMH, were announced last August. It would be the second residency program in the area, with a family medicine residency already established at TMH.

08/18/2011
ABCNews.com

Almost every physician in the U.S. will face a malpractice claim during his or her career, according to a new study published in the New England Journal of Medicine. "It's a tremendous problem in terms of the psychology of physicians and medical practice," said Marshall Kapp, director of the Center for Innovative Collaboration in Medicine and Law at Florida State University College of Medicine in Tallahassee, Fla. "It's also an enormous burden in terms of the impact of how doctors relate to patients. It makes doctors more wary and less willing to engage patients as friends than as potential adversaries."  

08/10/2011
Naples Florida Weekly

Three Immokalee High School students had the unique opportunity to experience what it’s like to attend medical school, thanks to The Immokalee Foundation and the Florida State University College of Medicine Summer Institute, a highly competitive program managed by FSU College of Medicine Outreach and Advising Office.

08/09/2011
Southwest Florida Public Radio and Television

Southwest Florida will soon be training doctors in its local hospitals. Lee Memorial Health System and Florida State University College of Medicine unveiled plans for a medical residency program in Fort Myers. It will be the first of its kind in Southwest Florida and the only one between Tampa and Miami.

08/08/2011
WinkNews.com

Lee Memorial Health System is joining forces with a major university to keep future doctors here in Southwest Florida. The argument is simple: more students graduating medical school are looking for work elsewhere. There aren't enough residency programs in the state to offer the needed training. In fact, not one hospital in Lee, Collier or Charlotte County has a residency program. But, all that is about to change. The Florida State University College of Medicine is joining Lee Memorial Health System to create the residency program. The medical partnership will welcome its first class of residency in July of 2013. The program, which will focus on primary care, is the first in the area. Watch video [wmv]

08/08/2011
Cape-Coral-Daily-Breeze.com

Lee Memorial Health System announced a partnership with Florida State University Monday afternoon for a medical residency training program for family practice physicians.

08/08/2011
MarcoNews.com

The Lee Memorial Health System is launching a residency program for family physicians with Florida State University to better address a persistent shortage of primary-care doctors in the region. The residency program will be based at Lee Memorial Hospital and could admit its first class in July 2013.

08/08/2011
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE e Florida State University College of Medicine and the Lee Memorial Health System Board of Directors today announced plans to create a family medicine residency program in Fort Myers.
 
The program, expected to produce six new family practice physicians a year when at full capacity, will be the first allopathic residency program south of Tampa/St. Petersburg along Florida’s southwest coast. Among the fastest growing regions in the state, the area is in need of more physicians to take care of a population that grew by more than 40 percent in Lee County between 2000 and 2010.

08/08/2011
News-Press.com

Despite looming budget cuts and everdeclining insurance reimbursements, Lee Memorial Health System is moving forward on a new family medicine residency program. It's a leap of faith for a hospital system that believes the program will be a medical necessity for this region's rapidly aging population. "We need primary care physicians. Florida is actually exporting physicians today," said Richard Akin, chairman of the system's elected board of directors. "We need them to stay in our community." The system, in cooperation with the Florida State University College of Medicine, expects to take its first residency applicants next year.  

08/08/2011
ABCNews.com

Parents, take note: A simple sack lunch may increase the risk of foodborne illness for the young children who bring them into daycare and school, according to a new study. Dr. Michael Muszynski, professor of pediatric infectious diseases at the Florida State University College of Medicine in Tallahassee, called the results of the study "concerning, since even lunches packed with multiple ice packs reached unsafe temperatures that would encourage the growth of bacteria that cause food-related illnesses."  

08/05/2011
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE On Monday, August 8, 2011, the Florida State University College of Medicine and Lee Memorial Health System will unveil plans for a doctor training program intended to create more primary care physicians for Southwest Florida.

07/25/2011
Volusia/Flagler Business Report

Dr.Wendy Myers, president and chief executive officer of Florida Health Care Plans Inc. and clinical assistant professor at the Florida State University College of Medicine was named an Influential Woman in Business by the Volusia/Flagler Business Report.

07/13/2011
TCPalm.com

The Florida State University College of Medicine's Summer Institute program, which began in 2003 as part of an outreach effort to recruit minorities into the College, offers high-school-aged students of diverse backgrounds an opportunity to experience what it’s like to be both a doctor and medical student. This summer, a total of 62 students are enrolled in the program from across the state. 

07/13/2011
TCPalm.com

The Volunteers in Medicine Clinic has taken on an increasingly important role as a teaching facility for students pursuing health care careers. The student program at VIM Clinic has been an unmitigated success, said Medical Director, Dr. Howard Voss. “It makes me very hopeful about the future of health care.” VIM Clinic is participating in a community-based teaching model with the Florida State University College of Medicine. Third-year medical students are mentored one day a week in a health care facility and over the course of a year, get to know their patients. “The students have a unique opportunity at VIM to do initial evaluations and follow-ups on new patients,” Dr. Voss said. “They see the fruits of their medical practices as the patients heal and improve.”

07/06/2011
Herald-Tribune

The Florida State University College of Medicine's Summer Institute program, which began in 2003 as part of an outreach effort to recruit minorities into the College, offers high-school-aged students of diverse backgrounds an opportunity to experience what it’s like to be both a doctor and medical student. With more than 60 participants each summer, the program aims to introduce graduating students to the medical profession by offering problem-based learning, seminars hosted by the College of Medicine's faculty and opportunities to shadow local physicians specifically chosen based on an applicant's interests.

06/30/2011
AAMC Reporter

Medical schools around the country are creating video games with the expressed goal of improving medical education. At Florida State University College of Medicine, students in geriatrics clerkships play ElderQuest, a role-playing game in which players work to locate the Gray Sage, a powerful wizard in poor health that each player must nurse back to health.

06/29/2011
Tallahassee Democrat

A first-time collaboration involving health-care professionals at Florida State University, Florida A&M University and Gadsden County Schools is taking root at Havana Middle School. The official name of the school-based clinic is the Havana health and Wellness Training and Service Center.

06/28/2011
Tallahassee.com

Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare and Florida State University's College of Medicine are working well together on two residency programs, both aimed at keeping new doctors practicing in this area. FSU's medical school was founded a decade ago on the premise that it would focus on rural and medically underserved areas such as those in North Florida. It is not an easy mission to fulfill, yet residency programs are known to be a big factor in where a physician decides to settle.
 

06/27/2011
Tallahassee Democrat

Mary Dailey was Florida’s first certified tobacco treatment specialist, but receiving the training she needed wasn’t
easy. So after Dailey traveled to the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey to receive her certification, she
and Andree Aubrey, director of FSU College of Medicine Area Health Education Center, saw the need to create a
certification program in Florida.

06/18/2011
Tallahassee.com

Florida State University's College of Medicine is giving aspiring doctors a chance to see the medical world before medical school. The Summer Institute — or "mini med school" — reaches out mostly to local high school students from rural communities, giving them a head start on becoming the doctors of tomorrow.

06/11/2011
Tallahassee.com

Ahead of Natasha Spencer is a residency at the University of Alabama-Birmingham. She will spend 
the next four years as an ob/gyn, studying and learning, preparing for the day she can take her 
talents to underserved communities. Behind Spencer is a rough childhood in a Tampa community where high school students were as 
likely to drop out as they were to graduate. Luckily, Spencer, a 26-year-old who graduated from FSU's College of Medicine three weeks ago, has an 
extremely supportive family and a network of influential friends who are as impressed with her as 
she is with them. And of course, having Super Bowl XXXVII champion Derrick Brooks in your corner doesn't hurt.

06/10/2011
Fort Myers News-Press

The ink is drying on a deal for a long-awaited program that aims to bring more doctors to Southwest Florida. Lee Memorial Health System has contracted with the Florida State University College of Medicine for a physician residency program for doctors-in-training. Compared to other states, Florida has one of the highest physician shortages because of a limited number of training programs for newly graduated doctors, experts say. Florida has 243 physicians for every 100,000 residents, compared with 267 doctors for every 100,000 nationally, according to the Florida Medical Association.

06/10/2011
FSU.com

Ewa Bienkiewicz, assistant professor in the College of Medicine's Department of Biomedical Sciences, is one of four chosen to receive a Florida State University GAP award. For more information about the GAP Program at Florida State University, visit http://www.techtransfer.fsu.edu

06/10/2011
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE Ewa Bienkiewicz, assistant professor in the College of Medicine's Department of Biomedical Sciences, is one of four chosen to receive a Florida State University GAP award. For more information about the GAP Program at Florida State University, visit http://www.techtransfer.fsu.edu
 
To read this article online and view associated images and a video clip featuring the award winners, visit http://www.fsu.com/Featured-Stories/Four-FSU-projects-win-GAP-awards-to-move-cutting-edge-research-from-lab-to-marketplace.
 

06/04/2011
FSU MED Magazine

 Tim Megraw studies microcephaly (literally "small heads"). In this rare congenital disease, the 
head is small because the brain does not develop to its normalsize.

06/02/2011
WCTV News

Dozens of Florida State medical students hit the road to learn more about living and working in small towns and rural communities.View News Story 1 View News Story 2

06/01/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Kabbaj, an associate professor in the Department of Biomedical Sciences, is one of six FSU faculty members chosen for Developing Scholar Award from Florida State University.

06/01/2011
FSU MED Magazine

The College of Medicine is actively pursuing every opportunity to help increase the number of 
available residency positions in Florida.

06/01/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Far more planning goes into the development of the College of Medicine's pipeline programs, but the intent is the same: a 
diverse student body that can help the medical school achieve its mission of producing the physicians Florida needs most.

06/01/2011
FSU MED Magazine

 Proteins represent the fastest-growing category of new drug approvals for human therapeutic application.

06/01/2011
FSU MED Magazine

In the summer of 2008, some of us affiliated with Students Interested in Global Health went to Nicaragua and conducted medical clinics for people with almost no regular health care. We went back in 2009, and started to think, "This might work for a long-term project."

06/01/2011
FSU MED Magazine

 College of Medicine researcher James Olcese is a step closer to demonstrating there's a better 
way to treat common and serious health issues related to pregnancy.

06/01/2011
FSU MED Magazine

When he was a medical student at Florida State Nick Seeliger (M.D., '06) sought an opportunity to work where patients had the greatest need for his services. He has found those patients as a captain in the U.S. AirForce.  

06/01/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Sachin Parikh (M.D., '05) and Joe Rousso (M.D., '07) joined a team of 30 people, including five surgeons, with Healing the Children NE on a medical mission trip to Santa Marta, Colombia, in February. The goal of the trip was to provide treatment for kids with cleft lips and cleft palates.

06/01/2011
FSU MED Magazine

On May 23, Spencer crossed the stage to receive her medical degree from Florida State Univenrity, and then headed straight for the two men who made it possible.

06/01/2011
FSU MED Magazine

As part of his efforts to make a strong department stronger, Richard Nowakowskihas just hired four faculty members who represent his vision of the future: 

06/01/2011
FSU MED Magazine

The College of Medicine lost one of its best friends in May. Charles R. Mathews. 
distinguished physician and active volunteer providing primary care for indigent people, was 
celebrated in a memorial tribute at the medical school.