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Date/Publication Headline/Description
02/14/2011
Tallahassee.com

The Florida State University's 16th annual Dance Marathon, a 40-hour charity event in which students stay on their feet for 20-hour shifts, ended Sunday, February 13th. More than 1,500 dancers participated in the event, raising more than $486,000 for the Children's Miracle Network. The more than $2.8 million raised over the years has also helped Shands Children's Hospital and FSU's College of Medicine.

02/10/2011
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE The Florida State University College of Medicine on Friday will host “Sexuality and Aging,” an event geared toward senior citizens

02/01/2011
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE Making health-care choices for another adult is a role no one really wants but anyone might get. A new publication for Florida residents just made that role a little easier. The booklet, “Making Medical Decisions for Someone Else: A Florida Handbook,” is based on one created in 2006 by the American Bar Association’s Commission on Law and Aging. View the completed handbook

01/31/2011
Pensacola Business Journal

Dr. Jason Rocha has joined Baptist Medical Group's orthopaedic trauma team. Dr. Rocha is a trauma specialist offering emergency treatment for patients confronted with life-changing, limb-compromising orthopaedic injuries. Dr. Rocha completed his medical training at the Florida State University College of Medicine, Tallahassee.

01/28/2011
AAFP International Update Newsletter

Natasha Demehri, FSU College of Medicine Class of 2012, discusses ways to develop lasting approaches to sustainable healthcare

01/22/2011
Naplesnews.com

Multi-year strategic initiatives between the Naples Children and Education Foundation, Collier Health Services (CHS), and the Florida State University's College of Medicine has had a considerable impact on the quality of and access to medical care for the children of Collier County.  Now, more than half of the community's children are served, and, with foundation funding, CHS renovated the Isabel Collier Ready Medical Center in Immokalee into a pediatric and maternal health center. Video News Story [wmv]

01/20/2011
Vero Beach 32963 - Health

Vero Beach is helping prepare a new generation of doctors. This week Steven Moore, a fourth-year medical student at Florida State University College of Medicine, is beginning a rotation of learning and practicing neurology with Dr. James Shafer. Moore's experience is part of a unique program to give medical school students a more intensive hands-on education in what its like to take care of patients. Doctor Shafer is one Vero Beach doctor taking part in a network of community-based instruction that's the result of FSU's vision for its College of Medicine.

01/10/2011
Tallahassee Magazine, Volume 33, No. 1, January/February 2011

The Florida State University College of Medicine BRIDGE Program helps less fortunate students achieve their medical school dreams

01/09/2011
Tallahassee.com

Nick Cummings, third-year medical student at Florida State University, receives Reiki, the transference of healing energy, for the first time. [pictured]

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

 The prestigious teaching award is given by the American Academy of Family Physicians Foundation based on scholastic achievement, leadership qualities and dedication to family medicine.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Researchers are beginning to see a previously unknown benefit of testosterone – as a shield against anxiety. They’re wondering whether the greater amounts of this hormone in males could help explain why men are afflicted by anxiety only half as much as women are.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

One way to address the shortage of medical residency programs in Florida is to create your own
program. The College of Medicine and Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare have teamed up to do just that.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

 Diagnosing head injuries, unfortunately, is an inexact science. The same blow to the head might cause drastically
different outcomes in two people who otherwise appear very similar. Also, there is not enough good research about what happens inside the brain when it’s exposed to a concussive blow. That’s where the College of Medicine’s unique educational model and burgeoning research program intersect.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Jimmy Moss' story seems more the stuff of Hollywood than real life, yet Moss is as real as can be. Built like an NFL linebacker and blessed with an engaging personality, Moss [recently earned] his medical degree at Florida State University. In June he [began] a three-year residency in internal medicine at the esteemed Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

“Even though I’m a family doc by training and practice,” Van Durme said, “I take a whole lot more pride when I can
get somebody to be a general surgeon in rural Florida than putting one more family doc in the suburbs of Orlando.”

01/06/2011
www.oneindia.in

The study on intimate education revealed that around 1,605 parents of primarily white, school-aged children in Minnesota found that kids should get this knowledge from their parents while another percent of parents felt that they should learn about the intimate education at school. Apart from this, most parents are confirmed that their kids already know about the intimate education with the help of their friends and the usage of the latest technology. Also featured in Health Behavior News Service [pdf] Also featured in The Times of India [pdf] Also featured in Bloomberg Businesweek [pdf] Also featured in ParentDish [pdf

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Professor Lynn Romrell believes nothing can replace having a well-educated physician making decisions based on a thorough understanding of the human body.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Though you can’t know exactly what medical school is like until you’re a med student, a weeklong immersion will give you a pretty good idea.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

With each new region of the body, students are assigned to a new team – and patient. They’ll work with at least 15 other students over the course of the summer and will get to know all of the cadavers. They’ll also get to know each other quite well, and that’s part of the course’s design.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Hand-picked from more than 3,000 applicants, 120 new medical students arrive each May filled with confidence – until they report to the anatomy lab. No amount of previous success can prepare them for the anxiety and emotional upheaval of their first medical school experience.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

There’s healthy competition amongFlorida’s medical schools, but ultimately they’re all looking out for the present and future health of our state. In fact, you might not know that they collaborate and cooperate extensively through the Council of Florida Medical School Deans.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

 Robert Watson figured he'd never again wear UAB clothing- inculding the jacket-length white coat he'd worn as an intern. Most of us would have left it behind. For Watson, though, this was not just anyold jacket. In the pockets were reminders of his first year as a physician. 

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Janine Edwards, Ph. D., chair of the Department of Medical Humanities and Social Sciences, is a leading expert in one of the things that help the College of Medicine attract diverse and talented students.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Richard Nowakowski may be gone from the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, but clearly he’s not forgotten. In September, in fact, he was one of four winners of the university’s fi rst Credo in Action awards, the highest awards it gives.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment Paradigm is a program that a College of Medicine professor helped create in Oregon years ago. Now the Center for Innovative Collaboration in Medicine & Law at the medical school is coordinating efforts to implement POLST in Florida. 

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

 Diagnosing head injuries, unfortunately, is an inexact science. The same blow to the head might cause drastically
different outcomes in two people who otherwise appear very similar. Also, there is not enough good research about what happens inside the brain when it’s exposed to a concussive blow. That’s where the College of Medicine’s unique educational model and burgeoning research program intersect.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Traditionally, the physicians most likely to practice in a rural area are those who grew up in one. So through its pipeline programs, the College of Medicine seeks out and nurtures potential physicians in places such as the Panhandle.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

When Philip Burke was in sixth grade, his teacher’s husband – Marianna physician Richard Goff – talked to the class about careers in medicine. Last year, Burke worked every Tuesday at Goff’s family-medicine practice, which gave him a chance to see the same patients multiple times.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

“Even though I’m a family doc by training and practice,” Van Durme said, “I take a whole lot more pride when I can
get somebody to be a general surgeon in rural Florida than putting one more family doc in the suburbs of Orlando.”

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

When your mother was younger and healthier, she did the smart thing and filled out an advance directive. Part of the reason was that she didn’t want her physicians to use extreme measures to keep her alive when she became seriously
ill. Life went on.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Before he allows new students in the anatomy lab, Professor Lynn Romrell wants them to know more about the people who donated their bodies to support medical education. So he reads them some of the letters he has received from family members over the years.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Students are taught from the beginning that how they react to the course will depend, in part, on their own circumstances.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

In May, during the College of Medicine’s commencement ceremony, she learned that a mentorship program in the newly
established Resident Division of the American Medical Women’s Association had been named for her. As one of Florida’s first female pediatricians, and as a key benefactor to Florida State University in general and the College of Medicine in particular, her infl uence as a role model is immeasurable.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Long before she was instrumental in the creation of the College of Medicine, Myra Hurt was a researcher. She still is. In August, Hurt – now senior associate dean for research and graduate programs – was elected chair of the Florida State University Council on Research and
Creativity for this academic year.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

In the fall of 2001, this school began with 30 students. Four years later, 27 of them graduated. The next year, 36 graduated. Then 48, 58, 73, 94. Slowly but surely, the College of Medicine has been climbing toward its goal.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

“We’ve all been basking in the glow of what you’ve accomplished in the last 10 years, and you should have your buttons just bursting with pride about that,” Darrell Kirch said at the medical school’s capstone anniversary event.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

The most provocative sign you’ll fi nd in the College of Medicine’s Thrasher Building may be “No Food or Drink in Classroom.” Yawn. Next door, though, in the medical school’s Research Building, is a collection of signs that are alternately sobering and mystifying. Here to help decode them is Myra Hurt, senior associate dean for research and graduate programs.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

American patients often prefer American physicians. Female patients often prefer female gynecologists. Spanish-speaking patients often prefer physicians who speak Spanish. It’s not about prejudice; it’s about comfort. Research indicates, and our hearts tell us, that we often feel more at ease when our doctors resemble us.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Immokalee is an inland melting pot of farm workers from around the world, and its population of roughly 25,000 nearly doubles in the peak agricultural season. If you’re seeking a cross-cultural experience, this is the
mother lode.

01/06/2011
ABC News

Marshall Kapp, director of the Center for Innovative Collaboration in Medicine and Law at Florida State University is featured in this article which covers the case of Norman Butler. Butler, a retired Washington state optometrist with Alzheimer's disease, was bilked him out of more than $2 million by a woman he met on the internet.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

It’s not always big-city medical students who cringe at the phrase “Rural Track.” At fi rst even Marianna native Philip Burke feared that he might never encounter interesting cases there. He loved Marianna, population about 6,300, but he was concerned he’d be paddling into a medical backwater.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Among the visitors doing business at the White House in August was the pediatrics clerkship director from the Orlando regional campus, there to discuss one key element in the federal government’s effort to reduce obesity among children: breastfeeding.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Though he is always eager to find out what students learned during the course, Romrell is just as interested in
what he hears at the annual memorial service at the end of the summer. The service, which takes place in the College of Medicine auditorium, is planned by the students as a tribute to the donors. Participants share personal observations and all have a chance to write personal thoughts about the experience.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Each chemically preserved body is stored in one of the $8,000 stainless steel immersion dissecting tables that are arranged in two rows throughout the rooms. At the start of each dissecting session, the steel tabletop doors are opened as a closet door might be, and a pedal raises the body for access and observation.

01/06/2011
FSU MED Magazine

Gonzalez-Rothi will replace interim chair Harold Bland, M.D., who will continue as professor and pediatrics education
director.

01/02/2011
TCPalm.com

While most medical school students spend their third and fourth years in large academic hospitals, Gondela, 25, is one of 19 third-year and 14 fourth-year Florida State University students making rounds through clinical rotations in doctors' offices and community hospitals across the Treasure Coast.

12/22/2010
Tallahassee Democrat and Tallahassee.com

Florida State University and Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare are well on the way toward establishing an internal medicine residency program. TMH, which already offers a residency in family medicine for medical school graduates, announced its formal partnership with FSU in August. FSU is the institutional sponsor for the new program — the first new residency that the 10-year-old College of Medicine will sponsor.

12/17/2010
www.FiercePharma.com

The American Medical Student Association gave its stamp of approval to most medical schools, saying that they finally have instituted "strong" conflicts-of-interest policies. As Pharmalot notes, AMSA gave a perfect score to two schools: University of South Dakota Sanford School of Medicine and Florida State University College of Medicine. And it hailed onethird of schools for their training students to recognize how industry marketing can affect their judgment and for teaching them to consider potential conflicts.

12/15/2010
Benzinga.com

The majority of U.S. medical schools have implemented strong conflict-of-interest policies this year, according to the 2010 American Medical Student Association (AMSA) PharmFree Scorecard. The Scorecard finds that 79 of 152 medical schools (52%) now receive a grade of A or B for their policies governing pharmaceutical industry interaction with medical school faculty and students. Only two medical schools received a perfect score for limiting access of sales representatives – the University of South Dakota Sanford School of Medicine and Florida State University College of Medicine.

12/15/2010
AAP Med Student News

The FSU College of Medicine's Pediatric Interest Group (PIG) raised $795 at their annual "Dreams Come True" wine and cheese fundraiser. The event is consistently a great success and is very popular among the students and faculty.