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04/16/2024
Tallahassee Democrat

Mental health care is being advanced in the Tallahassee region with the opening of an innovative facility that will house the Florida State University College of Medicine’s new Psychiatry Residency Program
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Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare and the Apalachee Center have a partnership with FSU through the residency program initiative, and the new center will also bring the two healthcare organizations’ outpatient behavioral health services together under one roof.

04/09/2024
Tallahassee Democrat

Florida State University and Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare recently signed a memorandum of understanding to seal their partnership for a future academic health center in Tallahassee, slated to open in fall 2026.

Through the agreement, a new "FSU Health TMH Trustees" will oversee decisions related to the academic health center and a medical campus underway in Panama City Beach on behalf of the university and hospital.

 

03/25/2024
Tallahassee Democrat

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed the Live Healthy Act, which aims to grow the health care workforce. By 2035 the state is expected to face a shortage of 18,000 doctors.

"The shortage is not getting better, it's getting worse," said FSU College of Medicine Interim Dean Alma Littles, M.D., who grew up in rural Gadsden County. "Around me, I was acutely aware of individuals both in my family, community, my church, etc. who did need health care and were not able to receive it."

The Live Healthy Act does several things, including expanding programs to attract more professionals and adding residency programs.

"We know that if we can have sufficient training programs in Florida, to train them in residency, we are likely to retain them in the State of Florida," Littles said.

 

03/18/2024
Emory University School of Medicine

Fourth-year Florida State University College of Medicine student Cunyet Ozkardes will be on familiar turf when he begins his residency training at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta. As a recipient of Emory's 2023 Open DOOR (Diversity and Opportunity in Ophthalmology Rotations) scholarship, Ozkardes was able to complete an away rotation at the Emory Eye Center and opened his eyes greater career opportunities.
 

03/17/2024
Tallahassee Democrat

As Florida State University’s College of Medicine celebrated the nationwide event known as Match Day, over a hundred of its graduating medical students got the official word on where they will receive residency training.

Shouts of joy, happy tears and group hugs filled FSU's Ruby Diamond Concert Hall Friday afternoon as students simultaneously tore open their envelopes, reading their letters with loved ones about where they will practice for the next several years in their chosen medical specialty.

03/08/2024
Tallahassee Democrat

Florida State University is slated to receive nearly $623 million in the Florida Legislature's proposed 2024-2025 budget, which includes a number of specific College of Medicine projects.

Lawmakers are expected to approve and forward the budget to Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday, March 8, closing out the legislative sessions. Beyond its portion from the university's operating allocation, these are some of the specific College of Medicine-related items in the proposed budget:
 

  • Institute of Pediatric Rare Diseases ($5 million)
  • Autism Institute ($1.48 million)
  • FSU Behavioral Health ($525,000)

03/02/2024
Florida State University News

Dr. Norman B. Anderson, clinical psychologist and well-known leader in the behavioral and social sciences, passed away on March 1, 2024. Dr. Anderson was born on October 16, 1955, in Greensboro, NC.

Anderson was appointed assistant vice president for research and academic affairs and professor of social work at Florida State University in 2017. In these roles he worked with faculty and administrators, including those at the College of Medicine, to advance the research mission of the university and to facilitate the success of emerging academic leaders.

 

03/01/2024
Central Florida Health News

Throughout Florida and the nation, there’s a significant physician shortage that creates barriers to health care for many. To help meet the demand for new physicians, BayCare plans to increase its residency positions to more than 650 by 2029.

“Here in Polk County, all the programs are academically sponsored by Florida State in collaboration with BayCare and Winter Haven Hospital,” said Nathan Falk, founding family medicine residency director for the FSU College of Medicine program at the BayCare Health System in Winter Haven.

“We first started the family medicine residency program in 2018, and we saw our first class onboarded in the summer of 2020. We graduated our first class in the summer of 2023. Of that first class, we graduated five individuals, and four out of the five stayed here in Polk County to practice, with the fifth one going to Orlando. So all five of them stayed in Central Florida.”
 

02/29/2024
Tallahassee Democrat

FSU College of Medicine Interim Dean Alma Littles, M.D. and Pradeep Bhide, Ph.D., executive director of the FSU Institute for Pediatric Rare Diseases, joined State Rep. Adam Anderson at the Florida Capitol Thursday in observance of Rare Disease Day.

"It's the most fitting day for Rare Disease Day because it is in fact the most rare day of the year," Anderson said of the February 29 gathering, which included a number of parents whose children suffer from rare diseases.

The College of Medicine's newly funded institute will conduct research and use technologies like gene therapy to help unlock the most effective treatments for children with rare diseases.

"We know that patients prefer to stay closer to home to receive care, and we look forward to developing a center that will allow them to receive much of the early testing, counseling and treatment of pediatric rare diseases as close to home as possible," Littles said.



 

02/29/2024
Florida State University News

Three Florida State University College of Medicine doctoral students were among a cohort of 24 who were celebrated as 2023-2024 recipients of McKnight Doctoral or Dissertation Fellowships at the 38th Annual McKnight Fellows Meeting and Research & Writing Conference in Tampa.

Doctoral candidate Meaghan Navarrete Mathews was honored as a McKnight Dissertation Fellow, while doctoral students Nella Delva and Zenzeale Hudson were recognized as McKnight Doctoral Fellows.

 

02/23/2024
CNN

George Rust, M.D., FSU College of Medicine professor and director of the university's Center for Medicine and Public Health, has warned colleagues over the past year that pockets of vaccine hesitancy could lead to a potential measles outbreak in Florida.

The Florida Department of Health in Broward County is investigating multiple cases of measles at a Weston elementary school.

"There's the possibility that children who are not immunized and who are susceptible to measles are attending school, potentially getting measles and transmitting it to other kids," Rust said. "Now, you've, on the one hand, allowed parents to make their own choices for the child who are not immunized, but you've also taken away some choices for those parents who may feel that their children should be protected."

 

02/21/2024
Tallahassee Democrat

Florida State University’s College of Medicine recently announced plans to launch a new psychiatry residency program — an addition that will bring psychiatric training into the Tallahassee area.

In partnership with Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare (TMH) and the Apalachee Center, the initiative would help address the crucial need for training mental health care providers in the region and across Florida.

02/01/2024
Tallahassee Democrat

State Rep. Adam Anderson on Thursday announced the establishment of Florida State University's new Institute for Pediatric Rare Diseases.

The state’s first-of-its-kind center is personal to the Palm Harbor Republican, who lost his four-year-old son Andrew to a rare genetic disorder called Tay-Sachs disease - a disease that causes rapid degeneration of nerve cells in the brain and in the spinal cord.

01/22/2024
WebMD

Florida State University College of Medicine researcher Angelina Sutin, Ph.D. was among several experts to weigh in on the effects of neuroticism on human health. 

Research suggests that neuroticism raises the risk of mental disorders such as depression and anxiety as well as physical illnesses like heart disease and some cancers. Some research links neuroticism with neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.

01/22/2024
Tallahassee Democrat

Myra Hurt, Ph.D.
Myra Hurt, Ph.D.

The Florida State University community is still remembering the esteemed retired professor Myra Hurt after she died last August. She was 75.

To continue celebrating Hurt’s life, FSU's College of Medicine will be holding a tribute 2-4p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 27, in the college’s Durell Peaden Auditorium, 1115 W. Call St. Theevent is open to the public.

“Dr. Hurt is literally referred to as the mother of the College of Medicine,” the medical school's interim dean, Dr. Alma Littles, told the Tallahassee Democrat. “You can’t really say FSU College of Medicine without thinking of Dr. Myra Hurt.”

12/27/2023
850 Business Magazine

When Dr. Alma Littles was in second grade, her teacher told the bright, young girl she would make a good doctor someday.

“I didn’t know what that meant,” said Littles, the youngest of 12 children growing up in Quincy. “I don’t think I had ever seen a doctor.”

That young girl did indeed grow up to be a family physician, treating residents of her hometown, an area where doctors were scarce.

Littles’ career as a physician, educator and health leader blossomed, and in February 2023, she was named the interim dean of theFlorida State University College of Medicine, a school Littles helped create, with a mission that reflects her own life story.

“We were developing physicians who would practice personal and patient-centered care, focusing on populations of need, the underserved, geriatric patients,” Littles said. “I called it my personal, professional mission.”

12/08/2023
AARP Magazine

FSU College of Medicine's Jonathan Appelbaum, M.D. and Michael Gloth, M.D. are among several physicians who share their advice on how patients can better ensure that their visits to the doctor's office goes well.

 

12/04/2023
Tallahassee Democrat

Maternal mental health is known to be a crisis across Florida — and throughout the nation.

That's why Florida State University’s College of Medicine and the Florida Maternal Mental Health Collaborative (FLMMHC) will host the state’s eighth annual Perinatal Mental Health Conference this Thursday, Dec. 7, and Friday, Dec. 8. The conference will be at the FSU Alumni Center, 1030 W. Tennessee St. in Tallahassee. This year marks
the conference’s first time taking place here since 2015. The annual event is also the state’s only conference that focuses on perinatal – the weeks right before and after birth – and maternal mental health.

“Every year, we identify what the needs are in the state and we mobilize stakeholders from the organization to see what we can do to address them,” said FLMMHC Co-Founder Heather Flynn, also an FSU professor and chair of the College of Medicine’s Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine.

11/21/2023
Tallahassee Democrat

The Homeless Outreach Medicine and Education (HOME) program, student-run by the College of Medicine's School of Physician Assistant Practice, is providing medical assistance to the unhoused community in Tallahassee..

"A lot of times when unhoused patients come into the ER or somewhere like that, they feel judged," explained Sam Mankus, the HOME president and a member of the PA Class of 2024. "[HOME] helps build a more positive relationship between healthcare providers and the unhoused community."

Over the last year the HOME program student volunteers, joined by a social worker and a licensed medical professional, make weekly rounds at a local encampment, where they measure vital signs, listen to the health concerns of individuals and provide advice and recommendations for further care.

11/09/2023
Wall Street Journal

Florida State University College of Medicine researcher Antonio Terracciano, Ph.D., who recently published research linking loneliness and Parkinson's disease, contributed to a Wall Street Journal story on the negative effects of loneliness.

"This uncomfortable, distressful feeling of being lonely over time has a negative effect," said Terracciano, a professor in the Department of Geriatrics. "You are in a state of stress, and over time this can increase vulnerability to disease."

11/02/2023
USA Today

Gender-affirming care is life-saving, research shows. Why is it so controversial for trans kids? Ramiz Kseri, M.D., an assistant professor of internal medicine and pediatrics at Florida State University's College of Medicine, and Jonathan Appelbaum, M.D., chair of the college's Department of Clinical Sciences as well as its education director and a professor of internal medicine, are two of the many experts consulted for this USA Today article.

11/01/2023
Tallahassee Democrat

Dr. Alexander Dumas "A.D." Brickler, who delivered more than 30,000 babies over the course of a storied 60-year career in medicine when he retired at age 90, passed away on Oct. 30.

"He, of course, helped train me when I was a resident and later worked for me when I became residency director at TMH," said FSU College of Medicine interim dean, Dr. Alma Littles. "Beyond that, he trained hundreds of family medicine residents here in Tallahassee, and also helped train hundreds of our medical students here at the FSU College of Medicine. We honored him with an Honorary Professor Emeritus award based on his many years of service to us."

10/31/2023
FSU College of Business

The Florida State University College of Business is bringing together healthcare leaders from throughout Florida and the U.S. for a comprehensive one-day forum to address the industry's most pressing workforce, policy, financial and technology issues.

The Business of Healthcare Summit, scheduled for Jan. 26 at the Augustus B. Turnbull Conference Center, will examine healthcare operations in the state and nation from the perspective of hospitals, private practices, health systems, policy boards and other professional organizations.
 

10/17/2023
Tallahassee Democrat

Florida State University College of Medicine graduate Shlermine "Shea" Everidge (M.D., 2006) has been hired by Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare as the area's first fellowship-trained breast surgical oncologist. 

Dr. Everidge, who completed her general surgery residency at TMH, is just the third physician from a Florida-based residency program to be trained at the prestigious Breast Surgical Oncology Fellowship Program at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas.

 

10/16/2023
Health

Loneliness may be linked to a higher likelihood of Parkinson’s disease, according to new research.

The new study, published earlier this week in JAMA Neurology, found that people who said they were lonely were 37% likely to be diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, a neurodegenerative disorder that can cause shaking, stiffness, memory issues, and other symptoms. 

10/12/2023
in-Training

Joslyn Schipper, a member of the FSU College of Medicine Class of 2024, shared her thoughts on obesity in medical education:

Obesity has evolved from an isolated concern to a pervasive health crisis. Within the United States along, nearly 42% of adults are classified as obese and obesity is considered a leading cause of morbidity and mortality. The direct medical expenditure associated with obesity in the United State reached approximately $173 billion in 2019, with projections indicating an increase of $48-66 billion on the coming decade.

In light of obesity's concerning prevalence and economic burden, it becomes imperative that we equip future healthcare providers with the knowledge and skills essential for effective obesity management. 
 

10/12/2023
HealthyDay News

Loneliness is associated with the risk for incident Parkinson disease (PD), independent of other risk factors, according to a study led  by Florida State University College of Medicine researcher Antonio Terracciano, Ph.D., and published online in JAMA Neurology.

 

10/12/2023
Flagler News Weekly

Florida Lieutenant Governor Jeanette Nuñez held a press conference at FSU PrimaryHealth to highlight the Florida Reimbursement Assistance for Medical Education (FRAME) program, through which a total of $16 million has been distributed to qualified health care professionals. Lieutenant Governor Nuñez was joined by State Surgeon General Joseph A. Ladapo, Florida State University (FSU) leadership, the Florida Medical Association, and a FRAME program award recipient.

Among those participating was FSU College of Medicine Interim Dean Dr. Alma Littles.

“The FSU College of Medicine was created with a mission to be responsive to community needs, and that’s what the State of Florida is doing with the FRAME program – addressing the state’s health care needs in a proven and effective manner,” Littles said, from the College of Medicine's facility in Southwest Tallahassee, which opened in 2019 to serve the underserved community. “This funding will provide valuable incentive for our graduates to practice primary care in Florida in communities that often struggle to recruit enough doctors and other health care professionals. I thank the Florida Legislature, the Governor, and the Lieutenant Governor for this important commitment to the health of all Floridians.”

View the entire press conference here

10/12/2023
UPI.com

A new study suggests that loneliness may be associated with a significant increased risk of developing Parkinson's disease, the second most common neurodegenerative condition after Alzheimer's disease.

"The findings add to the evidence that loneliness is a substantial psychosocial determinant of health," the authors noted in the study published in JAMA Neurology.

The study's lead author, Florida State University College of Medicine professor Antonio Terracciano, Ph.D., told UPI via email that "loneliness and other measures of social connectedness have been previously associated with other neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease and related dementias. Still, to our knowledge, no previous study had tested the association with Parkinson's disease."

09/24/2023
Pensacola News Journal

The Florida Statue University College of Medicine's Pensacola Regional Campus has been fulfilling its mission by addressing the health-care professional shortage. One of three regional campuses celebrating their 20th anniversary in 2023-2024, Pensacola has produced more than 50 alumni who are currently practicing in the region, according to its regional dean Dr. Paul McLeod.

Among them is Pensacola native Jada Leahy, M.D., who was inducted into the FSU Medical Alumni Hall of Fame on Sept. 23.

 

09/22/2023
Newsweek

The artificial sweetener aspartame is associated with learning and memory deficits that can be passed on to the next generation, scientists in the Bhide Lab at FSU's College of Medicine have discovered.

These effects were seen after consuming as little as 10% of the Food and Drug Administration's daily recommendations.

09/19/2023
The Messenger

A popular sugar-alternative has been linked to cognitive issues in a new study.

Researchers from Florida State University, in Tallahassee, found that mice who consumed a fraction of the recommended amount of aspartame had differences in their cognitive performance when compared to those who just drank water.

More worrying is that the rodents appeared to pass on the cognitive deficits to their pups. 

09/13/2023
CNN Health

A person’s sense of purpose declines leading up to and following a diagnosis of dementia or cognitive decline, according to a new study.

“Purpose in life is the feeling that one’s life is goal-oriented and has direction. It is an important component of well-being,” said Dr. Angelina Sutin, lead author of the
study published Wednesday in the journal JAMA Network Open.

Researchers now know a sense of purpose is an important factor of good health across adulthood, added Sutin, professor of behavioral sciences and social medicine at the Florida State University College of Medicine in Tallahassee.

09/01/2023
Infectious Disease Special Edition

Updated recommendations by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) giving an “A” rating to three available PrEP medications could further reduce the risk of acquiring HIV, providing challenges to access are improved.

“These recommendations are very important, as access to PrEP has been disappointing and uptake overall has been very low, particularly in communities most affected by HIV,” said Jonathan Appelbaum, chair of the Department of Clinical Sciences at Florida State University College of Medicine. 

Appelbaum went on to stress the importance of outreach and education for frontline health-care providers, many of whom “still don’t feel at ease prescribing PrEP.”

Despite the recommendations, access and insurance coverage for PrEP is also threatened by litigation.

“USPSTF’s new recommendation, if it is allowed to prevail in governing insurance coverage, will minimize cost barriers,” said Appelbaum, “but we will still have issues of access and stigma to deal with.”
 

08/10/2023
Tallahassee Democrat

Through FSU PrimaryHealth, the Florida State University College of Medicine is one of four core partners serving Sabal Palm Elementary School. It is the only community partnership school in Leon County and draws from 32304 zip code in southwest Tallahassee, an area plagued by poverty. 

08/04/2023
Daytona Beach News-Journal

Nearly one person every day died from a drug overdose in Volusia County in 2022. More than 1,000 overdose deaths have occurred since 2020.

Dr. Stephen Viel and Jamie Ponti, an advanced practice registered nurse, have seen the ravages of drugs up close after working for years in Halifax Health emergency rooms.

On Wednesday, they opened the doors of Shoreline Medical Addiction Treatment, a clinic specializing in pharmacotherapy, the use of medications to treat addiction to opioids, alcohol, and other substances.
 

08/03/2023
Business Wire

Three Florida State University College of Medicine faculty collaborators were recognized by the Interprofessional Education Collaborative (IPEC) and the U.S. Public Health Commissioned Officers Foundation for the Advancement of Public Health (COF) at a recent awards ceremony in Washington, D.C.

Benjamin J. Smith, Niharika Suchak and Debra A. Danforth were selected for honorable mention recognition under the category of Health Communications and Health Technology, which was titled: Using Simulation for Skill Building in Teams: Modified Use of Simulation in Teams for Students in Training (MUST-SIT) Together.

 

 

07/27/2023
Vero News

Florida is the fastest growing state in the nation, according to new Census Bureau data, with approximately 900 people per day arriving to live here in recent years - which is making an existing shortage of doctors worse.

To combat the shortage, Florida State University College of Medicine operates six regional campuses around the state - including one in Fort Pierce that has already supplied the Vero Beach area with several physicians.

 

07/27/2023
Spectrum

Amy Wetherby, distinguished research professor in the College of Medicine's Department of Clinical Sciences and director of the university’s Autism Institute, is profiled in Spectrum, the leading source of news and expert opinion on autism research.

 

07/24/2023
in-Training

John Weng (M.D. Class of '24) shares how a patient-encounter during his psychiatry rotation has positively impacted his approach to medicine as a future physician.

"I am forever grateful for this powerful experience and the opportunity to witness the power of empathy and understanding in patient care," Weng wrote.

07/20/2023
Food Ingredients First

The international publication Food Ingredients First discusses the impact of the recent World Health Organization evaluations of aspartame on companies, the public scrutiny of the artificial sweetener and a possible International Agency for Research on Cancer (IACR) reassessment with scientists and industry experts.

Pradeep Bhide, professor at Florida State University College of Medicine, was among those interviewed by the publication.

 

06/30/2023
Tallahassee Democrat

With Independence Day just around the corner, plans for outdoor fun are underway, but state and local officials warn Florida residents to be leery of a certain pesky intruder: mosquitoes.

Accounting for the recent resurgence of malaria in the state, Leon County is working with the Florida Department of Health to educate the community with best practices for the summer nights ahead.

06/27/2023
The Messenger

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued a warning that malaria could be spreading in the United States for the first time in 20 years, following the confirmation of four domestic-borne cases in Sarasota County, Florida. Malaria is a disease caused by a parasite and is primarily spread to humans bitten by infected Anopheles mosquitoes, which can be found across the U.S.

Symptoms can include headaches, fever, nausea and muscle aches.

"You always want to protect yourself from mosquitoes in Florida," said FSU College of Medicine professor Dr. George Rust, Director of the Center for Medicine and Public Health. The CDC recommends wearing long-sleeved shirts and using a bug repellent with DEET.  

"There are a lot of things that are more common [that can cause illness]," Rust said, adding that it's too early to panic. "[Malaria] is very low on a scale of things that can kill you."

06/21/2023
FAFP Newsletter

FAFP Past President ('96), Daniel (Dan) James Van Durme, M.D., age 61, passes away on May 30, 2023, in Tallahassee, FL. He was born on September 25, 1961, in Dansville, NY. Dan is survived by his wife of 42 years, Patricia, his children Felicia, Stephanie (Shawn), and Luke, his grandchildren Bella and Killian, and his siblings Norah, Jean, Michael, Claire, Tommy, Mar, Matthew, Rachel, and Patrick. He was a gifted teacher who won numerous awards and mentored hundreds of doctors worldwide. At USF, he was one of the family doctors for the Tampa Bay Lightning, Tampa Bay Mutiny, and USF Athletics. While at FSU, he was instrumental in forming the Family Medicine Scholars and the Chapman Chapter of the Gold Humanism Society. Under his direction, FSU Primary Health was conceived and implemented, maintaining the mission of the school to provide doctors to underserved, rural, minority, and elderly populations.

06/20/2023
WTXL

Partnering with the Kearney Center, the FSU College of Medicine School of Physician Assistant Practice's HOME Street Medicine outreach program, is providing medical support and essential items to the unsheltered in Tallahassee.

READ MORE | WATCH

06/01/2023
Tallahassee Democrat

The Florida State University medical community is mourning the loss of its Chief Medical Officer Dr. Daniel Van Durme.

Known for his leadership, friendship and larger-than-life personality, his presence and influence on FSU and the community will live on for many years, Dr. Alma Littles, the FSU College of Medicine's interim dean, said in a statement

05/24/2023
Washingtonian

Neuroscientist Lataisia Jones, the first Black woman to earn a biomedical sciences Ph.D. from the Florida State University College of Medicine in 2017, was among 120 women working in STEM fields represented with a bright-orange sculpture displayed on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. earlier this spring. The #IfThenSheCan exhibit, a collaboration between the Smithsonian Institute and the If/Then initiative that connects girls with female leaders in science and technology, was recently featured in Washingtonian magazine.

05/02/2023
Tallahassee Democrat

FSU SeniorHealth providers place a high priority on improving the self-management skills of older patients. They work in conjunction with primary care providers to provide comprehensive evaluations and develop integrated care plans for seniors diagnosed with a wide range of health issues.

 

04/17/2023
American Medical Association

Second-year College of Medicine medical student Alex Tolbert, participating in the AMA Medical Student Advocacy Conference in Washington, D.C., offered some real-life perspective on how the shortage of federally-funded graduate medical education (GME) positions is a stressor on aspiring physicians.

 

04/10/2023
American Medical Association

Florida State University College of Medicine student Alex Tolbert outlines some of the benefits for those look to build their leadership experience through organized medicine.