Press Release

Florida State University College of Medicine Announces Match Day Results

CONTACT: Melissa Powell
(850) 645-9699; melissa.powell@med.fsu.edu

March 15, 2019

FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF MEDICINE ANNOUNCES MATCH DAY RESULTS


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Graduating students in the Florida State University College of Medicine Class of 2019 received notification today of where they will enter residency training this summer.

Of the 114 graduating students who registered in the matching program, 63 (57 percent) matched in a primary care specialty, including internal medicine, family medicine, pediatrics and obstetrics/gynecology.

Other students matched today in anesthesiology, dermatology, emergency medicine, neurological surgery, plastic surgery, ophthalmology, orthopedic surgery, otolaryngology, pathology, psychiatry and general surgery.

Four students matched in Tallahassee and four matched with residency programs sponsored by the College of Medicine.

Forty-one students matched in Florida, a state that ranks 42nd nationally in the number of available residency slots.

“Our students continue to match with wonderful programs in Florida and throughout the country,” said College of Medicine Dean John P. Fogarty. “I’m also pleased that as we continue to support the creation of more residency slots in Florida, we’ll be able to keep more graduating Florida medical students in the state. With our focus on primary care, that means more doctors for Florida in specialties where there is a significant need.”

The residency match, conducted annually by the National Resident Matching Program, is the primary system that matches applicants to residency programs with available positions at U.S. teaching hospitals. Graduating medical students across the country receive their match information at the same time on the same day.

 

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For information about current and past Match Day results, visit http://med.fsu.edu/index.cfm?page=alumniFriends.whereTheyMatched

 

 

 

News of the Week

Gold Humanism Class of 2020

Eighteen members of the Class of 2020 have been chosen for the FSU Chapman Chapter of the Gold Humanism Honor Society.

 

The Arnold P. Gold Foundation for Humanism in Medicine defines humanism as the link between compassion and scientific competence. When practiced, humanism in medicine fosters relationships with patients and other caregivers that are compassionate and empathetic. It describes attitudes and behaviors that are sensitive to the values, autonomy, cultural and ethnic backgrounds of others. The humanistic doctor demonstrates the following attributes (I.E., C.A.R.E.S).

  • Integrity: the congruence between expressed values and behavior.
  • Excellence: clinical expertise.
  • Compassion: the awareness and acknowledgment of the suffering of another and the desire to relieve it.
  • Altruism: the capacity to put the needs and interests of another before your own.
  • Respect: the regard for the autonomy and values of another person.
  • Empathy: the ability to put oneself in another’s situation, e.g., physician as patient.
  • Service: the sharing of one’s talent, time and resources with those in need; giving beyond what is required.

The students selected for the Class of 2020 are:

  • Alexander Baradei (Sarasota Regional Campus)
  • Jordan Carbono (Orlando)
  • Joseph Chen (Tallahassee-Marianna)
  • Barbara Christakis (Daytona Beach)
  • Efe Cudjoe (Fort Pierce)
  • Ally Davis (Pensacola)
  • Olivia Donnelly (Daytona Beach)
  • Ryan Earwood (Orlando)
  • April Graham (Tallahassee-Thomasville
  • Matthew Hager (Tallahassee-Thomasville
  • Jim Jin (Fort Pierce)
  • JJ Kuhlman (Daytona Beach)
  • Casey Mason (Orlando)
  • Cordy McGill-Scarlett (Fort Pierce)
  • Cilia Nazef (Fort Pierce)
  • Scott Nelson (Tallahassee)
  • Reema Tawfiq (Tallahassee-Marianna)
  • Ariana Trautmann (Pensacola)

“It was encouraging to see so many of our students recognized by faculty and staff from across all four years of the curriculum AND their classmates,” GHHS faculty advisors Daniel Van Durme and Suzanne Harrison wrote in an email announcing the winners. “These students rose to the top as true exemplars of humanism by receiving multiple nominations from faculty, staff and peers in EVERY category demonstrating clinical excellence, service to others, patient-centered approach to care and compassion."

 

 

 

 

 

Press Release

Florida State Medical Students to Meet Their Match

CONTACT: Doug Carlson

(850) 645-1255; doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu

 

March 13, 2019

 

FLORIDA STATE MEDICAL STUDENTS TO MEET THEIR MATCH

 

During a Match Day ceremony Friday, the members of the Florida State University College of Medicine Class of 2019 will find out where they will receive residency training — a defining moment in their medical careers.

The students will simultaneously open envelopes, learning for the first time where they will spend the next several years completing training in the medical specialty they will practice.

 

Graduating students at M.D.-granting medical schools across the United States receive their match information at the same time through the National Resident Matching Program, the primary system that matches applicants to residency programs with available positions at U.S. teaching hospitals.

The ceremony will take place:

 

FRIDAY, MARCH 15

NOON

RUBY DIAMOND CONCERT HALL


WESTCOTT BUILDING, 222 S. COPELAND ST.

 

FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY

 

TALLAHASSEE, FLA.

 

The ceremony can also be viewed online. Visit http://med.fsu.edu/matchday for parking and map information, as well as details about the webcast.

 

Press Release

FSU Researchers Discover a Novel Protein Degradation Pathway

CONTACT: Kathleen Haughney, University Communications
(850) 644-1489;
khaughney@fsu.edu

@FSUResearch

March 2019

FSU RESEARCHERS DISCOVER A NOVEL PROTEIN DEGRADATION PATHWAY

Findings May Lead To Better Understanding of Muscular Dystrophy, Other Diseases

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. —  The nucleus is a treasure trove of biological information that keeps the cell -- and thus living organisms -- ticking. But many processes within the nucleus remain a mystery to scientists.

 

A Florida State University research team has uncovered one such mystery — how a type of protein that is embedded in the inner nuclear membrane clears out of the system once it has served its purpose. Understanding that process may have implications for a class of human diseases including muscular dystrophy.

 

FSU graduate student Bailey Koch, working in the lab of Associate Professor of Biological Science Hong-Guo Yu, led the work.

 

“This research is like a puzzle,” said Koch, who also worked for Yu as an undergraduate. “This study is a small piece, but it’s a piece that we and others can build on going forward.”

 

Koch and Yu examined the build-up of proteins around the nuclear membrane. These proteins are vital to a number of biological functions, but researchers were searching for clues about how old proteins were cleared out once they ceased to function.

 

The answer is published in the Journal of Cell Biology. Koch and Yu found that a type of enzyme that typically regulates cell cycle progression is responsible for the breakdown of the protein Mps3, an integral inner nuclear membrane protein that is an essential component linking the nucleoskeleton to the cytoskeleton.

 

Koch, who presented the research at the American Society of Cell Biology/European Molecular Biology Organization 2018 meeting, compares the cell to a park with the nucleus being the swimming pool and people serving as the proteins. When too many people crowd around the pool, it is difficult for parents to see their children, she said, so there needs to be a way to clear the non-parents from the side of the pool.

 

The enzyme is the lifeguard that clears proteins away.

 

Yu and Koch’s work is the first to shed light on this protein turnover pathway. They ran their experiments in yeast, a good model organism that often mimics human cellular processes, and conducted sophisticated genetic and biochemical analyses of their samples.

 

The protein the researchers studied is essential to cellular processes, such as cell-cycle progression, and also plays a role in a class of diseases that includes muscular dystrophy and a premature aging syndrome called progeria. Obtaining a better understand of how the protein is regulated could open doors to further understanding of how these diseases work.

 

“Many diseases associated with the nuclear membrane are due to protein issues,” Yu said. “That’s why there is so much of a focus on how they work.”

 

Assistant Professor of Biomedical Sciences Robert Tomko contributed to this study. This work is funded by the National Institutes of Health.

 

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