News of the Week

College of Medicine represented on winning Collaborative Collision team

Melissa Newsome, a research associate with the College of Medicine’s Center for Behavioral Health Integration, was a member of the winning interdisciplinary team at Tuesday’s Collaborative Collision at Florida State University competition.

Six teams of faculty and staff proposed rural service projects aimed at improving the lives of the underserved in North Florida’s 23 designated rural counties.

The Access to Resources for People with Disabilities team was awarded $100,000 by the FSU Office of Research Development for their winning proposal, geared to assisting those with autism, Down Syndrome, intellectual disabilities and other cognitive, or neurodiverse, challenges. 

The winning team produced a video describing their objectives in support of its project summary.


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News of the Week

Appelbaum participates in World AIDS Day panel

Jonathan Appelbaum, M.D., chair of the Department of Clinical Sciences, participated as a panelist on the Dec. 1 National Institutes of Health (NIH) Worlds AIDS Day 2022 presentation and discussion.

The World AIDS Day observance, titled Progress and Promise in HIV Research, was coordinated through the Office of AIDS Research (OAR) at NIH. The panel focused on community involvement in HIV research, more equitable and accessible prevention and treatment services and the need to support the next generation of investigators.

“OAR recognizes the important role early career investigators will play as we work toward our ultimate goal to end the HIV pandemic,” Maureen M. Goodenow, associate director for AIDS research and director of OAR at NIH, wrote in a letter of thanks to Appelbaum.

The full 90-minute panel discussion is archived on the NIH OAR website and includes a joint statement from Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and Goodenow, which reflects on the progress made over 34 years since the first World AIDS Day.

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Dec 06, 2022
Daytona Beach News-Journal
PRESS RELEASE

Retiring Daytona Beach Regional Campus Dean Luckey Dunn, M.D., was honored for his 15 years of service to the College of Medicine during a farewell luncheon.

"Luckey was the perfect choice to be the founding dean here," said George Bernardo, M.D., who succeeds Dunn. "He started a tradition of excellence that our students get at the Daytona Beach campus. He just did a perfect job of getting us to where we are today."

 

7th Annual FL PMHC Conference

Dec 01, 2022
7th Annual FL PMHC Conference Banner

Every woman in Florida and her family will receive the help and support they need for optimal maternal mental health and related conditions. The Florida Maternal Mental Health Collaborative (FLMMHC) brings together statewide partners to close the critical gaps in perinatal mental health equity, education, policy/financing, prevention, treatment, and outcomes for women and their families.

This conference is hosted by the Florida Meternal Mental Health Collaborative. Founded in 2015 by Lauren DePaola, LCSW and Heather Flynn, Phd, the FLMMHC engages leaders, professionals, advocates, and families around Florida to achieve our vision, mission, and goals. By attending this conference you are a continuing part of finding solutions and addressing and overcoming barriers that face parents and families during the time surrounding pregnancy and delivery. This year the conference will discuss policy making and change, health equity, substance use, and pathways to improving health access. 

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News of the Week

Statewide perinatal health conference opens in Tampa

The Florida Maternal Mental Health Collaborative (FMMHC) opened its 7th Annual Perinatal Mental Health Conference Dec. 1 in Tampa, hosted by the FSU College of Medicine’s Center for Behavioral Health Integration and Professor Heather Flynn, chair of the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine.

The three-day conference, a hybrid of in-person and online attendance, will address topics including perinatal mental health policy, health equity, updates on statewide policies, substance abuse disorders and grief and loss. Up to 18 Continuing Medical Education/Continuing Education credits can be earned.

Speakers include state Sen. Gayle Harrell, a Treasure Coast Republican who sits on a number of committees that deal with health policy; Kara Zivin, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Michigan Medical School and of health management and policy at Michigan’s School of Public Health; and Jennie Joseph, a certified professional midwife, founder and president of Commonsense Childbirth Inc., and one of the 12 Women of the Year in Time magazine’s inaugural class of 2022.

Joseph was selected for the honor because of her commitment to correcting racial and socio-economic disparities in health care, through providing community-based care to pregnant women before and after they give birth and training the next generation of midwives.

FMMHC is a non-profit partnership established in 2015 by Flynn and social worker Lauren DePaola that brings together stakeholders “to ensure every woman in Florida and her family receive the help and support they need for optimal mental health and well-being.” Perinatal mental illness is the No. 1 health complication related to pregnancy and after delivery.

Florida State University’s Center for Behavioral Health Integration, which Flynn directs, is committed to promoting innovations through research and planning, as well as developing Florida’s future physician workforce to address mental health and substance abuse issues successfully in their practices.

For more information, go to https://www.flmomsmatter.org/conference.
 

Fall 2022

Oct 25, 2022

Summer 2022

Jul 22, 2022