News of the Week

FSU professor weighs in on Aspartame in wake of WHO report

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (WCTV) - It’s found in thousands of foods and drinks across the globe. Aspartame has been a staple in the American diet since the 1980s and has been the subject of scientific study for just as long.

On Thursday, the World Health Organization made waves after a committee declared aspartame as “possibly carcinogenic,” citing several studies showing the sweetener could be linked to cancer.

Pradeep Bhide, director of the Center for Brain Repair at Florida State’s College of Medicine, said the WHO’s announcement was not shocking to him.

“I was not at all surprised,” he said.

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News of the Week

Sutin quoted in article about mortality and loneliness

Angelina Sutin, Ph.D., a professor in the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine, was interviewed for an article titled "Loneliness can kill you" that recently was published in The Independent. It details a Ugandan study that confirmed an association among social isolation, loneliness and mortality.

She was not involved in the research; the results were published in the journal Nature Human Behaviour.

Sutin's research addresses how personality traits are associated with physical and mental health..Read the article, including her comments, in The Independent.

 

News of the Week

Faculty, staff and students collaborate to publish article

A Florida State University College of Medicine faculty member, two third-year medical students and a medical school librarian recently published an article in Sleep Health: Journal of the National Sleep Foundation.

Shermeeka Hogans-Mathews, M.D., an assistant professor in the Department of Family Medicine and Rural Health, medical school librarian Roxann Mouratidis and students DanTasia Welch and A. Lisa Kurian (both M.D. 2025) built upon a previously published article that discussed the correlations between poor sleep and the two-dimensional perfectionism model of perfectionistic strivings and perfectionistic concerns.

“Perfectionism has been shown to manifest in medical students and medical educators, as the medical field recruits and rewards high achievers,” they wrote. “Maladaptive perfectionism cultivates a cycle of dysfunctional thoughts, negative feelings, and emotional distress.”

Their cross-sectional study of first- and second-year medical students showed elevated levels of stress were associated significantly with poor sleep quality. Further, a cross-sectional study of practicing physicians showed two types of burnout were predicted by high levels of self-perfectionism.

For more on their findings, their conclusions and recommendations, read their article at Elsevier’s ClinicalKey.

News of the Week

ACP recognizes College of Medicine graduates, residents in newsletter

Florida State University College of Medicine graduates, residents and one current medical student, were recognized for their accomplishments in the summer issue of the American College of Physicians (ACP) Florida Chapter Governor’s Newsletter. The organization is dedicated to internal medicine physicians and students.

Murali Iyyani (M.D. Class of 2021), a resident at Orlando Health, was acknowledged for winning the spring poster competition in the Resident Clinical Vignette category. His poster detailed the first reported case of disseminated Histoplasmosis Mitral Valve Endocarditis in Florida.

Iyyani was also selected Resident of the Year at Orlando Health, where he is one of the chief residents.

Zeina Kayali, MBBS, a resident in the FSU-Sarasota Memorial Hospital internal medicine program, won the Resident Clinical Research poster competition for characterizing embolism risk across vascular sites for index SARS-CoV-2 hospitalizations.

Sean Wimberley (M.D. Class of 2025) won the Medical Student Basic Research poster division for his work on factors contributing to missed appointments in an underserved primary-care setting and mitigation opportunities.

Jimmy Brown (M.D. Class of 2021) was a member of the FSU-Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare internal medicine residency team selected as finalists in the Doctors’ Dilemma Competition.

Ian Motie (M.D. Class of 2021), a resident the FSU-Sarasota Memorial program, was elected to the national position of chair-elect of the ACP Council of Residents and Fellows.

The ACP Florida Chapter recognized Ray Sadeq (M.D. Class of 2023) as the recipient of the College of Medicine’s Internal Medicine Award.

Also selected for Resident of the Year honors were Dr. Ryan Thompson (FSU-Sarasota Memorial) and Dr. Muhammad Yasir Baloch (FSU-Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare).
 

Press Release

FSU College of Medicine leading program to assist kids, families in crisis

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – With psychological distress among children and adolescents rising, and options for treatment unable to keep up, the Florida State University College of Medicine is working directly with local pediatricians to seek ways of helping.

 

Heather Flynn, chair of the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine, is leading a $2.6 million project to integrate best-practice behavioral health care with pediatric office visits. The goal of the Florida Department of Health (FDOH)-funded study is to improve screening, treatment and management of mental health disorders and substance use in pediatric patients.

 

“The pediatrician’s office is a first line of defense in detecting where children need help with mental health risk, but pediatricians need support and resources to treat and refer families at this crisis point,” said Flynn, director of the FSU Center for Behavioral Health Integration. “We are looking to increase awareness among these physicians in recognizing red flags indicating there are mental health issues under the surface that otherwise might not come to light.”

 

FSU, working with Whole Child Leon, is one of five behavioral health hubs in Florida to participate in the effort, which comes at a critical juncture. While rates of depression and anxiety in children were already rising before the COVID-19 pandemic, they have more than doubled over the last three years according to some studies.

 

Prior to COVID-19, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that one in five children had a mental health disorder, but only about 20% received care from a mental health provider. The CDC also reported that emergency room visits by children and adolescents related to mental health issues showed dramatic increases during the pandemic. 

 

Flynn and her team at the College of Medicine have been working with the FDOH for the past few years to develop capacity to partner with several pediatric practices in the Tallahassee area to understand the needs for better screening, treatment and management of mental health and substance use. 

 

Whole Child Leon, a local non-profit, runs a pediatric Behavioral Health Navigation (BHN) program for local pediatricians.  The FDOH funding will help to support both the integration of treatment within the practices, and the ability of the BHN to connect families with the right behavioral health treatment.

 

“Unfortunately, most kids at risk for anxiety, depression, substance use and other behavioral health issues such as ADHD do not get connected with timely and effective care,” Flynn said. “Given the shortage of child psychiatrists and pediatric mental health specialists, it is important for pediatricians to integrate good care for these issues within the context of pediatric care visits.

 

“This program will provide training and technical assistance to pediatricians to improve their knowledge and skills around behavioral health detection and treatment, as well as how to effectively refer kids to community behavioral health clinicians.”

 

Flynn’s team works closely with pediatricians and with the BHN program, which is staffed by licensed social workers, who conduct assessments with families and connect them with the right clinicians in the community, then follow up to ensure that they get the help they need. 

 

Cori McGooden, a College of Medicine faculty member and licensed clinical social worker, is the Whole Child Leon program supervisor. Nearly all pediatric practices in Tallahassee refer kids to the BHN program. 

 

“The ultimate goal of this new Florida Department of Health funding is to drastically improve the capacity of pediatricians to care for a larger number and array of behavioral health issues in their patients, and to make effective referrals to specialists when needed,” Flynn said.

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Jun 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."

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Jun 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.