News of the Week

Students at the top during FMA poster symposium

Competing against other medical students, residents and fellows across the state, two FSU medical students were rated among the top three entrants during a poster symposium at the Florida Medical Association’s annual meeting. The FMA recognized the top three abstracts in research and clinical cases, along with symposium winners for research and clinical cases.

College of Medicine Senior Associate Dean Alma Littles served as a judge for the FMA David A. Paulus, M.D., Poster Symposium. She was recused from judging FSU medical student entries.

Sanjana Iyengar (Class of 2015) was recognized for her research abstract, “Clinicopathologic Predictors of Sentinel Lymph Node Metastasis in Thin Melanoma,” and received a $100 prize. Eric Branch (Class of 2016) finished third and received a $50 prize for his research poster, “Biomechanical Evaluation of Arthroscopic Meniscal Repair Constructs.”

Selections were made based on discussion sessions with colleagues and judges during the July 26 meeting in Orlando.

News of the Week

Alumna keeps exploring mobile medical technology

July 2014

Francoise Marvel (M.D., ’12) was the lead author of an article published in the July 2014 edition of the Journal of Mobile Technology in Medicine. Its title was “Ideas to iPhones: A 10-Step Framework for Creating Mobile Medical Applications.” Marvel made news when she was a med student by converting her internal medicine mentor’s notes into an app: Madruga and Marvel’s Medical Black Book App.
 

News of the Week

O'Shea's art featured on Academic Medicine cover

Yet another College of Medicine student’s artwork is being featured on the cover of Academic Medicine. On the August 2014 cover is a painting by Jesse O’Shea (Class of 2015). “Innate Curiosity” is the title of the work, which O’Shea said was a painting on canvas with acrylics converted to digital. He no longer has the original, he said: He gave it as a gift to an attending physician.

Here is an excerpt from the artist’s statement printed in Academic Medicine: “Several hours after the induction of labor, I finally stood holding the newborn. It was a complicated delivery, and I couldn’t help questioning what had transpired. Why did the mother have to sustain injury and harm during this experience? Why did the newborn have its cord around its neck? Is this the miracle of life? The first delivery during my obstetrics–gynecology rotation raised questions on life, suffering, and universal truths as the baby surfaced for its first breath. Innate curiosity.”

O’Shea, who’s spending his clinical years at the Sarasota Regional Campus, is the fourth student whose art has been displayed on Academic Medicine’s cover. The three others were Jared Rich (Class of ’12), Monica Chatwal (’13) and Zach Folzenlogen (also ’13).
 

fetal

News of the Week

Students chosen for AOA Medical Honor Society

     Nineteen students from the College of Medicine’s Class of 2015 have been elected to the Alpha Omega Alpha Medical Honor Society, said Ricardo Gonzalez-Rothi, M.D., chair of the Department of Clinical Sciences and councilor to AOA’s Delta Chapter at FSU.
     To be eligible for election to AOA, students must be in the top 25th percentile of their class scholastically and must have demonstrated sufficient evidence of gifted teaching, of leadership in academia and the community, of support of the ideals of humanism and of promoting service to others.
     This is the list of newly elected students:

  • Shawn Adams
  • Ryan Berger
  • Maureen Bruns
  • Tyler Caton
  • Tyler Cobb
  • David Cristin
  • Joshua Greenstein
  • Brandon Lambiris
  • Noona Leavell
  • Juliana Matthews
  • Laura McLaughlin
  • Joanna Meadors
  • Nathan Nowalk
  • Crystal Pickeral
  • Melanie Siefman
  • Kristen Valencia
  • Katherine Wright
  • Zachary Zimmerman
  • James Zorn
AOA logo

News of the Week

AED paper will be published

Two years ago, Ryan Berger — with the help of classmate Jesse O’Shea — created an app to help anyone on campus find the nearest automated external defibrillator in case of cardiac arrest. Now the two students from the Class of 2015 have written a paper about that app, and it’s being published. “AEDs at Your Fingertips: Automated External Defibrillators on College Campuses and a Novel Approach for Increasing Accessibility” has been accepted for publication in The Journal of American College Health.

The app — found under the “Places” heading in the free FSU Mobile app — can give you a list of every AED on Florida State’s campus, show you a picture of each site and even guide you step by step to the closest ones.

Berger is at the College of Medicine’s Fort Pierce Regional Campus. O’Shea is at the Sarasota Regional Campus. Nancy Clark, the college’s director of medical informatics, helped the students develop the app.
 

AED_defibrillator

News of the Week

Pinto lab's paper published

A paper produced by the research lab of Assistant Professor Jose Pinto, in the Department of Biomedical Sciences, is being published in the Aug. 15 issue of the Journal of Biological Chemistry. Its title is “Long Term Ablation of Protein Kinase A (PKA)-mediated Cardiac Troponin I Phosphorylation Leads to Excitation-Contraction Uncoupling and Diastolic Dysfunction in a Knock-in Mouse Model of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy.”

Pinto’s co-authors are David Dweck, Marcos A. Sanchez-Gonzalez, Crystal-Dawn Badger, Andrew Koutnik, Edda Ruiz, Brittany Griffin, Professor Mohamed Kabbaj and Professor Michael Overton.
 

News of the Week

New Class of 2018 selects its officers

August 2014

The first-year students in the Class of 2018 have chosen these 18 officers to represent them:

 

  • President: Mark Micolucci (son of Program in Medical Sciences alumnus Vic Micolucci).
  • Vice president: Adam Jaffe.
  • Secretary: Annie Cadavid (sister of Class of 2014 graduate Felipe Cadavid).
  • Treasurer: Kelley Rojas.
  • Year 1 & 2 Curriculum Committee representative: Shawn Hassani (brother of Class of 2015 member Brian Hassani).
  • Curriculum Committee representative: Michael Alexander.
  • Council on Diversity & Inclusion representative: Nick Karr.
  • Social co-chairs: Bruce Ferraro, Travis Thompson.
  • Historian chair: Simon Lopez.
  • Hospitality co-chairs: Corey Cavannaugh, Amanda Trippensee.
  • Gala chair: Cilla Edmonston.
  • Community outreach co-chairs: Arnold Abud, Drew Williams.
  • Intramural co-chairs: Nina Morgan, Ariella Price.
  • IT/Library Committee representative: Boris Faynberg.

 

News of the Week

Siblings work together on publication

Recent College of Medicine graduate Vishal Dahya (M.D., '14) has been published again, but this time one of his co-authors is his sister, Zarna Dahya (M.D., '11). During his fourth year Vishal did an externship in Louisville, where Zarna is doing her residency. The paper, "McKittrick-Wheelock syndrome complicated by Enterococcus faecalis endocarditis: a unique combination," was published online by the International Journal of Colorectal Disease. Vishal has just begun his residency at the FSU College of Medicine-Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare Internal Medicine Residency Program.

News of the Week

Faculty Council hands out awards

August 2014

Five faculty members and a staff member were honored Aug. 27 at the Faculty Council's annual awards ceremony. The awards went to:

  • Joedrecka Brown Speights, M.D., associate professor, Department of Family Medicine and Rural Health (guardian of the mission and service).
  • Heather Flynn, Ph.D., vice chair for research, Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine (outstanding faculty educator).
  • Mohamed Kabbaj, Ph.D., professor, Department of Biomedical Sciences (outstanding faculty investigator).
  • Jacquelyn Manduley, academic program specialist, Office of Medical Education (outstanding staff member).
  • Curt Stine, M.D., associate chair, Department of Family Medicine and Rural Health (outstanding faculty educator).
  • Angelina Sutin, Ph.D., assistant professor, Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine (outstanding faculty investigator).

Here are excerpts from their nominations.

JOEDRECKA BROWN SPEIGHTS
Several nominators mentioned that Joedrecka Brown was a role model for students as well as for fellow faculty members. She was named the outstanding mentor at the 2014 Medical Student Education Conference by the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine. She’s also an advisor for the Student National Medical Association here at the College of Medicine.

She works on the Access to Care Committee through Capital Medical Society, the Leon County Domestic Violence Fatality Review Team, Physicians Against the Trafficking of Humans, and the Healthy Infant Partnership. Her research is aimed at eliminating health disparities, with special attention to black infant mortality. And apart from all of that, she’s a great doctor who practices medicine that’s congruent with our mission.
 

HEATHER FLYNN
(Taken from a letter of nomination)
“Having been an educator in medical schools since 1978, I can honestly say [Heather Flynn] is one of the best teachers I have known. Here’s the real situation in medical school education: Any experienced physician knows that psychology plays a huge role in a person’s illness. Yet medical students seem almost intrinsically to see psychology as unimportant, a distraction from ‘real medicine,’ and ‘soft.’ Dr. Flynn has an amazing ability to provide teaching to medical students and residents in a way that is not only heavily evidence-based, but interesting!

“She has taught me a great deal about motivational interviewing and depression. I have watched her provide this teaching to medical students in the classroom setting as well as in small groups and one-to-one. She is a very active listener, who uses humor and nonjudgmental approaches to open up learners to new information. I understand she is now helping to incorporate motivational interviewing into our CLC teaching, an idea that I think is fabulous.”


MOHAMED KABBAJ
Mohamed Kabbaj demonstrates a commitment to rigorous science. He has over 150 publications and has published over 20 articles just in 2013 and 2014. His impact on the field is significant, as evidenced by almost 2,700 citations since 1995. He has been published multiple times in leading journals such as Journal of Neuroscience, Nature Neuroscience, Journal of Neuroendrocrinology and Psychopharmacology. And he has been invited as a speaker to numerous national and international meetings.

In addition to his impressive accomplishments in scientific discovery, Mohamed Kabbaj has been funded by NIH continuously since his second year with the College of Medicine. In fact, he’s the only faculty member here with two five-year R01 grants from NIH. He also serves on both NIH and NSF study sections.

His work in the neurobiology underlying individual and sex differences in depression, drug addiction and anxiety, as well as molecular mechanisms underlying social behaviors, will continue to break new ground. In addition, he’s dedicated to creating a lab that is an important learning environment for graduate students. Despite all of these accomplishments, he’s described by colleagues as personable, approachable, humble, supportive and collaborative.


JACQUELYN MANDULEY
Five letters nominated Jacquelyn Manduley for this award, calling her critical to the success and day-to-day operations of the Office of Medical Education. She has diverse technical skills; has developed systems that improve accuracy and efficiency; is committed to meeting the educational needs of our students; maintains a positive attitude even when dealing with difficult or new tasks; takes the initiative on projects; and works collaboratively with course directors/faculty, staff and students.

Excerpts from nominations: “This person takes on the most challenging tasks, navigates the most frustrating terrain, deals with seemingly endless potential barriers and/or problems to deliver products we all are proud of, and never once draws attention to her role in getting the job done. This staff member makes all of us look good and makes us more successful.” And: “Course directors and students rightly credit this individual for making their courses better and their lives easier and more satisfying.”


CURT STINE
Curt Stine has the ability to take the best of what others have to offer and utilize it to the advantage of our learners. He also has the ability to make you think about the underlying reasons for your ideas about teaching, learning and curricular goals. He’s committed to continuous quality improvement, and enthusiastic about curricular changes that enhance student learning.

Excerpt from one of the nomination letters: “During his time at our College of Medicine (for the past 12 years), he has had numerous teaching/educational responsibilities…. In every endeavor, he has worked hard to promote educational innovation, quality improvement and excellence. He’s a vocal proponent of interdisciplinary teaching and strives to bring varied departments, disciplines and course directors together for the optimal teaching of our students. He is an enthusiastic teacher who can give a great lecture to students, and is highly rated as a small group leader, but he does not seek the spotlight, but gives others the chance to shine. He is clearly deserving of this award.”


ANGELINA SUTIN
In just a couple of years at the College of Medicine, Angelina Sutin has had 14 publications, nine of which listed her as first author. Overall, she has over 60 publications in journals such as Psychological Medicine, Journal of Personality, Journal of Behavioral Medicine, Psychology and Aging, and JAMA Psychiatry and has been cited 523 times since 2006, almost 300 of those in the past two years.

She’s an associate editor of a major journal in her field and an ad-hoc reviewer for over 25 other journals. She’s been a lead presenter at major national conferences, including the American Psychological Association, the Gerontological Association of America, and the Association for Research in Personality. She’s currently PI for an FSU planning grant and is funded as a co-PI on an R01 from the National Institute on Aging. Somehow she also finds time to mentor undergraduates, Bridge students and medical students.

Angelina Sutin’s research in the areas of how personality traits are associated with physical and mental health across adulthood and how personality shapes the psychological understanding of personally meaningful experiences will continue to create new knowledge in the field.