News of the Week

Lataisia Jones receives Leslie N. Wilson-Delores Auzenne Graduate Assistantship

Biomedical Sciences graduate student Lataisia Jones, M.S., was awarded the Leslie N. Wilson-Delores Auzenne Graduate Assistantship. The award covers Jones' tuition for fall 2016 and spring 2017. It also includes a $5,000 bonus to her stipend. Jones entered the department's Ph.D. program in 2012 under Professor Pradeep Bhide.

News of the Week

Van Durme appointed associate dean for clinical and community affairs

March 2016

Dean John Fogarty has appointed Daniel Van Durme, family medicine and rural health chair, to associate dean for clinical and community affairs. Van Durme will assume the additional role beginning April 1.

Van Durme has served as vice president of the college’s Faculty Practice Plan since 2009. He has also served on the Florida Medical Practice Plan Visioning Task Force to address the potential need for a clinical practice for the college. He will lead the effort to move forward with a local practice for the college’s clinical faculty members.

 

News of the Week

Van Durme appointed associate dean for clinical and community affairs

March 2016

Dean John Fogarty has appointed Daniel Van Durme, family medicine and rural health chair, to associate dean for clinical and community affairs. Van Durme will assume the additional role beginning April 1.

Van Durme has served as vice president of the college’s Faculty Practice Plan since 2009. He has also served on the Florida Medical Practice Plan Visioning Task Force to address the potential need for a clinical practice for the college. He will lead the effort to move forward with a local practice for the college’s clinical faculty members.

 

News of the Week

Faculty honored at Innovators' Reception

During the 11th Annual Innovators' Reception, many College of Medicine faculty members were recognized for efforts to commercialize their research through start-up companies, obtaining a license, receiving a GAP grant or being issued a patent.

Start-up companies:

  • Ewa Bienkiewicz
  • James Olcese

Licenses:

  • Myra Hurt
  • Raed Rizkallah

GAP grant recipients:

  • Pradeep Bhide
  • Deirdre McCarthy
  • Branko Stefanovic

Patents issued:

  • Ewa Bienkiewicz
  • Myra Hurt
  • Sanjay Kumar
  • James Olcese

 

News of the Week

Alexander presents at Chapman Regional Symposium

Alumna Christie Alexander (M.D., '05) led a dsicussion called, "Serving our Neighbors," about student-run free clinics in Florida at the first Chapman Regional Symposium of Florida Gold Humanism Honor Society chapters on April 23.

FSU College of Medicine students in attendance:

  • Tamra Travers
  • John-Anthony Coppola
  • Dijo Joseph
  • Keith Kincaid
  • Stephanie Tran
  • Stefano Leitner
  • Adhish Singh

FSU College of Medicine faculty in attendance:

  • Daniel Van Durme
  • Robert Watson
group picture

News of the Week

Suchak and Danforth win poster competition

Niharika Suchak, Associate Professor in the Department of Geriatrics, and Debra Danforth, Director of the Maguire Medical Library, won first place in the 2016 Florida Gerontological Advanced Practice Nurses Association meeting in Orlando during the weekend of April 29. Their poster was titled, "MUST-SIT together©: An Interprofessional Education Model Using Simulation" and was based on work with the Geriatics Interest Group interprofessional education event.

News of the Week

Artistic mission

  For the past five years, local artists have lent their work for exhibition in the hallway between The Doctor’s Inn and the dean’s suite as part of the College of Medicine’s mission to cultivate compassionate physicians. But art actually has been a priority for the college since its inception.
  “A compassionate physician is a person that feels something for their patient,” said Myra Hurt, senior associate dean for research and graduate programs. “Encouraging feeling toward your environment, toward your fellow man, is all a part of encouraging people to feel something for their patients.”
  Currently in the hallway, artist Eluster Richardson’s work (above) depicts a vibrant series of subjects with quilts. In the adjacent hallway, Junia Mason-Edmonds’ artwork displays abstract scenes of live oaks.
  “The purpose of art is to expose people to beauty, and get them to feel something,” said Hurt. “Beyond the beauty, it’s about making us see and reflect on things that perhaps we wouldn’t normally think about.”
  Rob Jurand, general counsel, coordinates and sometimes curates the exhibitions displayed on a two- to four-month rotation. He inherited the responsibility from former Medical Humanities and Social Sciences Chair Janine Edwards. Often, the Gadsden Arts Center lends exhibits from its gallery.
  “The hallway exhibits started out with vernacular art: African-American art of the South,” said Jurand.
  Hurt describes how the evolution of art at the college began.
  “The statue in the atrium came from a cast, a Renaissance art piece,” she said. “The college could have it if we paid to repair one of the hands. It had to go back to Italy to be repaired. The names on the base are those who contributed to get that done. Art in the building beyond that has evolved.”
  Besides the atrium and the hallways near the dean’s suite, art is also on display outside the main entrance, near the Clinical Learning Center and by the learning communities on the second floor.
  Richardson’s exhibit features watercolor and oil paintings centered on the tradition of quilting. The Tallahassee native described those paintings during an interpretive talk at the college.
  “My mom kept house and made quilts and raised the family,” he said. “She never had a W-2 form. I wanted to bring a little recognition to her craft after she passed away at 97 years old. I wanted her quilting to live past her and, perhaps, past me.”
  Hurt believes art exhibitions and talks by artists are important for the college to maintain its humanistic focus.
  “It contributes to the culture that I would hope our college has — being civilized, sensitive people,” she said. “I think having an environment that’s warm and conducive to interaction is part of developing physicians that enjoy life, and enjoy their practice, and feel something for their patients.”

Eluster