News of the Week

FAPA names Salahshor its first black president

Susan Salahshor, assistant professor in the FSU College of Medicine School of Physician Assistant Practice, was named the 2017-18 President of the Florida Academy of Physician Assistants (FAPA). She has been a PA for over 23 years. Salahshor previously served as president-elect of FAPA before being installed as president at the organization's 2017 Summer Symposium and Annual Business Meeting in Marco Island. She is the first black woman to hold either title.

Read the full press release

Susan Salahshor

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Mar 08, 2010
FSU MED Magazine
PRESS RELEASE

Cathy Levenson, associate professor of biomedical sciences at the FSU College of Medicine, is part of a team of Florida State University researchers seeking to fill a gaping hole in the scientific literature regarding zinc.

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Mar 08, 2010
FSU MED Magazine
PRESS RELEASE

With Michelle Obama looking on, Elena Reyes received Florida Campus Compact’s service Learning Faculty Award for encouraging lifelong leadership among her students. Reyes was one of the College of Medicine’s founding faculty members and is the behavioral sciences curriculum director and an associate professor.

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Mar 08, 2010
FSU MED Magazine
PRESS RELEASE

Laura Brock is the FSU College of Medicine’s new director of external relations. Among other things, that means she’ll act as a liaison with the Florida State governmental relations office, and she’ll work on developing a strategic constituency plan to organize and mobilize community resources.

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Mar 08, 2010
FSU MED Magazine
PRESS RELEASE

Janine C. Edwards is returning to Florida State to become chair of the FSU College of Medicine’s Department of Medical Humanities and Social Sciences.

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Mar 07, 2010
The Tallahassee Democrat
PRESS RELEASE

The College of Medicine's Dr. Alice Pomidor comments on this Tallahassee Democrat story, discussing why seniors should continue to work-out as long as they can.

News of the Week

PA faculty member Smith featured in ABIM blog

Aug. 17, 2017

Benjamin Smith, director of didactic education for FSU's School of Physician Assistant Practice, is featured in a Q-and-A post in the American Board of Internal Medicine blog.  

Asked about the best advice he's ever received as a physician assistant, he replied: "My supervising physician, Victor M. McMillan, has taught me to always be ready to learn the art of medicine. Be humble so that learning can occur throughout a career."

Read the entire blog post.

 

News of the Week

Florida medical school deans and FMA working together

August 2017

The FSU College of Medicine played a key role in a recent forum that allowed Florida experts to compare notes on patient care, medical education and research.

In the first week of August, for only the second time, the Council of Florida Medical School Deans had its midyear meeting in conjunction with the Florida Medical Association’s annual meeting.

“This forum ... provides an opportunity for the deans and other leaders of the medical schools to interact with their students, residents and faculty who are also actively participating in the FMA’s advocacy and educational programs,” stated a summary released after the forum. “... This cooperative network has allowed us to share ideas and best practices, recruit outstanding talent and pursue resources that benefit medical education and healthcare in the state as a whole, while enhancing programs at our individual institutions.”

During the FMA meeting, College of Medicine Assistant Professor Christie Alexander, M.D., and former Director of Community Clinical Relations Mollie Hill received prestigious awards. In addition, Alexander was elected to the association’s Board of Governors.

Here are more FSU connections: College of Medicine Dean John P. Fogarty, M.D., is chair of the deans’ council, which includes all six public and three private medical schools in Florida. Senior Associate Dean Alma Littles, M.D., a member of the deans’ council, also chairs the FMA’s Council on Medical Education, Science and Public Health. And interventional cardiologist John Katopodis, M.D., newly installed FMA president, is on the clerkship faculty of the College of Medicine’s Tallahassee Regional Campus.

Among the special guests attending were American Medical Association President David Barbe, M.D.; Joshua Lenchus, D.O., representing the Florida Osteopathic Medical Association; Florida Surgeon General Celeste Philip, M.D.; and state Rep. Gayle Harrell, R-Stuart. Among the topics discussed were graduate medical education; well-being of medical students and residents; and pain management and the opioid crisis.

When honors were handed out, Alexander received the FMA’s Gerold L. Schiebler, M.D., Advocate for Students Award. (Read more about the award.)

Hill received FMA’s Distinguished Layman’s Award. She was recognized for her decades of service as executive director of Capital Medical Society and then with the brand-new FSU College of Medicine beginning in 2000. Here is an excerpt from her nomination: “The College of Medicine faced a unique challenge among medical schools, needing to arrange for student clinical rotations to take place in community settings all across Florida [since the innovative new medical school didn’t] operate its own teaching hospital or academic medical center.... The hard part was figuring out how to ensure that medical students would get access to physicians and their patients for the required rotations. Mollie was given this challenge and deserves a great deal of credit for negotiating affiliation agreements with (today) more than 100 hospitals, group practices, medical centers, surgery centers, clinics and other health-care facilities throughout Florida.”

Presenters with an FSU connection in the David A. Paulus, M.D., Poster Symposium included:

  • Third-year student Bianca Alvarez, Orlando campus, "Dopamine Neuron Development in a Mouse Model of Early-Onset Generalized Dystonia" (co-authors Deirdre McCarthy, Nutan Sharma and Pradeep Bhide, Ph.D.).
  • Third-year student David Aung-Din, Orlando campus, "Investigation on the Effects of Exogenous Melatonin on Working Memory and Driving Performance in Parkinson's Disease" (co-author Nick Garson).
  • Third-year student Devan Patel, Fort Pierce campus, "Human Mesenchymal Stem Cell Treatment Prevents TBI-Associated Depression: Genes to Behavior" (co-authors Ali Darkazalli, Ph.D., Cynthia Vied, Ph.D., Nastaren Abad, Samuel Grant and Cathy Levenson, Ph.D.).
  • Fourth-year student Nina Morgan, Sarasota campus, ""Atrial Fibrillation Masquerading as Panic Attacks" (co-authors Karen Hamad, M.D., and Wilhelmine Wiese-Rometsch, M.D.).
  • Fourth-year student Megan Phelan, Fort Pierce campus, "VSD Complicated With Pulmonary Overcirculation."
  • Resident Luba Muaddi, FSU Internal Medicine Residency Program at TMH, "Cystic Fibrosis Presenting as Cavitary Pneumonia in a 24-Year-Old Caucasian Female" (co-author Michele Edison, M.D.).
  • Resident Krishna Patel, FSU Internal Medicine Residency Program at TMH, "Left Ventricular Noncompaction Cardiomyopathy: An Uncommon Case of Cardiac Arrest Potentially Missed on Echocardiogram" (co-authors Philip Denoux, M.D., and Gian Carlo Giove, M.D.).
  • Resident Zareen Vaghaiwalla, FSU Internal Medicine Residency Program at TMH, "A Severe Presentation of Herpes Simplex-2 in the Immunocompromised Patient" (co-author Philip Denoux, M.D.).
  • And resident Latrisha Wright, FSU Internal Medicine Residency Program at TMH, "Jod-Basedow Phenomenon in Follicular Carcinoma" (co-authors Mittal Patel, M.D., and Raymond Shashaty, M.D.).

 

News of the Week

Ten honored as Chapman Humanism Scholars

September 2017

Five students apiece from the Class of 2019 and the Class of 2020 have been selected for Chapman Humanism Scholarships.

From the Class of 2019: Shelbi Brown (also selected in 2016), Sam Cook (also selected in 2016), Charlie Ingram, Cory Nonnemacher and Stephanie Rolon Rodriguez.

From the Class of 2020: Nicholas Adams, Paige Blinn, Arjith Rathakrishnan, D’Andre Williams and Stephanie Williams.

The $2,000 scholarships were awarded by the Jules B. Chapman, M.D., and Annie Lou Chapman Private Foundation based on the students' ability to communicate with patients in a sincere and humanistic way. They were nominated largely by the standardized patients in the Clinical Learning Center.