Millender and Wong Forge Alliance with Panamanian Research Institute

Mar 22, 2024

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Flynn Confronting Maternal Mental Health

Jan 30, 2024

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Mar 17, 2024
Tallahassee Democrat
PRESS RELEASE

As Florida State University’s College of Medicine celebrated the nationwide event known as Match Day, over a hundred of its graduating medical students got the official word on where they will receive residency training.

Shouts of joy, happy tears and group hugs filled FSU's Ruby Diamond Concert Hall Friday afternoon as students simultaneously tore open their envelopes, reading their letters with loved ones about where they will practice for the next several years in their chosen medical specialty.

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Nair-Collins Responds to Commentary that Entails False-Positive Misdiagnosis

Jan 11, 2024

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Mar 08, 2024
Tallahassee Democrat
PRESS RELEASE

Florida State University is slated to receive nearly $623 million in the Florida Legislature's proposed 2024-2025 budget, which includes a number of specific College of Medicine projects.

Lawmakers are expected to approve and forward the budget to Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday, March 8, closing out the legislative sessions. Beyond its portion from the university's operating allocation, these are some of the specific College of Medicine-related items in the proposed budget:
 

  • Institute of Pediatric Rare Diseases ($5 million)
  • Autism Institute ($1.48 million)
  • FSU Behavioral Health ($525,000)

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Feb 29, 2024
Florida State University News
PRESS RELEASE

Three Florida State University College of Medicine doctoral students were among a cohort of 24 who were celebrated as 2023-2024 recipients of McKnight Doctoral or Dissertation Fellowships at the 38th Annual McKnight Fellows Meeting and Research & Writing Conference in Tampa.

Doctoral candidate Meaghan Navarrete Mathews was honored as a McKnight Dissertation Fellow, while doctoral students Nella Delva and Zenzeale Hudson were recognized as McKnight Doctoral Fellows.

 

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Mar 01, 2024
Central Florida Health News
PRESS RELEASE

Throughout Florida and the nation, there’s a significant physician shortage that creates barriers to health care for many. To help meet the demand for new physicians, BayCare plans to increase its residency positions to more than 650 by 2029.

“Here in Polk County, all the programs are academically sponsored by Florida State in collaboration with BayCare and Winter Haven Hospital,” said Nathan Falk, founding family medicine residency director for the FSU College of Medicine program at the BayCare Health System in Winter Haven.

“We first started the family medicine residency program in 2018, and we saw our first class onboarded in the summer of 2020. We graduated our first class in the summer of 2023. Of that first class, we graduated five individuals, and four out of the five stayed here in Polk County to practice, with the fifth one going to Orlando. So all five of them stayed in Central Florida.”
 

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Mar 02, 2024
Florida State University News
PRESS RELEASE

Dr. Norman B. Anderson, clinical psychologist and well-known leader in the behavioral and social sciences, passed away on March 1, 2024. Dr. Anderson was born on October 16, 1955, in Greensboro, NC.

Anderson was appointed assistant vice president for research and academic affairs and professor of social work at Florida State University in 2017. In these roles he worked with faculty and administrators, including those at the College of Medicine, to advance the research mission of the university and to facilitate the success of emerging academic leaders.

 

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Feb 29, 2024
Tallahassee Democrat
PRESS RELEASE

FSU College of Medicine Interim Dean Alma Littles, M.D. and Pradeep Bhide, Ph.D., executive director of the FSU Institute for Pediatric Rare Diseases, joined State Rep. Adam Anderson at the Florida Capitol Thursday in observance of Rare Disease Day.

"It's the most fitting day for Rare Disease Day because it is in fact the most rare day of the year," Anderson said of the February 29 gathering, which included a number of parents whose children suffer from rare diseases.

The College of Medicine's newly funded institute will conduct research and use technologies like gene therapy to help unlock the most effective treatments for children with rare diseases.

"We know that patients prefer to stay closer to home to receive care, and we look forward to developing a center that will allow them to receive much of the early testing, counseling and treatment of pediatric rare diseases as close to home as possible," Littles said.