Florida State University’s College of Medicine has established its fifth residency program with the announcement Friday of an agreement with Winter Haven Hospital. The college will establish a family medicine program in Winter Haven, about 45 miles southwest of Orlando.
The College of Medicine's annual report includes details about the physicians we are producing for Florida, significant achievements in our research program, and data that reflect the success of our medical education program.
Assessing the Florida State University College of Medicine's socioeconomic impact through its first 15 years of operation. Also including background about the medical school's history and structure.
Created less than two decades ago to address the most pressing issues in access to health care, FSU's College of Medicine today is the nation's most diverse medical school. Read about it in the fall 2016 issue of FSU MED.
The Florida State University College of Medicine 2016 annual report. Includes updated information about how College of Medicine alumni physicians are helping to address health-care needs throughout Florida.
College of Medicine research in Immokalee with the potential to guide rural communities on ways to provide behavioral health solutions for children. Also, catching up with College of Medicine alumni in Class Notes.
Learn about the way the College of Medicine is being responsive to community needs through the physicians we produce. Read about the generous donors who support the important work taking place here. It's all in our 2017 annual report.
Students from Florida State University and Florida A&M University represent the first results of a new inter-institutional program linking them with University of Florida in a new pathway for medical education.
In addition to updates on research, alumni, clinical expansion and program growth, the fall 2018 issue of FSU MED takes a look at the College of Medicine’s efforts to instill a culture of wellness to address the root causes of burnout that are impacting medical professionals at an alarming rate.
Leon County Emergency Medical Services is receiving national recognition after presenting the findings from a study done in conjunction with the FSU College of Medicine. The results were published in the journal Prehospital Emergency Care and presented at the National Association of EMS Physicians annual meeting in San Diego, California. The data showed that resuscitating a person in cardiac arrest via IV injection has a higher success rate than other methods.