Press Release

Family Medicine Residency Program Receives Full Accreditation

Contact: Doug Carlson
(850) 645-1255 or (850) 694-3735
Doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu

-or-

Mary Briggs
(239) 454-8765 or (239) 851-0136
Mary.briggs@leememorial.org

May 23, 2013


FAMILY MEDICINE RESIDENCY PROGRAM RECEIVES FULL ACCREDITATION


FORT MYERS – The Florida State University College of Medicine and Lee Memorial Health System received news that their family medicine residency program has received full accreditation for the maximum initial interval of three years.

“This is exciting news and something we had been anticipating. With this announcement we can begin interviewing fourth-year medical students this fall in order to choose the top candidates to become our first class of residents,” said Gary Goforth, M.D., director of the Florida State University College of Medicine Family Medicine Residency Program at Lee Memorial Health System.

The program, expected to produce six new family medicine physicians a year, will be the first residency program in Southwest Florida approved by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Educate (ACGME). Among the fastest-growing regions in the state, the area needs more physicians to take care of a population that grew by more than 40 percent in Lee County between 2000 and 2010.

The Family Medicine Residency Program is intended to help combat a growing shortage of primary care physicians. Numerous studies have shown that most physicians end up practicing near where they completed residency or fellowship training.

Residency program faculty physicians already are seeing patients in the Family Medicine Center at Lee Memorial Hospital to build the patient base needed for the arrival of the first class of residents in 2014.

The announcement came during the May 20-22 meeting of the family medicine review committee of the ACGME, the sanctioning body of graduate medical education in the U.S. and Canada.

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Apr 10, 2018
Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Approval to launch a new residency program in emergency medicine -- designed to build up the local supply of doctors trained in this field -- has been granted to the Florida State University College of Medicine and Sarasota Memorial Health Care System by the the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education.

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Apr 17, 2018
SRQ Magazine

The Florida State University College of Medicine and Sarasota Memorial Health Care System have received approval to launch a new Emergency Medicine residency program to meet healthcare and physician workforce needs in Sarasota and surrounding communities.

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Apr 17, 0018
Tallahassee Democrat

First-year medical students Gabe Lowenhaar and Harielle Deshommes traveled to Immokalee during spring break for FSUCares' annual medical outreach and served as interpreters.

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Apr 23, 2018
UWF News

On Friday, April 20, the University of West Florida celebrated the grand opening of University Park Center, a multi-use facility that will now house the College of Medicine's Pensacola Regional Campus in addition to UWF's athletics program and College of Health.

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Apr 24, 2018

Light stretching can make a big difference for elderly people with low mobility, according to a new study from a Florida State University-led team of international researchers including lead researcher and College of Medicine professor Judy Muller-Delp.

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May 03, 2018
SRQ Magazine

Deepak Nair, clinical associate professor at the FSU College of Medicine, has been elected president of the Sarasota County Medical Society.

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May 03, 2018
SRQ Magazine

Deepak Nair, clinical associate professor at the FSU College of Medicine, has been elected president of the Sarasota County Medical Society.

Press Release

Bus Trips Give FSU Medical Students Glimpse of Rural Medicine

CONTACT: Gail Bellamy
(850) 644-2373, gail.bellamy@med.fsu.edu
or
Doug Carlson
(850) 694-3735; doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu
 

May 29, 2013
 

BUS TRIPS GIVE FSU MEDICAL STUDENTS
GLIMPSE OF RURAL MEDICINE

 

Friday, first-year College of Medicine students will board buses and fan out across North Florida to explore rural health care. It’s the FSU College of Medicine Rural Education Opportunity Program (REOP), sponsored by the Florida Blue Foundation. The idea is to increase students’ familiarity with rural health — and the possibility that they will practice rural medicine — by exposing them early to rural communities and health providers. 
 

This year, four buses each will depart with 30 first-year students, plus faculty and staff from the College of Medicine, other FSU colleges and Florida A&M University. The destinations are:
 

•    Graceville and Marianna in Jackson County, where they will visit a VA outpatient clinic.
•    Cairo in Grady County, Ga.
•    Perry in Taylor County.
•    And Crawfordville in Wakulla County, where they will visit a senior services center.
 

In addition to visiting rural hospitals, health departments and medical practices, they will meet and hear from primary care physicians, nurse practitioners, administrators, community leaders, and from second-year medical students who participated in the 2012 REOP.
 

Buses will depart:


FRIDAY, MAY 31
8 A.M. (CAIRO);
8:15 A.M. (MARIANNA) and
8:45 A.M. (PERRY AND CRAWFORDVILLE)
(All buses expected to return around 3 p.m.)
FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
1115 W. CALL ST.
TALLAHASSEE, FLA.

Directions: From downtown, travel west on Tennessee Street and turn left on Stadium Drive. The College of Medicine is at Stadium Drive and Call Street. Press parking will be available by RSVP.
 

Visit http://med.fsu.edu/index.cfm?page=ruralMedicalPrograms.home for more information about the College of Medicine’s rural health programs.
 

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Press Release

FSU College of Medicine Researcher Links Epigenetic Mechanisms To Social Bonding

CONTACT: Julie Jordan, FSU College of Medicine
(850) 645-9699; julie.jordan@med.fsu.edu
 

June 2013
 

FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE RESEARCHER LINKS
EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS TO SOCIAL BONDING

 

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — People who have autism, schizophrenia or similar disorders often lack the ability to form secure relationships. If that condition could be addressed at the molecular level, their overall health and quality of life could improve.
 

Florida State University College of Medicine researcher Mohamed Kabbaj published his latest social-relationship discoveries in Nature Neuroscience following a comprehensive study of brain behavior and partner preference.
 

Kabbaj studied chemical changes, or “epigenetic mechanisms,” that loosen chromatin structure in the prairie vole — a small mammal that typically forms lifelong bonds after a 16- to 24-hour mating period. Prairie voles, which protect one another from intruders and share parental duties, are often used as models to study social bonding, attachment and love in other animals, including humans.
 

“Prairie voles develop social monogamy,” said Kabbaj, an associate professor in the College of Medicine’s Department of Biomedical Sciences. “They cheat occasionally, but they always go back to their mate. That’s what makes them unique.”
 

This pair-bonding is associated with changes in brain chemistry after mating. With a drug injection, Kabbaj and his team were able to produce the same change even though the voles had not mated.
 

“It’s the first time anyone’s shown any epigenetic basis for partner preference,” Jeremy Day, a University of Alabama at Birmingham neuroepigeneticist who was not involved in the study, told The Scientist.
 

During the experiment, Kabbaj and his team first paired virgin female voles with male partners for six hours without allowing them to mate. Then they injected histone deacetylase inhibitors into the pleasure center of the brain, or nucleus accumbens. That injection caused the DNA and the proteins surrounding it (histones) to relax, allowing for increased expression of genes related to pleasure.
 

After the cohabitation period and the injection, the female vole displayed partner preference behavior for her paired male as if mating had occurred.
 

Kabbaj and his lab then examined the voles’ brains and saw the same neurobiological changes that take place in nature after the normal mating period: increased levels of the expression of genes related to pleasure and reward at the receptors that cause social attachment.
 

To determine whether the six-hour cohabitation period was required to produce the result, Kabbaj’s team tested the animals without pairing them with a male. They discovered that six-hour cohabitation plus the drug was required to create the same permanent brain changes as seen after mating.
 

The next question Kabbaj and colleagues want to answer is what mechanisms maintain this bond for life.
“In humans, it has been shown that this social attachment — the formation of this strong couple, a healthy couple — leads to an increase in life expectancy, a reduction in psychological disorders, a stronger immune system and a stronger cardiovascular system,” Kabbaj said.
 

This advancement in understanding social attachment in light of epigenetic factors will further knowledge about how certain drugs can help those who lack these social abilities, improving their relationships and overall health.
 

“It should not be long before we can apply these findings to humans, because some of these drugs are used to treat cancer, epilepsy and other diseases already,” Kabbaj said. “One just has to study social attachment in patients treated with these drugs and expand them to other psychopathologies, like autism and schizophrenia. Social bonding may occur.”
 

The study was co-authored by FSU psychology Professor Zuoxin Wang, as well as researchers Hui Wang, Florian Duclot and Yan Liu, all of whom are associated with FSU’s interdisciplinary Program in Neuroscience. The study was supported by grants from the National Institute of Mental Health.
 

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