IMS Appointments Booking Page Updates

Sep 27, 2018

We have gained several new staff members in IMS, so we’ve made some changes to the Setmore Appointment booking page. We wanted to be sure you are aware of those changes so that you can make appointments with the correct person in our office. The following are the new categories for appointments on our appointment page:

  • Pre-Med/Pre-Health Advising- We recommend you see a pre-med/pre-health advisor for questions regarding Health Professions Schools/Requirements
  • Prospective IMS Students
  • Current IMS Students: Transfer Advising – We recommend all transfer students use this service in order to book with Emily Burgess, our Transfer Specialist
  • Current IMS Students: High School AA Advising - We recommend all high school AA students use this service in order to book with Emily Burgess, our Transfer Specialist.
  • Current IMS Students: Academic Advising – We recommend all other IMS students use this service for any academic related questions and/or concerns
  • Current IMS Students: Experiential Learning Advising - All students who have EL questions should use this service to book an appointment with our Community Coordinator, Heather Stitely.
  • Current IMS Students: Holds/Dean Stop Advising

You’ll first need to select the appropriate category based on your needs or student type, and then select the service that best fits what you are looking to achieve during your appointment.

You can make an appointment for any of the above services by visiting imsadvising.setmore.com. As a reminder, our appointments are available 2 weeks in advance, so if you need to get in to see someone, be sure to book early so you aren’t closed out of a desired time!

As always, if you have questions or concerns, please do not hesitate to reach out to us at imsadvising@med.fsu.edu.

 

Press Release

Florida State Medical Students to Meet Their Match

CONTACT: Doug Carlson, FSU College of Medicine
(850) 645-1255; doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu

March 18, 2015

FLORIDA STATE MEDICAL STUDENTS TO MEET THEIR MATCH

On Friday, the 115 members of the Florida State University College of Medicine Class of 2015 expect to find out where they will receive residency training — a defining moment in their medical careers — during a Match Day ceremony.

The students will simultaneously open envelopes, learning for the first time where they will spend the next three to seven years completing training in the medical specialty they will practice.

Graduating students at M.D.-granting medical schools across the United States receive their match information at the same time through the National Resident Matching Program, the primary system that matches applicants to residency programs with available positions at U.S. teaching hospitals.

The ceremony will take place:

FRIDAY, MARCH 20

NOON

RUBY DIAMOND CONCERT HALL

WESTCOTT BUILDING, 222 S. COPELAND ST.

FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY

TALLAHASSEE, FLORIDA

The ceremony can also be viewed online. Visit /matchday for parking and map information, as well as details about the webcast.

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Press Release

Florida State University College of Medicine Announces Match Day Results

CONTACT: Doug Carlson
(850) 645-1255; doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu

By Doug Carlson
March 20, 2015

FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF MEDICINE ANNOUNCES MATCH DAY RESULTS

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Graduating students in the Florida State University College of Medicine Class of 2015 received notification today of where they will enter residency training this summer.

Sixty-five of the 113 students (58 percent) who matched with a residency program did so in a primary care specialty, including internal medicine, family medicine, pediatrics and obstetrics/gynecology.

Other students matched in emergency medicine, general surgery, anesthesiology, psychiatry, orthopedic surgery, diagnostic radiology, radiation oncology, neurological surgery, neurology, otolaryngology, pathology, plastic surgery and urology.

Five students matched in Tallahassee – four with the College of Medicine’s internal medicine residency program at Tallahassee Memorial Hospital and one with TMH’s family medicine program.

“Once again our students matched at spectacular places, both here in Florida and across the country,” said John P. Fogarty, dean of the College of Medicine. “We're very, very proud of our super docs who are the next generation of patient-centered physicians to graduate from Florida State.”

Thirty-three percent of the students who matched did so in Florida, a state that ranks 42nd nationally in the number of available residency slots. To help address the issue the College of Medicine is partnering with several institutions around the state to sponsor more residency programs, including a planned new internal medicine residency program at Sarasota Memorial Hospital.

The residency match, conducted annually by the National Resident Matching Program, is the primary system that matches applicants to residency programs with available positions at U.S. teaching hospitals. Graduating medical students across the country receive their match information at the same time on the same day.

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For information about Florida State’s Match Day history, visit
http://med.fsu.edu/index.cfm?page=alumniFriends.whereTheyMatched

To see where past College of Medicine graduates are practicing, visit
http://public.med.fsu.edu/alumni/alumni.aspx?class=2005

Press Release

Testosterone Needs Estrogen’s Help To Inhibit Depression

CONTACT: Ron Hartung, FSU College of Medicine
(850) 645-9205; ronald.hartung@med.fsu.edu

March 2015

TESTOSTERONE NEEDS ESTROGEN’S HELP TO INHIBIT DEPRESSION

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — In popular culture, the phrase “battle of the sexes” seems to pit the male hormone (testosterone) against the female (estrogen). Now a Florida State University College of Medicine researcher has documented a way in which the two hormones work together to protect low-testosterone males from the effects of anxiety and depression.

Specifically, the testosterone must first be converted into estrogen. That’s the latest discovery from the lab of biomedical sciences Professor Mohamed Kabbaj. With a six-year grant from the National Institute of Mental Health, he is investigating the ways in which anxiety affects the sexes differently.

Women are 70 percent more likely than men to experience depression during their lifetime, according to the NIMH. It also reports that “major depressive disorder” affects more than 20 million U.S. adults each year.

So far, the link between testosterone conversion and anxiety/depression has been detected only in laboratory animals. But Kabbaj says the results are potentially promising for humans as well.

“Maybe in the future, when we are trying to develop an antidepressant that works in low-testosterone males, we can target some of the mechanisms by which testosterone acts, since it has numerous side effects,” he said.

Testosterone acts on many receptors and pathways in the brain, so the challenge is to come up with a drug that provides only the effect you want.

“A number of treatments are available for depression, but the drugs are not effective in all patients and the side effects can be serious, especially on the heart,” said biomedical sciences Professor Pradeep Bhide, director of the College of Medicine’s Center for Brain Repair. “Therefore, there is an urgent need for safer and more efficacious drugs to treat depression. Dr. Kabbaj’s research is offering new insights into the causes of depression and the role of hormones in this disorder. Such insights are critical for the development of new drugs and diagnostic tests.”

Kabbaj’s latest paper was published in Biological Psychiatry.

He already knew that testosterone had a protective effect on males, just as estrogen and progesterone do on females. He also knew that most testosterone was converted into estrogen in the brain. What he didn’t know was that those anxiety- and depression-inhibiting effects couldn’t be produced unless the testosterone was first converted to estrogen.

“There is an enzyme in the brain that ‘mediates’ the conversion of testosterone into estrogen,” Kabbaj said. “We inhibited that enzyme in a specific brain area implicated in the regulation of mood. And when you do that, you lose the antidepressant effect of testosterone. So the conversion is very important.”

His lab targeted the hippocampus area of the brain, where testosterone acts through what’s known as the MAPK pathway to induce its antidepressant and anti-anxiety effects.

“But we have to be careful about that pathway,” Kabbaj said, “because it’s also implicated in cellular growth and cancer. Therefore, we’re looking for other pathways that don’t have these effects. It’s complicated. Nothing is ever simple, but we’ll get there.”

The co-authors of the Biological Psychiatry paper are (or previously were) affiliated with the College of Medicine: Nicole Carrier, Ph.D. alumna; Samantha Saland, graduate student; Florian Duclot, research faculty; Huan He, research faculty; and Roger Mercer, director, Translational Sciences Laboratory.

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Press Release

FSU Is Key Player In National Push To Help Diverse Communities Target Autism

 CONTACT: Ron Hartung, FSU College of Medicine
(850) 645-9205; ronald.hartung@med.fsu.edu

March 31, 2015

FSU IS KEY PLAYER IN NATIONAL PUSH TO HELP DIVERSE COMMUNITIES TARGET AUTISM

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Researchers are enlisting the help of black churches and federally funded nutrition programs in the quest to identify young children who may show signs of autism.

The National Institute of Mental Health has awarded $10.4 million to a team of researchers led by Florida State University Distinguished Research Professor Amy Wetherby to implement a community-based approach to early intervention.

Her team’s five-year, $10.4 million project — “Mobilizing Community Systems to Engage Families in Early ASD Detection & Services” — includes researchers not only at Florida State but also Emory University, Weill Cornell Medical College and Drexel University.

Data released in March by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated one child in 68 was identified with ASD. Symptoms vary widely, from a mild degree of social impairment to intellectual and language disabilities. Research suggests that early and intensive intervention can reduce those challenges, but early screening and referral to treatment are not routinely provided in pediatric settings. Wetherby and her colleagues are determined to make them more available.

“We can do this,” said Wetherby, director of FSU’s Autism Institute. “We know how to find these children early. We just need to help build the capacity of communities to do this.”

The NIMH has asked for a set of effective strategies engineered for rapid adoption and implementation on a broad scale. Here are highlights from the Wetherby team’s proposal:

•Because problems in minority and low-income children often are traditionally detected later than in other children, underserved families are a crucial part of this project.

•Because underserved families often don’t have a strong relationship with a pediatrician, this project will test other, more familiar venues where children can be screened — such as black churches and the federally funded Women, Infants and Children nutrition program.

•Because states differ in the intervention services they offer, this project involves screening 9,000 children in each of four states: Florida, Georgia, Pennsylvania and New York.

“NIH (the parent agency of NIMH) has historically funded hard-science research,” Wetherby said. “Although they were making major gains, there’s a lot of discussion about what is actually changing in the lives of children. So they decided to try changing things in the community. Everything we do at the Autism Institute is community-based.”

With her help, communities learn what to look for as their children develop.

“Parents may not be aware of the early social communication milestones, like gestures,” Wetherby said. “By 16 months they should have 16 gestures. They should be reaching, waving, clapping, blowing a kiss, all before they have words. Part of what we’re doing is teaching parents these milestones — so they’ll understand that a child who hasn’t mastered them by 18 months needs to get referred, to follow up, to get help.”

In Florida, the researchers will screen children in Fort Myers, Sarasota, Naples and the surrounding rural counties — including Immokalee, a largely Hispanic farmworker community where the College of Medicine helps to operate a health education site.

“You’d think that screening should be done by a pediatrician or family physician,” Wetherby said. “But because we’re interested in underserved populations and minorities, we thought, ‘Where are other places they would go that might be effective?’ So we’re targeting three community systems. Primary care practices are one. Second are federal programs such as WIC and Early Head Start. Third are churches, through our collaboration with the National Black Church Initiative, a network of 34,000 churches across the country to reach families.”

With volunteers already in place, one of the black church group’s initiatives connects minority families with health care. Wetherby said the churches’ child development specialists will get ASD training through the Web-based Autism Navigator course, developed at the Autism Institute. Then on Sundays they can invite families with children 9 to 18 months old to get screened — and, when appropriate, refer them to primary care.

Someone in the participating physician’s office also needs to get the Autism Navigator training. “It’s automated in a way that will save them time,” Wetherby said. After all, the NIMH is looking for systems that will work in the real world, where time is scarce.

“Based on the estimates, we should be helping to identify roughly 411 children who have autism,” she said. “If we can identify those children within 18 months and get them into good early intervention, 90 percent of them, if not all, should then be able to be ready for regular kindergarten. It doesn’t mean they don’t have autism, but it means they’re doing well enough that they can function, learn and succeed. So it’s going to help the community at each site involved in this project. But more importantly, the research findings are going to help children all over the world.”

Two other College of Medicine faculty members are co-investigators in the project. Joedrecka Brown Speights, associate professor of family medicine, will help shape the research questions and help the team work more effectively with minority and low-income families. Heather Flynn, associate professor of behavioral sciences and social medicine, will help engage families more effectively through a technique called motivational interviewing.

Besides Wetherby, the principal investigators are Ami Klin, Emory; Catherine Lord, Weill Cornell; and Craig Newschaffer, Drexel. Among the co-investigators are Elizabeth Slate, FSU; the Rev. Anthony Evans, NBCI president; and Leon Rozenblit and David Voccola, Prometheus Research.

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Press Release

Florida State and Sarasota Memorial Announce Physician Training Program

CONTACT: Doug Carlson, FSU College of Medicine
(850) 694-3735; doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu

Kim Savage, Sarasota Memorial Health Care System
(941) 893-7649; kim-savage@smh.com

April 15, 2015

FLORIDA STATE AND SARASOTA MEMORIAL ANNOUNCE PHYSICIAN TRAINING PROGRAM

SARASOTA, Fla. – The Florida State University College of Medicine and Sarasota Memorial Health Care System unveiled plans to create an internal medicine residency program in Sarasota.

The program, expected to produce as many as 10 new internal medicine physicians a year when at full capacity, will be the first allopathic residency program between St. Petersburg and Fort Myers along Florida’s southwest coast. The area is in need of more physicians to take care of a population that grew by 20,000 people between 2010 and 2014 and is home to more than 100,000 residents age 65 and older.

“Ten years ago we brought medical education to Sarasota in a community-based approach that is the foundation for how we teach our medical students,” said John P. Fogarty, M.D., dean of the College of Medicine. “This year we are celebrating the 10th anniversary of our Sarasota Regional Campus. During this time we’ve built relationships throughout the local medical community, and the one we’ve developed with Sarasota Memorial has led us to this important next step.

“This new internal medicine residency program is a significant part of the commitment to producing future physicians for Sarasota and this entire region.”

The residency program will be based at Sarasota Memorial Hospital with the Florida State University College of Medicine as its institutional sponsor.

“Creating a residency program is the next logical step in Sarasota Memorial’s progression to becoming a teaching hospital, but it’s also an important move for our region,” said Steve Taylor, M.D., chief medical operations officer for Sarasota Memorial. “Without more residency programs, the physician shortage that Florida is experiencing will only worsen as our population swells and our existing physician workforce retires.”

First, the program will need to hire a director and apply for accreditation from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME). If all goes according to plan, the program could begin taking applications from prospective residents as early as 2016 and admit its first residents in 2017.

Medical school graduates are required to complete residency training in their chosen specialty in order to gain board certification and become independently practicing physicians. Numerous studies have shown that most physicians end up practicing near where they completed residency training.

At present, Florida ranks 42nd nationally in its percentage of medical residents, despite being the third-most populous state in the country. Alaska, Idaho, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming – the only states with fewer per capita medical residents – have a combined population roughly half the size of Florida’s.

In an effort to provide more graduate medical education opportunities in the state, the FSU College of Medicine has partnered with a number of hospitals to sponsor new residency programs. In the past five years, the College of Medicine has sponsored new programs in Tallahassee (internal medicine) and Fort Myers (family medicine). In addition, programs in general surgery and dermatology are pending accreditation in Tallahassee, where Florida State also sponsors a fellowship for advanced training in procedural dermatology.

The new program in Sarasota will be the seventh residency program sponsored by Florida State.

“The College of Medicine commends Sarasota Memorial Health Care System for recognizing the return on investment to the patient community by training more primary care physicians,” said Joan Meek, M.D., associate dean for graduate medical education at the FSU College of Medicine.

“The reality is that health care cannot be provided to those who need it without enough providers to do the job,” Meek said. “Sarasota Memorial understands that reality.”

Third- and fourth-year students from the medical school’s Sarasota campus do clinical rotations on a year-round basis under direct supervision of community physicians at area health centers and physician offices, including Sarasota Memorial.

To date, 795 physicians have graduated from the FSU College of Medicine, which first accepted students in 2001. Internal medicine and family medicine are the top two residency program choices for College of Medicine alumni.

Press Release

NAACP, FAMU, DOH-Leon, & FSU College of Medicine Put Heads Together For Greater Frenchtown and Southside Area Neighbors

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                                                                                   Contact: J. Page Jolly
May 4, 2015                                                                                                                                                     Telephone: (850) 606-8190
(850) 321-3213

NAACP, FAMU, DOH-LEON, & FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE PUT HEADS TOGETHER FOR GREATER FRENCHTOWN AND SOUTHSIDE AREA NEIGHBORS
--Community Advisory Council to be new voice for communities--

Tallahassee–The Florida Agricultural & Mechanical University’s College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Center For Health Equity, the Florida Department of Health in Leon County, the Tallahassee Branch National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and The Florida State University’s College of Medicine are launching their own version of a family kitchen table meeting to give voice to the residents of two neighborhoods traditionally overlooked. The Community Advisory Council kickoff will be on Saturday, May 9, from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Two meals will be served for the residents who come to talk around the kitchen table at the Richardson-Lewis Clinic Building, at 872 West Orange Avenue, Tallahassee, Florida.

The first meeting will be an opportunity to meet the neighbors over coffee. The goals are to put into place the membership, discuss goals and talk about how to proceed. “We need people who have a mission, who say, ‘I want to be heard, I want to make progress, I want to make changes!’” said Cynthia Seaborn, Health Committee Chair, Tallahassee Branch of the NAACP.

“Leaders and citizens both agree that our agencies need to hear feedback from residents about life-altering issues, and we must work with them to find solutions,” said Claudia Blackburn, RN, MPH, Health Officer for DOH-Leon. “We must open our ears and help our residents make the changes they want and need to create a healthier place to live, work, play and pray.”

“This is the beginning of an era of self-determination and self-progress,” said Dale Landry, President, Tallahassee Branch NAACP. “Too often we have seen others try to define disparities in health impacting minorities, who are neither minority, nor have the best interest of the health of minorities in mind. This is the first step to provide an opportunity for minorities to take an active role in determining what health disparities are impacting them and to take a lead in defining how best to correct it.”

“We must not remain tone-deaf to our neighbors’ concerns. The Community Advisory Council is a very important step in changing the status quo,” said Dr. Michael Thompson, Dean of the FAMU College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences. “We will do whatever we can to support current leaders and help grow new leaders.”

“Gone are the days when doing what’s best for a group of people precludes their input,” said Dr. Les Beitsch, Chair, Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine, Center for Medicine and Public Health, FSU College of Medicine. “The sponsoring groups of CAC will be a sounding board and technical advisor for the voices of Greater Frenchtown and the Southside area. Good ideas don’t just come from afar. Good ideas come from kitchen table talks with friends, family and neighbors over cups of coffee and glasses of tea.”

“Custom has it that the kitchen is the heart of the home—where nurture is natural and nature is shaped, where talk and ideas flow freely and where every member of the family has a say in the running of their everyday lives. The heart of the home is where leaders grow and goals are born. That’s what we hope for, for CAC,” said Claudia Blackburn.

Invitation

Who: Residents of Greater Frenchtown and Southside areas are cordially invited to attend and help launch the Community Advisory Council. A free breakfast and lunch will be served.

What: Free breakfast, lunch and good conversation with neighbors who want to make progress on the health of the Greater Frenchtown and Southside area communities.

When: Saturday, May 9, from 9 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.

Where: The Richardson-Lewis Clinic Building
872 West Orange Avenue
Tallahassee, Florida 32303 

Call to Register: 850-606-8153.

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Press Release

College of Medicine In Top 10 For Producing Family Physicians

CONTACT: Ron Hartung, FSU College of Medicine
(850) 645-9205; ronald.hartung@med.fsu.edu

May 5, 2015

COLLEGE OF MEDICINE IN TOP 10
FOR PRODUCING FAMILY PHYSICIANS

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — The Florida State University College of Medicine is ranked seventh on a just-released list of the nation’s top 10 producers of family physicians.

The American Academy of Family Physicians compiled the ranking based on a three-year average reflecting the 2012, 2013 and 2014 classes. Of the FSU College of Medicine’s graduates, 16.2 percent pursued family medicine residencies.

“The FSU College of Medicine has only 10 graduating classes to date, and we are just beginning to demonstrate our excellent outcomes in producing the kinds of doctors that Florida needs,” said Dean John P. Fogarty, a family physician. “We have great graduates matching at wonderful programs throughout the country and a true commitment to primary care and patient-centered, community-based care. Recognition as one of the top 10 schools for producing family physicians is a great affirmation that our focus is working.”

The United States is facing a shortage of primary-care physicians, according to AAFP President Robert Wergin.

“Although we’ve seen incremental growth in student interest in family medicine, those increases will not meet the skyrocketing demand for family physicians,” Wergin said in an AAFP press release. “These top schools are outstanding examples of the commitment to building the nation’s family physician workforce.”

The AAFP tracks the success of U.S. allopathic (M.D.) and osteopathic (D.O.) medical schools in producing doctors who select family medicine residencies, and the journal Family Medicine publishes the results annually.

The FSU College of Medicine was also in the top 10 in 2007, 2008 and 2009.

“This reflects a commitment by the entire school to meet the legislative mandate that created our school with a focus on primary care and our mission of meeting the needs of communities, especially the underserved populations, across the state,” said Daniel Van Durme, also a family physician, and chair of the Department of Family Medicine and Rural Health. “From outreach programs in rural areas that begin before college, through admissions policies that focus on characteristics likely to produce family doctors through our innovative curriculum, this award reflects positively on the entire College of Medicine.”

According to the AAFP, in addition to providing preventive and first-encounter care, family physicians diagnose and treat patients with conditions ranging from a sore throat to multiple, complex conditions such as diabetes combined with congestive heart failure. Research has shown family physicians are the usual source of care for more than six in 10 patients with anxiety, depression or diabetes; six in 10 patients with cancer; and nearly six in 10 patients with heart disease.

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Press Release

Florida State and Escambia County Medical Society Foundation To Announce Gift Supporting Medical Education In Pensacola

Contact: Erica Huffman
Escambia County Medical Society Foundation
(850) 478-0706 ext. 2; director@escambiacms.org

-or-

Doug Carlson
Florida State University College of Medicine
(850) 694-3735; doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu


FLORIDA STATE AND ESCAMBIA COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY FOUNDATION TO ANNOUNCE GIFT SUPPORTING MEDICAL EDUCATION IN PENSACOLA


On Wednesday the Escambia County Medical Society Foundation will present a major gift to the Florida State University College of Medicine. The gift will establish the Escambia/Santa Rosa County Medical Society Scholarship Endowment Fund in support of medical education in the Pensacola area.

The FSU College of Medicine’s Pensacola Regional Campus is in its 12th year of operation. Third- and fourth-year medical students assigned to the Pensacola campus work in one-on-one apprenticeship style rotations alongside experienced and distinguished physicians throughout Pensacola, including numerous physicians who are members of the Escambia County Medical Society.

The College of Medicine’s unique, community-based approach to medical education supports the college’s mission to focus on producing more primary care physicians. The Escambia County Medical Society Foundation gift is in support of the college’s mission and its effort in the Pensacola area. That effort has helped to produce numerous College of Medicine alumni physicians who now practice in the area.

Participating in the announcement will be members of the Escambia County Medical Society Foundation board, FSU College of Medicine Dean John P. Fogarty and Paul McLeod, dean of the College of Medicine’s Pensacola Regional Campus.


WEDNESDAY, MAY 6
6:30 P.M.
HILTON GARDEN INN
1144 AIRPORT BOULEVARD
PENSACOLA

Press Release

FSU College of Medicine Joins National Effort To Understand and Treat Depression

CONTACTS: Heather Flynn
(850) 645-7367; heather.flynn@med.fsu.edu

Doug Carlson
(850) 694-3735; doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu

May 8, 2015

FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE JOINS NATIONAL EFFORT
TO UNDERSTAND AND TREAT DEPRESSION

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — The Florida State University College of Medicine will join the National Network of Depression Centers to continue its work on the diagnosis, treatment and scientific discovery in depression and bipolar illness.

The NNDC invited the College of Medicine to become an associate member in recognition of the college’s efforts to expand the expertise for these illnesses.

“This is a tremendous opportunity for FSU to join a national collaborative effort to tackle depression and related mental health disorders,” said Heather Flynn, associate professor and vice chair for research in the medical school’s Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine.

“Progress in eliminating one of the world’s most disabling conditions has been very slow over several decades, mostly due to people working on the problem independently. By joining forces in a growing network of centers across the country we can bring something unique to the effort to accelerate the pace of eradicating this disease.”

The NNDC’s mission is to develop and foster connections among members to use the power of a network to advance scientific discovery and to provide stigma-free, evidence-based care to patients with depressive and bipolar illnesses.

The NNDC brings together experts from across the nation who:

• Actively pursue initiatives in education, research, clinical care delivery and community outreach
• Engage in interdisciplinary collaborations both within their home institution and across the network
• Identify opportunities for multi-site studies and emerging partnerships

“By uniting in a collaborative network, we bring the best minds together, regardless of their location, to advance the state of the science in the field of mood disorders,” said John Greden, founding chair of the NNDC. “To best leverage the expertise of our growing network, we are about to launch our new Mood Outcomes program. It combines both a clinical care program with research programs addressing depressions and bipolar illnesses. Only by doing both will we simultaneously help people while generating the data needed to develop personalized treatment breakthroughs. Florida State University will greatly contribute to both efforts.”

The FSU College of Medicine uses a community-based medical education program with regional campuses and clinical training sites throughout Florida. Nearly 2,500 community physicians are part of the clerkship faculty and a number of those have expressed interest in the college’s Clinical Research Network (CRN).

The CRN has the potential to include a diverse mix of patients from all socioeconomic backgrounds that is representative of Florida’s population.

“With our primary care focus and distributed model of education, we will be able to expand this national network into rural and underserved areas and promote a much more integrated approach between primary care and mental health services,” said John P. Fogarty, dean of the FSU College of Medicine. “We are excited to be part of this program and look forward to highly productive research collaborations.”

“To date, research on causes and treatments for mood disorders has mostly included specialty-care patients at single centers and sites, which has limited its impact,” Flynn said. “Access to such a broad and diverse patient population is vital in order to develop a better understanding of mental health and other health issues that can be relevant to many different kinds of people.”

Flynn and the FSU College of Medicine have been involved in developing new models of clinical health research collaboration by creating the capacity for researchers to share data and to use standard tools for mental health measurement across diverse sites.

Specific projects that are planned and underway focus on improving care for perinatal mental health, sex differences in depression, as well as factors related to suicide. The College of Medicine also will be collaborating with university departments, community organizations and other Florida universities to strengthen the potential and impact of the NNDC affiliation.

The FSU College of Medicine joins a network that includes centers of excellence affiliated with Brigham & Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Duke University, Emory University, Johns Hopkins Medical School, Mayo Clinic, Medical University of South Carolina, Menninger Clinic and Baylor College of Medicine, Stanford University, Weill Cornell Medical College, Massachusetts Medical School and the universities of California-San Francisco, Cincinnati & Lindner, Colorado-Denver, Illinois at Chicago, Iowa, Louisville, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Texas Southwestern.

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