Press Release

FSU Faculty Awarded $226M in Research Dollars

CONTACT: Zachary Boehm, University Communications
(850) 645-1504; zboehm@fsu.edu
@FSUResearch

July 2018

FSU FACULTY AWARDED $226M IN RESEARCH DOLLARS

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida State University researchers brought in more than $226 million in the 2018 fiscal year from federal, state and private sources to support investigations into areas such as nuclear science, climate change, the effect of deep space travel on human health and much more.

This is a $16 million increase over the prior fiscal year and the second highest amount FSU researchers have ever received in a single year. The university has received more than $1 billion over five years.

“This news is evidence of the growth of Florida State University and the exceptional work by the faculty here,” Vice President for Research Gary K. Ostrander said. “We have made critical investments to support our researchers as they apply for these competitive grants and are seeing a great return on that.”

The yearly total received a boost from university researchers’ increased focus on pursuing funding from the National Institutes of Health. Over the past year, FSU researchers have received a 73 percent increase in NIH funding.

Florida State is one of the leaders in the state for NIH funding. FSU ranks fifth in the state for NIH dollars, ahead of research heavyweights such as the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville and the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute in Tampa.

The university also received a record number of awards from the National Science Foundation, with 201 awards this past fiscal year.

“What these dollars represent is the dedication by researchers to do work that improves the human condition,” Ostrander said. “Researchers are working on treatments for Zika, Alzheimer’s and cancer. They’re developing new technologies that can improve our daily lives. These decisions by federal officials and other organizations to award FSU this type of money shows their faith in our faculty members to make the big scientific breakthroughs that can change our world.”

This is the second highest amount that FSU researchers have received in a single fiscal year from federal, state and private sources. The record year was 2014 when researchers brought in $230.1 million. However, that total was boosted by federal stimulus dollars that had to be used in a finite period.

This swell of research activity coincides with a dramatic jump in national rankings by FSU. In two years, the university surged ahead 10 spots in the U.S. News & World Report rankings. FSU is now ranked No. 33 in the nation among public universities.

The Florida Legislature’s designation of FSU as a preeminent university in the state has provided FSU with additional funding that has allowed the university to hire more faculty in the health sciences and other areas.

###

Press Release

FSU Family Medicine Residency Program at Winter Haven Hospital Names Founding Director

July 2018

CONTACT: Angel Neubrand, BayCare
(863) 291-6736; angel.neubrand@baycare.org

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

 

FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY FAMILY MEDICINE RESIDENCY PROGRAM AT WINTER HAVEN HOSPITAL NAMES FOUNDING DIRECTOR 

 

WINTER HAVEN – Nathan Falk, M.D., will be the first program director for the Florida State University College of Medicine Family Medicine Residency Program at Winter Haven Hospital. The residency program was announced earlier this year, with the hiring of a program director serving as a pivotal point for curriculum development, faculty recruitment, and completion of the accreditation application.

Falk, a graduate of the University of Nebraska Medical Center College of Medicine, currently is medical director and associate program director for the Florida Hospital Family Medicine Residency Program in Orlando. He is expected to begin work in Winter Haven in October.

“I am extremely excited for the opportunity to help Florida State and Winter Haven Hospital start this new residency program. It’s a great opportunity to help move health care and primary care forward in Florida and Polk County,” said Falk, a 2015 recipient of the U.S. Air Force Meritorious Service Medal.

“Dr. Falk will be instrumental in initiating our Family Medicine Residency Program,” said Steve Nierman, president of Winter Haven Hospital. “He arrives with incredible experience and a passion for improving primary care access for our communities.”

Florida State and Winter Haven Hospital have applied with the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) to establish the new residency program. The length of the accreditation process and other preparations will make it likely that the program’s first residents will arrive in 2020.

The three-year program is expected to admit six new residents each year for a total of 18 residents. In addition to receiving in-depth training in the field of family medicine, the residents will train and provide care in a community with significant needs for more primary-care physicians.

“This residency program is a real mission fit for the College of Medicine, and we are thrilled that Dr. Falk has agreed to be the founding director,” said Joan Meek, M.D., associate dean for graduate medical education at the College of Medicine. “Dr. Falk is an experienced medical educator and leader. The program has the potential to have a significant impact on health outcomes in the area. Ultimately, we hope to encourage more family physicians to live and work in areas of the state in which they are most needed.”

Falk served as chief resident and faculty at the University of Nebraska Family Medicine Residency Program and has served as clinical faculty for the FSU College of Medicine and the University of Central Florida College of Medicine since 2016.

“The goal of an excellent family physician is to provide high-quality care for most of every patient’s needs. We are truly the specialists in providing whole-person care,” Falk said. “In Winter Haven, the local medical staff of all specialties are very excited to help train our residents in this manner. They will have the advantage of being the only residents at Winter Haven Hospital and thus have exclusive access to excellent, unopposed, hands-on training in an intimate community-based setting.

“Our goal is to help provide outstanding primary care for years to come in Central Florida. As such, we intend to recruit residents dedicated to family medicine and serving underserved patients. Having residents from Florida wanting to stay here to practice would be fabulous.”

###