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Feb 01, 2024
Tallahassee Democrat
PRESS RELEASE

State Rep. Adam Anderson on Thursday announced the establishment of Florida State University's new Institute for Pediatric Rare Diseases.

The state’s first-of-its-kind center is personal to the Palm Harbor Republican, who lost his four-year-old son Andrew to a rare genetic disorder called Tay-Sachs disease - a disease that causes rapid degeneration of nerve cells in the brain and in the spinal cord.

News of the Week

Help FSUCares SSTRIDE Student Award Fund Provide More Pathways

Founded by students in the first College of Medicine class at Florida State University, FSUCares remains devoted to underserved and unprivileged populations, both locally and internationally, while exposing and preparing future physicians for the changing faces of medicine and society.

Putting its alignment with the college’s mission statement to practice, the FSUCares SSTRIDE Student Award Fund provides scholarship assistance to college-bound high school seniors from the Science Students Together Reaching Instructional Diversity & Excellence (SSTRIDE) program.

Through its first two years, the fund has awarded nine scholarships to students intent on pursuing degrees in STEM fields to assist in their transition to Florida State University. Through gifts to the FSUCares SSTRIDE Student Award Fund SPARK Campaign, organizers hope to add at least three more students from the 2024 high school graduating class to that count.

“SSTRIDE prepared me for college by giving me academic support and mentorship, while also giving me experiences in the medical field that led me to the decision of my future career,” said FSU sophomore Arianna Gomez-Martinez, a graduate of the SSTRIDE Collier County program and 2022 FSUCares SSTRIDE Scholarship recipient.

“Getting scholarships took the burden off my parents and me when we were struggling to find a way to pay for my education,” added Gomez-Martinez, an Immokalee High School graduate who is studying to become a medical social worker. “It allowed me to come to college stress-free and to focus only on my schoolwork.” 

FSUCare SSTRIDE scholarship recipients
Clockwise from top left: Arianna Gomez-Martinez,
Josica Previlus, Leah Wojtaszek and Kaley
Maze (taking selfie).

That is  precisely what FSUCares Past-President Neha Saini, a member of the M.D. Class of 2024, hoped the scholarship program would accomplish when it was established. A SSTRIDE mentor dating back to 2018, she has a great appreciation for the many challenges facing the programs’ participants.

“All of us at FSUCares are so grateful for the support this scholarship has received,” Saini said. “The satisfaction derived from offering these opportunities to alleviate financial burdens is immeasurable. [SSTRIDE] goes beyond mere academic support; it’s about empowering individuals from challenging backgrounds to pursue their aspirations.”

Josica Previlus, a first-generation college student and another scholarship recipient in 2022 from the Immokalee program, credits the resources provided by her SSTRIDE experience for opening her eyes to career possibilities within STEM.

A sophomore double-majoring in criminology and information technology, she is exploring career possibilities in cyber security, possibly in a health setting.

“Receiving scholarships was the sole reason I did not need to take out any loans,” Previlus said. “It paved my journey to FSU.”

Leah Wojtaszek and Kaley Maze, graduates of the SSTRIDE program in Sarasota County, were among the three scholarship recipients in 2023. Freshmen at FSU, they are on different undergraduate paths with the same goal: attending medical school.

Wojtaszek, who attended Sarasota High School, was accepted into the Interdisciplinary Medical Sciences Pre-Clinical Professions program. Maze, who graduated from Sarasota’s Booker High School, is majoring in cell and molecular neuroscience. Each cited SSTRIDE experiences for influencing their career plans.

Still uncertain of whether she will become a physician or a medical researcher, Wojtaszek found her passion for a health-care career through SSTRIDE’s guest speakers and clinical skills experiences, such as the visiting physical therapist who taught the class how to wrap an ankle with kinesiology tape.

Maze hopes to become a neurologist and credits SSTRIDE’s Pre-Med Mentoring Program for providing the guidance necessary to navigate college life. But her favorite experience was attending the recent SSTRIDE Alumni Leadership Conference, where networking opportunities with SSTRIDE alumni physicians buoyed her confidence as she follows her chosen career path.

“Without scholarships, I would not be at FSU,” Maze said.

“Seeing these positive transformations and knowing that we contribute to creating more equitable opportunities for these students brings a profound sense of fulfillment to me and my FSUCares peers,” Saini said. “The collective efforts of medical students joining forces to support younger students facing similar challenges conveys a powerful message about the values upheld by the College of Medicine.”

Contributions to the FSUCares SSTRIDE Student Award Fund SPARK Campaign, which will be directed to the 2024 scholarship recipients, will be accepted through March 1.
 

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Jan 22, 2024
WebMD
PRESS RELEASE

Florida State University College of Medicine researcher Angelina Sutin, Ph.D. was among several experts to weigh in on the effects of neuroticism on human health. 

Research suggests that neuroticism raises the risk of mental disorders such as depression and anxiety as well as physical illnesses like heart disease and some cancers. Some research links neuroticism with neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.

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Jan 22, 2024
Tallahassee Democrat
FSU to honor the late Myra Hurt, "Mother of the College of Medicine"
PRESS RELEASE
Myra Hurt, Ph.D.
Myra Hurt, Ph.D.

The Florida State University community is still remembering the esteemed retired professor Myra Hurt after she died last August. She was 75.

To continue celebrating Hurt’s life, FSU's College of Medicine will be holding a tribute 2-4p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 27, in the college’s Durell Peaden Auditorium, 1115 W. Call St. Theevent is open to the public.

“Dr. Hurt is literally referred to as the mother of the College of Medicine,” the medical school's interim dean, Dr. Alma Littles, told the Tallahassee Democrat. “You can’t really say FSU College of Medicine without thinking of Dr. Myra Hurt.”

News of the Week

College of Medicine has prominent place at FAFP Winter Summit

​The Florida State University College of Medicine was well-represented among the more than 800 attendees at the Florida Academy of Family Physicians (FAFP) Winter Summit, held December 8-10 at the Ritz-Carlton, Amelia Island.

From the honorees at the opening day FAFP “Academy Awards” to the installation of the 77th President of the FAFP and the announced establishment of the FAFP Hall of Fame, College of Medicine personnel were front and center.

Three of the six “Academy Awards” winners are inextricably connected to Florida State, with Diana Twiggs, M.D., FAAFP, introduced as the 2023 FAFP Family Physician of the Year. Twiggs completed her undergraduate degree at FSU and stayed in Tallahassee where she completed the Program in Medical Sciences (PIMS - 1994) prior to completing medical school at the University of Florida.

The award is provided in recognition of outstanding service as a family physician and acknowledges dedication to the profession and compassion to patients.

She has been practicing family medicine at Baptist Primary Care in Fernandina Beach, Florida since 2000. Involved in organized medicine since medical school, she served as FAFP President (2017) in addition to numerous other positions within the organization and also sat on the Florida Medical Association (FMA) Board of Governors and also an FMA delegate.

In addition to her practice, Twiggs has more recently served in the mission field, providing medical care in Warsaw, Poland and Ukraine during the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

Krista Brinkerhoff (M.D. 2017) was honored with the 2023 FAFP Young Leader Award, which recognizes outstanding service and dedication to the FAFP and the specialty of family medicine. In addition to practicing with Florida Health Care Plans in Orange City, Florida, Brinkerhoff has been a clinical assistant professor at the College of Medicine’s Daytona Beach Regional Campus, where she completed her clinical training at FSU, since 2021.

In her practice she treats substance abuse disorders, and shares her passion in that area by teaching medical students and practicing physicians about patient care for those with opioid abuse disorder.

Brinkerhoff graduated in the top of her class at the College of Medicine and received the AMWA Glasgow-Rubin Citation for Academic Achievement.

The Art of Medicine Award recognizes a physician’s compassion, proven by personal example so that the patient received the full benefit of total care only when the science of medicine is practiced as an art. The 2023 Art of Medicine Award was presented posthumously to Daniel Van Durme, M.D., MPH, FAAFP.

In addition to being decorated with awards for teaching, service, humanitarianism and mentoring over the course of his career at Florida State and the University of South Florida, Van Durme held numerous leadership positions including service to the board of directors of the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), the AAFP Foundation and as FAFP Past President.

He is responsible for developing Family Medicine Scholars at the FSU College of Medicine to produce specialty leaders in the future. Van Durme was Senior Associate Dean for Clinical and Community Affairs and Chief Medical Officer, among many other roles, when he passed on May 30, 2023.

Pat Van Durme, his wife of 42 years, accepted the award.

George Bernardo, M.D., FAFP President
FAFP President
George Bernardo, M.D.

On Saturday morning, Daytona Beach Regional Campus Dean George Bernardo, M.D. was installed as the 77th President of the Florida Academy of Family Physicians. Bernardo was joined at the event by his wife Peggy Bernardo, and College of Medicine graduate sons Joe (M.D. 2018) and Wyatt (M.D. 2022).

Bernardo came through the PIMS program at Florida State in 1985 and graduated from the University of Florida College of Medicine in 1988. He has been in private practice in Port Orange, Florida since 1991 and joined the College of Medicine faculty in 2007. He has held multiple leadership positions with the FAFP. 

He is most recent in a long line of presidents who are connected to the College of Medicine. The list of past presidents includes Christie Alexander (2020), Twiggs (2017), his Daytona Beach Regional Campus predecessor Luckey Dunn (2016), Dennis Mayeaux (2009-10), Cyneetha Strong (2007), Dennis Saver (2004), College of Medicine Interim Dean Alma Littles (1999) and Van Durme (1996).

The morning session also included the announcement of the establishment of FAFP Hall of Fame as a way of recognizing former or current members or non-physicians affiliated with the organization who had an indelible impact on the Academy and the specialty of family medicine throughout Florida.

Following a video tribute, which you can watch here, Van Durme was enshrined as the inaugural FAFP Hall of Fame member.

In addition to the honors presented, the FAFP recognized a number of leadership positions for 2024, which included a significant number with connections to the College of Medicine. Joining Bernardo on the Board of Directors is Christy Cavanagh, M.D., Family Medicine Residency Program Associate Director and professor at Lee Health in Fort Myers. Cavanagh will also serve as one of two AAFP delegates.

Board members with connections include Kristin Dimas (M.D. 2016), residency faculty at Lee Health-Fort Myers and Nathan Falk, M.D., College of Medicine Professor, Assistant Dean of GME, and founding program director for Family Medicine Residency, BayCare Health in Winter Haven, Florida.

Joanne Saxour, M.D., Family Medicine Director and Informatics Clerkship Director at the Daytona Beach Regional Campus, was the presidential appointee to the Board. Bailey Creighton (M.D. Class of 2024) will represent the FSU College of Medicine as its Student Director.

Alfred C. Gitu, M.D., FAAFP, Professor and Family Medicine Program Director at Lee Health-Fort Myers, will serve as the Residency Director Council Chair.

Photo below: Diana Twiggs, M.D. (far left), Pat Van Durme (third from left), wife of the late Daniel Van Durme, M.D. and Krista Brinkerhoff, M.D. (third from right) were among those to accept awards at the FAFP Academy Awards 

Photos and videos courtesy Florida Academy of Family Physicians

FAFP Winter Summit Award Winners

Print

Dec 27, 2023
850 Business Magazine
PRESS RELEASE

When Dr. Alma Littles was in second grade, her teacher told the bright, young girl she would make a good doctor someday.

“I didn’t know what that meant,” said Littles, the youngest of 12 children growing up in Quincy. “I don’t think I had ever seen a doctor.”

That young girl did indeed grow up to be a family physician, treating residents of her hometown, an area where doctors were scarce.

Littles’ career as a physician, educator and health leader blossomed, and in February 2023, she was named the interim dean of theFlorida State University College of Medicine, a school Littles helped create, with a mission that reflects her own life story.

“We were developing physicians who would practice personal and patient-centered care, focusing on populations of need, the underserved, geriatric patients,” Littles said. “I called it my personal, professional mission.”

College of Medicine has prominent place at FAFP Winter Summit

Dec 15, 2023
FAFP Award Winners

The Florida State University College of Medicine was well-represented among the more than 800 attendees at the Florida Academy of Family Physicians (FAFP) Winter Summit, held December 8-10 at the Ritz-Carlton, Amelia Island.

From the honorees at the opening day FAFP “Academy Awards” to the installation of the 77th President of the FAFP and the announced establishment of the FAFP Hall of Fame, College of Medicine personnel were front and center.

Three of the six “Academy Awards” winners are inextricably connected to Florida State, with Diana Twiggs, M.D., FAAFP, introduced as the 2023 FAFP Family Physician of the Year. Twiggs completed her undergraduate degree at FSU and stayed in Tallahassee where she completed the Program in Medical Sciences (PIMS - 1994) prior to completing medical school at the University of Florida.

The award is provided in recognition of outstanding service as a family physician and acknowledges dedication to the profession and compassion to patients.

She has been practicing family medicine at Baptist Primary Care in Fernandina Beach, Florida since 2000. Involved in organized medicine since medical school, she served as FAFP President (2017) in addition to numerous other positions within the organization and also sat on the Florida Medical Association (FMA) Board of Governors and also an FMA delegate.

In addition to her practice, Twiggs has more recently served in the mission field, providing medical care in Warsaw, Poland and Ukraine during the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

Krista Brinkerhoff (M.D. 2017) was honored with the 2023 FAFP Young Leader Award, which recognizes outstanding service and dedication to the FAFP and the specialty of family medicine. In addition to practicing with Florida Health Care Plans in Orange City, Florida, Brinkerhoff has been a clinical assistant professor at the College of Medicine’s Daytona Beach Regional Campus, where she completed her clinical training at FSU, since 2021.

In her practice she treats substance abuse disorders, and shares her passion in that area by teaching medical students and practicing physicians about patient care for those with opioid abuse disorder.

Brinkerhoff graduated in the top of her class at the College of Medicine and received the AMWA Glasgow-Rubin Citation for Academic Achievement.

The Art of Medicine Award recognizes a physician’s compassion, proven by personal example so that the patient received the full benefit of total care only when the science of medicine is practiced as an art. The 2023 Art of Medicine Award was presented posthumously to Daniel Van Durme, M.D., MPH, FAAFP.

In addition to being decorated with awards for teaching, service, humanitarianism and mentoring over the course of his career at Florida State and the University of South Florida, Van Durme held numerous leadership positions including service to the board of directors of the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), the AAFP Foundation and as FAFP Past President.

He is responsible for developing Family Medicine Scholars at the FSU College of Medicine to produce specialty leaders in the future. Van Durme was Senior Associate Dean for Clinical and Community Affairs and Chief Medical Officer, among many other roles, when he passed on May 30, 2023.

Pat Van Durme, his wife of 42 years, accepted the award.

George Bernardo, FAFP President
FAFP President
George Bernardo, M.D.

On Saturday morning, Daytona Beach Regional Campus Dean George Bernardo, M.D. was installed as the 77th President of the Florida Academy of Family Physicians. Bernardo was joined at the event by his wife Peggy Bernardo, and College of Medicine graduate sons Joe (M.D. 2018) and Wyatt (M.D. 2022).

Bernardo came through the PIMS program at Florida State in 1985 and graduated from the University of Florida College of Medicine in 1988. He has been in private practice in Port Orange, Florida since 1991 and joined the College of Medicine faculty in 2007. He has held multiple leadership positions with the FAFP. 

He is most recent in a long line of presidents who are connected to the College of Medicine. The list of past presidents includes Christie Alexander (2020), Twiggs (2017), his Daytona Beach Regional Campus predecessor Luckey Dunn (2016), Dennis Mayeaux (2009-10), Cyneetha Strong (2007), Dennis Saver (2004), College of Medicine Interim Dean Alma Littles (1999) and Van Durme (1996).

The morning session also included the announcement of the establishment of FAFP Hall of Fame as a way of recognizing former or current members or non-physicians affiliated with the organization who had an indelible impact on the Academy and the specialty of family medicine throughout Florida.

Following a video tribute, which you can watch here, Van Durme was enshrined as the inaugural FAFP Hall of Fame member.

In addition to the honors presented, the FAFP recognized a number of leadership positions for 2024, which included a significant number with connections to the College of Medicine. Joining Bernardo on the Board of Directors is Christy Cavanagh, M.D., Family Medicine Residency Program Associate Director and professor at Lee Health in Fort Myers. Cavanagh will also serve as one of two AAFP delegates.

Board members with connections include Kristin Dimas (M.D. 2016), residency faculty at Lee Health-Fort Myers and Nathan Falk, M.D., College of Medicine Professor, Assistant Dean of GME, and founding program director for Family Medicine Residency, BayCare Health in Winter Haven, Florida.

Joanne Saxour, M.D., Family Medicine Director and Informatics Clerkship Director at the Daytona Beach Regional Campus, was the presidential appointee to the Board. Bailey Creighton (M.D. Class of 2024) will represent the FSU College of Medicine as its Student Director.

Alfred C. Gitu, M.D., FAAFP, Professor and Family Medicine Program Director at Lee Health-Fort Myers, will serve as the Residency Director Council Chair.

Photo top right: Diana Twiggs, M.D. (far left), Pat Van Durme, wife of the late Daniel Van Durme, M.D. (third from left) and Krista Brinkerhoff, M.D. (third from right) were among those to accept awards at the FAFP Academy Awards 

Photos and videos courtesy Florida Academy of Family Physicians

News of the Week

Faculty, staff awards for 2022-23 presented

The annual Florida State University College of Medicine faculty and staff awards were presented Dec. 4 at a lunchtime celebration in the Durell Peaden Auditorium.

Assistant Professor Mike Drury, Psy.D., who chairs the Faculty Council Executive Committee for the 2023-24 academic year, presented the awards. Drury was assisted by Assistant Dean and Chief Financial Officer Dawn Snyder, who handled master of ceremonies duties. Awards were presented to outstanding faculty educators and researchers, Guardian of the Mission and Service and exemplary staff.

The recipients of the 2022-23 awards are as follows:

Guardian of the Mission & Service Award: Allison Justice, PA-C, Assistant Professor, Physician Assistant Program
Outstanding Junior Faculty Educator Award: Ramiz Kseri, M.D., Department of Clinical Sciences
Outstanding Junior Faculty Researcher Award: Tyra Dark, Ph.D., Assistant Professor Behavioral Sciences & Social Medicine, CHASE Program Director Center for Translational Behavioral Science
Outstanding Regional Faculty Educator Award: Megan Verdoni, PA-C, CAQ-EM, Sarasota Region Campus Education Director and Clinical Assistant Professor, Emergency Medicine
Outstanding Senior Faculty Educator Award: John Bastin, DMSc, MHS, PA-C, Assistant Professor Physician Assistant Program
Outstanding Senior Faculty Researcher Award: Jose Pinto, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Biomedical Sciences, Director of the Pinto Lab
Exemplary Staff Member Award: Lilly Lewis, Interdisciplinary Medical Sciences Program Director
Exemplary Staff Team/Group Award: Angela Brown, Jessica Scott, Melissa Oglesby and Carla Dunn,
Student Support Coordinators (Main Campus) 

In addition, the following College of Medicine employees were recognized for their longevity of service: awards.

20 Years
Elizabeth Foster, Research & Graduate Programs
Choogon Lee, Biomedical Sciences
Robert Glueckauf. Behavioral Sciences & Social Medicine
Mary Gerend, Behavioral Sciences & Social Medicine
Christopher Clark, Information Technology
Claudin Pierre-Louis, Information Technology
Regina Scott, Geriatrics
Sandra Nevels, Student Affairs
Yanchang Wang, Biomedical Sciences

15 Years
Jose Diaz, Biomedical Sciences
Chip Orth, Information Technology
Mark Stavros, Clinical Sciences Emergency Medicine
Crystal Grey-Hewett,, Autism Institute
Katelyn Hunley, Autism Institute
Melanie Hill, Faculty Development
Susan LaJoie, Family Medicine & Rural Health
Veronica Jones, Autism Institute
Renee Holland, Autism Institute
Allison Leatzow, Autism Institute
Renata McCann, Medicine Instruction
Laura Rosenthal, Autism Institute
Joy Moore, Autism Institute
Patricia Armstrong, Autism Institute
Sheldon White, CQI
Cathy Levenson, Biomedical Sciences
Amy Wetherby, Autism Institute

10 Years
Diana Paquette, Finance & Administration
Yi Ren, Biomedical Sciences
Giuliana McQuirt, Behavioral Sciences & Social Medicine
Matthew Hohmeister, Information Technology
Judi Traynor, Central Administration, Fort Pierce Regional Campus
Robert Moore, Central Administration, Tallahassee Regional Campus
Yuxia Wang, Behavioral Science & Social Medicine
Matthew Pouliotte, Information Technology
Hongying Deng, Information Technology
Sara Green, Behavioral Sciences & Social Medicine

 

Composite of faculty, staff award winners

News of the Week

RSO Awards Night Celebrates the Best from 2023

The College of Medicine’s Medical Student Council hosted its annual Recognized Student Organization (RSO) Awards Night on Dec. 8 in the Durell Peaden Auditorium.

The ceremony recognizes the most outstanding RSO’s, in addition to their leaders and events as the calendar year draws to a close.

The 2023 RSO of the Year honor was presented to PRIDE (Promoting Recognition of Identity, Dignity & Equality) in Healthcare. The organization provides support to LGBTQ students and the community through education, service, advocacy, collaboration, mentorship, and support.

In addition to the team honor, PRIDE officer Dillon Buckley (M.D. Class of 2026) collected the Medical Student Council Leadership Award.

In another leadership category, Elizabeth Ruelke was honored as RSO President of the Year. Ruelke (M.D. Class of 2026) headed up the Business and Medicine (BAM) organization and served as the coordinator for the inaugural Specialty & Business Symposium in August, which drew 150 students with an interest in medical careers.

Women’s Health Day, held Nov. 1 on Landis Green and presented by the FSU chapter of the American Medical Women’s Association (AMWA) and the College of Medicine, received RSO Event of the Year honors. The daylong event is a free health education and resource for students, graduates, faculty and staff, and it promotes physical, clinical, mental, financial and sexual health through a variety of activities.

Not coincidentally, AMWA advisor Casey Rust, M.D. received the RSO Advisor of the Year Award.

Philanthropic Event of the Year honors went to FSUCares’ MADSO Madness, a collaboration with CollegeTown’s Madison Social to support FSUCares’ mission to provide health services, medical care, education and counseling to those who would not otherwise have access to them.

Service Event of the Year honors went to the HOME (Homeless Outreach Medicine and Education) Street Medicine Drive, which is organized through the School of Physician Assistant Practice. HOME conducted two separate seasonal drives, collecting items including clothing, hygiene products, sunscreen, and bug repellent, which in turn are provided to Tallahassee’s unsheltered population during visits to their encampments.