News of the Week

Sheffler's research on COVID-19 impacts on older adults published in The Gerontologist

A study from Julia Sheffler, research faculty member in the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine, was published in the Gerontological Society of America’s journal The Gerontologist in August. Her study, The Interpersonal and Psychological Impacts of COVID-19 on Risk for Late-Life Suicide, discusses how current COVID-19 pandemic-related policies are likely to harm older adults disproportionately, especially as it relates to increased risk for suicide. The abstract reads, in part, “COVID-19 pandemic social distancing policies and ethical guidelines for COVID-19 treatment may exacerbate experiences of social isolation, perceived expendability, and exposure to suffering…”

Sheffler is the director of the Integrative Science for Health Aging research program at the FSU Center for Translational Behavioral Sciences


Read the full publication here.
 

Julia Sheffler

AMA House of Delegates Special Meeting Update

Nov 20, 2020
Ian Motie

“The Special Meeting of the House of Delegates took the place of the normally occurring Interim meeting originally set to be held in San Diego. Although this meeting was held virtually, the House of Delegates would still hear resolutions on topics deemed urgent and timely. The Medical Student Section (MSS) submitted several resolutions that met this criteria and attended the requisite Reference Committee hearings where they provided impassioned testimony on the subject matter and the importance of adoption. The support that was garnered for the issues introduced and championed by medical students was so immense that nearly all the resolutions introduced were recommended for adoption with minor amendments. These policies included the recognition of racism as a public health crisis, denouncing racial essentialism in health care and medical education, recognition of police brutality as a manifestation of structural racism, advocating for equitable access to telehealth, the expedited retirement of USMLE Step 2 Clinical Skills, and support for a Public Option. These are just some among the many important resolutions adopted to help make medicine more equitable and safe for our fellow medical students, physicians, and patients.”

 

Respectfully,

Ian Motie

Ian Motie

Florida State University College of Medicine

MD Candidate | Class of 2021

Region 4 Chair, AMA Medical Student Section

Print

Nov 16, 2020
Pediatric News
PRESS RELEASE

The U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Department of Health & Human Services aim to release new dietary guidelines by the end of 2020. For the first time, the guidelines are mandated to include dietary recommendations from birth to 24 months and for women who are pregnant or lactating.

Ahead of the release of the 2020-2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, Joan Younger Meek, dean of the College of Medicine's Orlando Regional Campus, discussed parts of the scientific report at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Pediatrics, held virtually this year.

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Nov 05, 2020
FSU News
PRESS RELEASE

It has been two decades since the Florida State University College of Medicine was established.

The college will commemorate its 20th anniversary with a virtual ceremony Friday, Nov. 6. The event will recognize Myra Hurt, who served as the college’s acting dean when it opened, and the college’s Hall of Fame Class of 2020. The event also will serve as a virtual reunion for alumni.

Press Release

FSU College of Medicine Celebrates 20-Year Anniversary

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT: Bill Wellock, University Communications
(850) 645-1504;
wwellock@fsu.edu

@FSUResearch

Nov. 5, 2020


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — It has been two decades since the Florida State University College of Medicine was established.

The college will commemorate its 20th anniversary with a virtual ceremony Friday, Nov. 6. The event will recognize Myra Hurt, who served as the college’s acting dean when it opened, and the college’s Hall of Fame Class of 2020. The event also will serve as a virtual reunion for alumni.

“The College of Medicine has developed tremendously in the 20 years since its founding,” said Dean John P. Fogarty. “It’s remarkable to look at its legacy — the many practicing health-care providers and successful research projects that have come from the school — and see how far it has come as an institution.”

The Florida Legislature created the College of Medicine in 2000, and the university welcomed its inaugural class of 30 students in 2001. Since then, the college has graduated more than 1,500 physicians, physician assistants and doctoral students who are helping improve patient health across Florida and the nation.

Although this is the 20th anniversary of the college, the institution can trace its origins to the Program in Medical Sciences (PIMS), which enrolled its first students in 1970. PIMS was an expansion of the University of Florida College of Medicine that saw students complete their first year of medical school at FSU then transfer to UF to complete their medical education. Faculty from Florida A&M University, which was a partner in the program, initially taught pharmacology classes.

PIMS was funded by a National Institutes of Health grant and was designed to meet the need for more physicians in rural Northwest Florida. The College of Medicine’s goal today is the same as the mission of PIMS: to develop physicians who practice patient-centered health care, advance knowledge and are responsive to community needs, especially through service to elder, rural, minority and underserved populations.

Helping those communities has been a focus of the college since the Florida Legislature codified its mission 20 years ago.

The legislation establishing the medical school required the college to create a program to ensure training in the medical needs of the elderly and to develop a Department of Family Medicine with significant rural training. It also required the college to continue outreach efforts in order to develop the ranks of physicians from underserved communities.

FSU President John Thrasher, who was speaker of the Florida House of Representatives when the law creating the medical school passed, strongly believed in the university’s unique ability to provide exemplary education and patient-centered training.

“FSU believes that students with a desire to serve their communities will make the best doctors,” Thrasher said. “The FSU College of Medicine took a new approach to how people are admitted to medical school and how they are trained. We now have 20 years of evidence that our approach works that it makes a difference in people’s lives.”

The commitment to reaching underserved populations is exemplified by the college’s decentralized approach to clinical training. Students perform their rotations at regional campuses around the state. The college started with regional campuses in Orlando, Pensacola and Tallahassee. Today, there are also facilities in Sarasota, Daytona Beach and Fort Pierce, as well as rural clinical-training sites in Immokalee, Marianna and Thomasville, Georgia.

“Giving our students the opportunity to practice what they’re learning in a community setting is an important part of their education,” Fogarty said. “Students get personalized experience with a practicing physician, and the mentorship and experience they receive is invaluable.”

One person who knows the medical school’s story well is Dr. Christie Alexander.

Alexander was a member of the first class to graduate from the newly created medical school. Today, she is a family physician in Tallahassee at FSU PrimaryHealth, president of the Florida Academy of Family Physicians and an associate professor in the college’s Department of Family Medicine and Rural Health.

“Ever since I was a little girl, I knew I wanted to be a doctor,” Alexander said. “Being in the first class of the College of Medicine not only fulfilled that dream but also opened the doors to so many other opportunities. Little did I know that years later, I would be the first graduate to return as full-time faculty at the college. It’s exciting to be able to pay it forward to future physicians at the very medical school that gave me so much.”

There are more stories like Alexander’s from the college’s 20-year history — and more to come.

“It is a privilege for our faculty to help teach the physicians of the future and to see them grow in their careers,” Fogarty said. “It’s a mission we love. One day, they may take care of our health, and it is comforting to know we’ll be in good hands.”

The ceremony recognizing the college’s 20-year anniversary will take place:

FRIDAY, NOV. 6

7 P.M.

Links to watch will be available at: https://med.fsu.edu/VirtualEvents

###

News of the Week

College of Medicine in the News: Nov. 4, 2020

In case you missed them, here are some recent news items about the College of Medicine.
 

Oprah.com: All your questions about the 2020 cold and flu season, answered
 


ScienMag: College of Medicine researcher makes novel discoveries in preventing epileptic seizures

ScienceDaily: Novel discoveries in preventing epileptic seizures


 

  • Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the five major college football conferences appointed their own medical task forces to analyze the potential safety and health concerns associated with having a college football season. Les Beitsch, chair of the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine, was one of the 15 panelists advising the ACC.

    Washington Post: Meet the doctors who are helping decide the fate of college football season


     
  • Professor and Chair of the Department of Geriatrics Paul Katz was interviewed by WINK News in Southwest Florida about the spread of COVID-19 at long-term care facilities.

    WINK: COVID-19 cases spread at long-term care facilities despite lockdowns, testing mandates


     
  • When FSU students returned to campus in the fall, new COVID-19 protocols and programs were in place, including the Secure Assessment for FSU Exposure Response (SAFER) initiative. The program aims to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 through contact assessment, while providing support for students, staff and faculty who have been exposed or tested positive. Research faculty member Emily Pritchard is the administrative lead for the SAFER initiative while Senior Associate Dean Daniel Van Durme is the chief medical officer for the COVID-19 testing program.

    FSU News: New FSU initiative is set to track and support COVID-19 cases: Print or audio



     
  • Care Point Health & Wellness Center launched a new partnership with the College of Medicine, bringing three faculty members to their full-time team of providers. They include Jonathan Appelbaum, Gregory Todd and Stephen Sandroni.

    Tallahassee Democrat: Care Point launches partnership with FSU College of Medicine doctors



     
  • As part of her practice in Oregon, College of Medicine alumna and pediatric surgeon Kim Ruscher (M.D. '05) treats patients with pectus excavatum, a chest deformity where the sternum or breast bone is sunken inward. The deformity can be corrected with a minimally-invasive surgery, said Ruscher, to prevent heart complications in the future. Fraternal twin brothers, Jack and Clay Mornarich, recently had surgery for the condition.
     

KVAL: Set of twins had unique chest surgery done at Riverbend