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May 19, 2020
FSU News
PRESS RELEASE

FSU’s 16th class of M.D. students graduated Saturday in a virtual ceremony, an emotional milestone even though participants were isolated from each other and from faculty and mentors because of social distancing requirements. The ceremony also included 11 students receiving a Master of Science in Biomedical Sciences degree through FSU’s Bridge to Clinical Medicine program. Those students are now part of the Class of 2024, scheduled to begin medical school at Florida State next week.

Spring 2020

May 18, 2020

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Press Release

FSU College of Medicine to Hold Virtual Graduation Event

MEDIA ADVISORY

 CONTACT: Doug Carlson, FSU College of Medicine
doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu

 May 14, 2020

 FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE TO HOLD VIRTUAL GRADUATION EVENT

 

The Florida State University College of Medicine will graduate its 16th class of medical students during a virtual commencement ceremony Saturday. Scott Rivkees, Florida’s Surgeon General, is the commencement speaker. His message was recently recorded, as were other remarks from participants including FSU President John Thrasher and College of Medicine Dean John P. Fogarty.

During the ceremony, which is planned to include interactive participation through social media, the college will graduate 115 new physicians. In addition, it will graduate its 11th class of students with the Master of Science degree in Biomedical Sciences–Bridge to Clinical Medicine. By completing the program, the 11 Bridge students have qualified to begin medical school at Florida State on May 25 as members of the incoming Class of 2024.

 While I know that not being together at graduation is a disappointment to each of our graduates, as well as to our faculty and staff, knowing how far these students have come reinforces our pride in seeing them reach their goal of becoming a physician,” Fogarty said. “The Class of 2020 has had its share of challenges – Zika, Ebola, hurricanes Irma and Michael, and now COVID-19. None of these kept them from their goal – and they are now prepared to go out into residency programs at a time when their presence is needed more than ever.”

 The commencement ceremony will take place:
 

SATURDAY, MAY 16
 
10 A.M.
 
MED.FSU.EDU (link on home page will go live at 9:30 A.M.)
 


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News of the Week

Bridge Program celebrates Class of 2020 at annual luncheon

The 11 students in the Bridge Program’s Class of 2020 took to Zoom on Tuesday morning to present their research findings to deans, department heads, mentors, administrators, faculty and staff for the annual Bridge Graduation Luncheon.

The presentations mark the end to a busy year. It’s the final requirement before the students receive their master’s in biomedical sciences at the College of Medicine’s virtual commencement ceremony on Saturday. They’ll then join the M.D. Class of 2024 in less than two weeks, on May 26.

Read more

Bridge Class of 2020

Press Release

Office of Research will Allocate More Than $400K Toward COVID-19 Projects

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

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

@FSUResearch

May 2020

FSU NEWS: OFFICE OF RESEARCH WILL ALLOCATE MORE THAN $400K TOWARD COVID-19 PROJECTS 

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida State University’s Office of Research will allocate over $400,000 to fund 26 interdisciplinary projects that address questions related to COVID-19.

The research tackles a variety of questions around the health, social and economic impacts brought on by the coronavirus pandemic. Projects include exploring possible therapies, the development of tools for tracking infections and an examination of how the pandemic has affected mental health.

“The projects we chose represent scholarship from across the university,” said Vice President for Research Gary K. Ostrander. “This is an exciting opportunity and responsibility for FSU. As researchers, we have an obligation to use our specialized skills to help understand this disease and its impacts.”

Many of the projects were conceived through an event known as Collaborative Collision, which brings together faculty from different departments to work together on research that bridges traditional academic disciplines. The Office of Research Development has organized Collaborative Collision events since 2016.

Previous Collaborative Collision events usually funded one or two projects, but because of the extraordinary reach and impact of COVID-19, the Office of Research Development funded as many high-quality proposals as it was able to support. The seed funding is intended to help researchers quickly move forward on projects that show promise for receiving federal funding that supports research answering questions about the pandemic.

Many of the funded proposals involve medical research, but the office is also funding projects that examine the broad impacts of a disease that has affected life in many ways. In Florida and across the world, the way people work, study, eat, play and live together has changed. This research will help explain the effects of COVID-19 and investigate how humanity can cope with the changes brought on by the disease.

For example, Yanshuo Sun, an assistant professor of industrial and manufacturing engineering, will lead a project exploring how the COVID-19 pandemic affects people’s decisions about evacuating under the threat of oncoming hurricanes.

“Natural disasters, such as earthquakes, hurricanes and wildfires, will not disappear due to the presence of a public health crisis,” Sun wrote. “There is no evidence indicating that the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. will come to an end in June 2020, when the Atlantic hurricane season is expected to begin.”

The Atlantic hurricane season runs from June 1 through Nov. 30 with a peak in late August through the month of September. Several experts have predicted a more active season than usual this year.

“This pandemic is having major impacts on many aspects of life,” Ostrander said. “Florida State is involved in a wide variety of research activities and is ready to help answer the numerous questions posed by COVID-19.”

The full list of funded projects and the department or college of the principal investigator leading each project includes:

  • College of Criminology and Criminal Justice: Considering Collateral Consequences of the COVID-19 Pandemic: Examining the Impact of the Pandemic on Prejudice, Hate Crime, and Victimization
     
  • Department of Psychology: Understanding the Impact of COVID-19-Related Stress on Families
     
  • Department of Psychology: A Longitudinal, Prepandemic-Postpandemic Assessment of the Mental Health and General Psychological Functioning of a Large Sample of Young Adults
     
  • Department of Sport Management: A Grim Choice Facing the American Public: A Natural Experiment Testing the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Mental and Physical Health in the U.S.
     
  • Department of Biomedical Sciences: Mesenchymal Stem Cell Derived Extracellular Vesicles as an Anti-Coronavirus Therapy
     
  • College of Social Work: Immediate Economic, Social, and Health Impacts of COVID-19 for Vulnerable Mothers and Their Young Children
     
  • Department of Biomedical Sciences: Establishing a Preclinical Discovery and Evaluation Pipeline for Small Molecule Inhibitors of SARS-CoV-2 Replication
     
  • Department of Business Analytics, Information Systems and Supply Chain: Instilling Consumer Confidence on Social Media during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Implications for Rapid Economic Recovery
     
  • Department of Computer Science: Achieving Economic Freedom and Public Health Through Deep Learning and Contact Tracing
     
  • Museum of Fine Arts: Online Events and the Audience Experience in a Time of Crisis
     
  • Department of Biomedical Sciences: Targeting Macrophage Activation-Induced Microvascular Injury to Treat COVID-19
     
  • School of Communication Science and Disorders: Family-centered Practice during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Lessons Learned and Implications for AAC Service Delivery
     
  • Department of Biological Science: siRNAs for Coronavirus Gene Knock-Out Research
     
  • Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering: Data-Driven Modeling and Learning of Hurricane Evacuee’s Individual Decision-making under COVID-19 Pandemic
     
  • College of Social Work: Examining the Health, Economic, and Professional Impacts of COVID-19 on Human Service Workers
     
  • School of Communication Science and Disorders: Knowledge and Self Efficacy to Provide Essential Research-based, Functional, Effective, Communication Tele-Therapy for Equitable Development (KASE-PERFECTED)
     
  • Department of Biological Science: Characterizing Chromatin Variations in Human Cells in Response to SARS-Cov-2
     
  • Department of Biological Science: Portable Drug Screening Microarrays for Discovery of COVID-19 Therapeutics
     
  • Department of Psychology: Mortality Salience, Economic Failure, and Parenting Behaviors
     
  • College of Social Work: A Pilot Study of mDOT for Immunosuppression Medication Adherence in Adolescent Heart Transplant Recipients During COVID-19 Pandemic
     
  • Department of Educational Psychology and Learning Systems: Adolescent Social Media Use in the Time of COVID-19
     
  • Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry: Biophysical Investigation of Action Dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 Main Protease for Effective Drug Discovery
     
  • Department of Educational Psychology and Learning Systems: Psychological and Substance Use Impacts of COVID-19 Perceived Threat in Racially Diverse Emerging Adults
     
  • Department of Nutrition, Food and Exercise Sciences: Risk Factors for COVID-19 Infection
     
  • Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry: Lipid Rippers: Antiviral Polymers
     
  • Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies: Creation of Dataset to Track County Level Variables and COVID Infections

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May 12, 2020
FSU News
PRESS RELEASE

Like many others, second-year med students Vinita Akula and Gabby Cintron were overwhelmed and anxious in response to unrelenting and ever-changing news and headlines at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In an effort to offset the anger, sadness and stress felt across the globe, the duo created a website, “Kindness amid the Coronavirus ,” to highlight and share positive stories. The website collects and tracks user-submitted stories and displays them in a map.

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May 12, 2020
Tampa Bay Times
PRESS RELEASE

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics found less than 20% of black workers and roughly 16% of Hispanic ones are able to telecommute. About two-thirds of employed Hispanic adults say they would not get paid if the coronavirus caused them to miss work for two weeks or more, a Pew Research Center survey found. "The very people we rely on to do many essential services are disposable hourly workers living in crowded conditions," says Leslie M. Beitsch, chair of behavioral sciences and social medicine at Florida State University College of Medicine. "Were asking that very group to take on essential tasks in a time of great need."