Congratulations to our regional Alpha Omega Alpha (AOA) inductees

Aug 27, 2024

Congratulations to Joshua Davis and Alexandra Mackey on being selected for induction into Alpha Omega Alpha (AOA) Honor Medical Society.

Twenty-four members of the M.D. Class of 2025 have been selected for induction into the Delta Chapter of the Alpha Omega Alpha (AOA)

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Aug 20, 2024
Disability Scoop

Tiem Strouse seemed like a perfectly healthy baby boy when he was born in 2013 in St. Petersburg.

But at about 13 months his development stalled. The baby words that had come early stopped. He would only walk on the balls of his feet and at times would spin around for no reason, mom Liz Strouse said. He also appeared to be suffering from night terrors.

The first specialist that examined him wrongly concluded he had Down syndrome. It was the start of a five-year struggle for his parents to know what was affecting their son’s development. It only ended when a genetic test revealed he had a neurodevelopmental genetic disorder caused by mutations in the ADNP gene.

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Aug 16, 2024
WFLA

There are more than 7,000 known rare diseases that affect 350 million people around the world. Florida Rep. Adam Anderson is hoping to provide a glimmer of hope to Floridians after losing his son, Andrew, to Tay Sachs disease. His recently passed piece of legislation helped launch the College of Medicine's Institute for Pediatric Rare Diseases.

He wants to "position the State of Florida to be a nationwide leader in genetics and gene therapy" through research advancement in search of cures for pediatric rare diseases.
 

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News of the Week

Littles elected vice president of Florida Medical Association

FSU College of Medicine Dean Alma Littles, M.D.
Dean Alma Littles, M.D.

Alma Littles, M.D., dean of the Florida State University College of Medicine, was elected vice president of the Florida Medical Association (FMA) at its Aug. 2-4 annual meeting in Orlando. The FMA is a professional organization representing more than 25,000 members on issues of legislation and regulatory affairs, medical economics and education, public health and ethical and legal issues.

Prior to being elected vice president, Littles served two years as FMA secretary.

“I am thrilled to continue my service with FMA — a great organization that advocates statewide for physicians and their patients,” Littles said. “Our ultimate goal is to help physicians practice medicine, enhancing the quality and availability of health care throughout the state — and this speaks directly to our mission at the college.”

Littles has been involved in medical education since 1989, when she began precepting, or training,  medical students and residents in her rural practice. She joined the faculty of the Family Medicine Residency Program at Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare in 1996 and became director of that program in 1999. A former president of the Capital Medical Society and the Florida Academy of Family Physicians, as well as former chair of the Academic Physicians Section of the American Medical Association, Littles has been actively involved in organized medicine since she was a medical student and is a longtime patient advocate.