By Patrick Crowley
FSU College of Medicine
As the FSU College of Medicine celebrates its 25th anniversary, it’s fitting that the 2025 inductees into the Medical Hall of Fame consist of outstanding health care professionals who span the history of the institution — ranging from a member of the PIMS class (the pre-cursor to the College of Medicine), a dean emeritus, and alumni who continue their good work and serve as the college’s best ambassadors in their respective communities.
“Congratulations to each of these inductees,” said Alma Littles, M.D., dean of the college. “Through their hard work, dedication to our profession and commitment to medical education, they uphold the values and the mission of our college. Without question, they will leave a positive legacy in their respective fields, and it gives me great pleasure to welcome them into the hall of fame — it’s very well deserved!”
The 2025 Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony will be held Nov. 8 at 6 p.m. in the Champions Club at Florida State University’s Doak Campbell Stadium. The ceremony is part of the annual College of Medicine Alumni Weekend, Nov. 7-9.
THE 2025 INDUCTEES
Thomas Beardsley (M.D., ’14)
A two-time alumnus from Florida State University, receiving both his bachelor’s degree and M.D. from FSU, Thomas Beardsley, M.D., currently practices emergency medicine at the University of Florida College of Medicine, Jacksonville, where he serves as an assistant professor.
Beardsley completed his Emergency Medicine residency in 2018 at Yale – New Haven Hospital, New Haven, Connecticut. In 2019, he completed a fellowship in Medical Simulation, also at Yale — a specialty he has pursued throughout his career. It has led him to hold assistant professor and medical director positions for the Center for Simulation Education and Safety Research in Jacksonville, where he continues to contribute to both medical education and patient safety initiatives.
In his role as center director, Beardsley leads the entire simulation curriculum for 46 emergency medicine residents, applying high level, simulation-based educational initiatives, allowing residents to learn high-stakes emergency medicine skills in a safe environment. As an assistant professor, Beardsley earned several awards, including:
• 2020 and 2022: Emergency Medicine Residency Teacher of the Year Award
• 2023 and 2024: UF College of Medicine Jacksonville Exemplary Teacher Award
Angela Guzman (M.D., ’14)
To say that Angela Guzman, M.D., is the personification of all the good things FSU has to offer – the embodiment of its mission, vision and values – is an understatement. She first got involved in the College of Medicine’s pathway programs in 2005 as a freshman. With a strong interest in medicine and helping others, she was active in SSTRIDE’s collegiate component, USSTRIDE or undergraduate SSTRIDE, as well as MAPS, the Multicultural Association of Pre-medical Students, where she held several leadership roles. Guzman then successfully completed the college’s yearlong post-baccalaureate Bridge to Clinical Medicine Program. From there, she was admitted to the College of Medicine and earned her M.D.
Today, she serves as an OB/GYN clerkship faculty member at the college’s Orlando Regional Campus, associate program director for the University of Central Florida/HCA Osceola Regional OB/GYN Residency Program in Kissimmee, and as a hospitalist for Woman’s Health Centers.
While at the College of Medicine, Guzman was inducted into the Alpha Omega Alpha and Gold Humanism honor societies. As chief resident at Orlando Health Winnie Palmer Hospital for Women & Babies, she earned numerous awards.
J. Ocie Harris, M.D.
Now bearing the title of Dean Emeritus, J. Ocie Harris, M.D., served as the second dean of the College of Medicine, a post he held from January 2003 through July 2008. During his tenure, he laid the foundation for growth and navigated the Liaison Committee on Medical Education process for the college to achieve full accreditation.
After a 30-year career at the University of Florida College of Medicine, Harris came to FSU in November 2000 as associate dean for medical education and was the first physician to serve on the faculty. He was responsible for overseeing the development of the regional campuses in Orlando, Pensacola and Tallahassee, and for recruiting many of the college’s clinical faculty. During his tenure, construction began on the building that now houses the college.
In July 2003, the college grew with the establishment of the Department of Geriatrics, becoming the first medical school in the state with a separate department devoted to geriatrics training for medical students. In October of that year, under Harris’ leadership, the college was approved to begin its first doctoral program, a Ph.D. in Biomedical Sciences.
Since 2005, the graduating medical student or students showing the best all-around promise of becoming a physician of the highest caliber have been presented the J. Ocie Harris Outstanding Student Award in his honor.
Nariman Heshmati (M.D., ’05)
As the president of the inaugural graduating class of 2005, Nari Heshmati, M.D., was instrumental in building the infrastructure students today still enjoy.
Heshmati worked with the FSU Student Government Association to secure funding for many College of Medicine student interest groups and served as its first SGA student senator. He co-founded the Medical Student Council, which serves as the umbrella organization for groups within the college.
After completion of his OB/GYN residency, Heshmati moved to Washington state and joined The Everett Clinic. Ultimately, he oversaw all surgical and specialty operations and value-based care for both The Everett Clinic and The Polyclinic. He also oversaw the labor and delivery unit at Providence Everett.
Heshmati served as the chair of the Washington Section of the American College of OB/GYNs and as president of the Washington State Medical Association. He was appointed by Gov. Jay Inslee to the Pandemic After Action Taskforce to analyze the state’s response to COVID.
In 2024, Heshmati returned to Florida to become the chief physician and operations executive for Lee Physician Group in Fort Myers. In that capacity, he oversees 1,250 clinicians at over 100 sites in Southwest Florida. He also has oversight over two FSU College of Medicine residency programs, including Family Medicine and Internal Medicine, and supports his teams in establishing a new FSU OB/GYN residency program.
Amy Neal (M.D., ’08)
By combining her ability to take on leadership roles, her thirst for knowledge, and her commitment to patient care and family and obesity medicine, Amy Neal, M.D., continues to make a positive impact on the medical profession, as well as on the lives of her patients and future physicians.
Neal earned three degrees from Florida State — an undergraduate degree, followed by her M.D. and an MBA in 2021. As a capstone to her M.D. degree, she received the Outstanding Graduate in Family Medicine award.
After completing her Family Medicine Residency at Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare in 2011, Neal began her career at Capital Health Plan in Tallahassee in urgent care and then transitioned to primary care in 2016. She was elected president of the medical staff at CHP in 2016.
Neal was promoted to associate medical director in 2019 and holds that position today. She currently supervises and hires physicians and actively participates in 20 committees within the CHP organization such as quality, credentialing, new employment, and CHP electronic health record Nex Gen’s core team. Outside of CHP, Neal provides leadership on the Board of Directors of Capital Medical Society.
She currently serves as a clerkship faculty member in the College of Medicine’s Department of Family Medicine and Rural Health, teaching medical students in her clinic.
Richard Rodriguez (M.D., ’09)
Through his work as an emergency medicine physician, advocacy for the medical profession, commitment to medical education and community involvement, Richard Rodriguez (M.D., ’09) is an outstanding ambassador for the FSU College of Medicine.
Rodriguez is a full-time physician with Excelis Medical Associates in Tampa, where he sees patients in the emergency departments of St. Joseph’s Hospitals. His dedication to patient well-being has been recognized with awards such as the "Physician of the Month" by the St. Joseph’s Professional Practice Council and as an "Alumni Belen Hero" by his high school alma mater for his efforts on the frontlines during the COVID-19 pandemic. He was voted by his peers as a Top Doc in Emergency Medicine for three consecutive years (2021-2023) and has been recognized as such in Tampa Magazine.
Rodriguez is deeply involved in medical education and mentorship, serving as Volunteer/Collaborative Faculty in the University of South Florida Morsani College of Medicine, where he holds the rank of affiliate assistant professor.
Beyond his clinical and educational endeavors, he serves on the Board of Directors of Excelis Medical Associates. He is the associate medical director of Emergency Services at St. Joseph’s Hospital South and medical director of Emergency Transport Services at St. Joseph’s Hospitals.
A member of the Hillsborough County Emergency Medical Planning Council since 2016, Rodriguez has served as its vice-chair since 2021. The EMPC is a governmental body that reports to and advises the Hillsborough County Board of County Commissioners. He has also been an active member of the Hillsborough County Trauma Agency and its audit committee, and in 2016, chaired the Spinal Immobilization Guidelines Subcommittee.
Rashad Sullivan (M.D., ’13)
Service to the community, the medical profession and the College of Medicine have been career hallmarks of Rashad Sullivan, M.D.
Following his 2006 graduation from Florida A&M University with a degree in biological sciences pre-med, with a minor in chemistry, Sullivan worked for the FSU College of Medicine’s SSTRIDE program, a pathway program for students in designated middle and high schools. He has attended and spoken at every SSTRIDE reunion since his medical school days, forming mentoring relationships with students interested in STEM careers.
In 2007, he co-founded Youth Motivation & Empowerment, a movement that seeks to persuade inner-city and rural teenagers in Florida’s Big Bend and South Georgia to make positive lifelong decisions. He has remained active in Y.M.E. ever since.
After starting the Bridge to Clinical Medicine post-baccalaureate program in 2008, he was a guest speaker at Lincoln High School’s Advanced Placement Summer Institute. Sullivan also volunteered with the Neighborhood Health. Following his acceptance into medical school, he continued his outreach to youth and volunteered at the Family Worship and Praise Center Ministry for the Homeless.
Sullivan earned his M.D. in 2013, completed an internship in general surgery at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in 2014, a residency in orthopedics there in 2020, serving as chief resident, and a fellowship in adult total joint reconstruction at Florida Orthopaedic Institute in Tampa in 2021. Throughout his journey, he has regularly returned to the Tallahassee area to continue his outreach efforts.
Today, Sullivan is a surgeon at Mid State Orthopaedic & Sports Medicine Clinic in Alexandria, Louisiana, and also works as a consultant from home.
Richard Sheridan, M.D. (PIMS, ’76)
The love of medicine runs deep in the family of Richard Sheridan (PIMS, ’76). As a proud undergraduate alumnus and a PIMS graduate, Sheridan watched with pride as his son, Stephen, graduated from the College of Medicine in 2015.
Well after his own graduation from the PIMS program and a successful career as a neonatologist prior to retirement in Tampa, Sheridan has remained a staunch supporter and a great advocate for FSU and its College of Medicine.
At the college, he served on the FSU Medical Alumni Board and was the board’s president from 2021 through 2023. He’s also an active member of the Leadership Council of the College of Arts and Sciences, where he received his undergraduate degree.
Sheridan was a member of Phi Eta Sigma (1973) and Phi Beta Kappa (1976) honor societies, recognizing academic excellence. He completed his internship and residency at the Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis (1980-1982), specializing in pediatrics. From 1982 to 1984, he was a fellow in neonatal and perinatal medicine at E.H. Crump Women’s Hospital and Perinatal Center, University of Tennessee in Memphis.
Sheridan is board-certified with the National Board of Medical Examiners and with the American Academy of Pediatrics, where he is a fellow. He is also a member of the Hillsborough County Pediatric Society, the Florida Society of Neonatologists, and the Irish American Pediatric Society.
Sanam Zahedi (M.D., ’14)
Committed to her profession and alma mater, Sanam Zahedi, M.D., continues to take on leadership roles in both. A member of the FSU Medical Alumni Board since 2021, Zahedi also serves as a HOST volunteer, a College of Medicine program in which people provide medical students with a place to stay when they need to travel as part of their education, whether for a specialty rotation offered at another campus or to interview for a residency or fellowship program.
Zahedi has made significant scholarly contributions to the field of plastic surgery. Her publications in leading journals, Aesthetic Surgery Journal and Annals of Plastic Surgery, showcase her research on the impact of social media on plastic surgery trends, breast augmentation and the implications of socioeconomic factors in breast reconstruction. Her research not only advances the field but also brings attention to important demographic and social issues that influence patient care.
Her leadership roles in the field are equally impressive. As a founding core host and marketing executive of The Loupe Podcast, she has contributed to global medical education by providing valuable resources and discussions for medical students, residents and surgeons. This podcast, which ranks in the top 2% of educational podcasts, serves as a crucial supplement for those preparing for plastic surgery exams and pursuing continuous learning. Additionally, Zahedi serves the American Society of Plastic Surgeons as a member of the Women Plastic Surgeons Steering Committee and the Annual Meeting Educational Program committee.
Our 2024 Inductees
Since last year’s Alumni Weekend was cancelled because of Hurricane Helene, the 2024 inductees will be officially welcomed to the Hall of Fame at this year’s event. Their information appeared in the Winter 2025 issue of FSUMED magazine. The 2024 inductees:
• Joseph Camps, M.D. (PIMS ’79)
• Daniel Van Durme, M.D. (faculty member – inducted posthumously)
• Geden Franck (M.D., ’14)
• Shoshana Hallowell (M.D., ’10)
• Myra Hurt, Ph.D. (First Acting Dean – inducted posthumously)

Pepper, a board-certified pediatrician, is also an assistant professor at the College of Medicine. She is serving a one-year term as chair of the TMH Medical Executive Committee until Sept. 30, 2026, after which, Howard will assume the role. The chair of the committee oversees quality of care, enforces policy and acts as the primary liaison between the medical staff and the hospital’s board of trustees, on which they serve as an ex-officio member.
After graduation from the FSU College of Medicine, Howard completed residency at the Medical Center of Central Georgia (Mercer University School of Medicine). He has been a member of TMH’s surgical team since 2017 and serves as associate program director of the FSU/TMH General Surgery Residency Program. Howard is also a Surgeon of Excellence in hernia repair, minimally invasive surgery and robotic surgery at TMH, a credential in specialized surgery validated by the independent, non-profit Surgical Review Corporation that accredits top medical professionals and facilities globally. As a medical student, Howard was nominated by his peers for induction into the Gold Humanism Honor Society for his excellence in clinical care, leadership, compassion and dedication to service. He was also inducted into the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Society, which recognizes individuals for high attainment and service in medical sciences, patient care and related fields.
cted into the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Society and received the FSU College of Medicine’s Mission Model Award in 2012. Ho will serve a one-year term as secretary-treasurer.