Four research projects from Florida State University have recently been granted a total of $106,000 by the Florida State University Research Foundation. Two professors from the College of Medicine, Dr. Bhide and Dr. Hurt, were awarded funding to further pursue their research.
Myra Hurt, Raed Rizkallah, and Pradeep Bhide, in the College of Medicine, are a few of the winners from the latest round of awards from FSU’S biannual, $250,000 Grant Assistance Program.
Two professors from the College of Medicine, Dr. Pradeep Bhide and Dr. Myra Hurt, were awarded funding by the Florida State University Research Foundation to help move their discoveries from the laboratory to the marketplace.The latest round of awards from Florida State’s biannual, $250,000 Grant Assistance Program (GAP) are intended to help each project reach new milestones on their march to real-world implementation
There is a contract dispute between BayCare Health System and UnitedHealthcare. The fight between the two affects 400,000 patients and thousands of physicians, which makes it a matter of public concern. It all started when BayCare Health System, a network of 10 major non-profit hospitals, notified United that it was ending their contract early because, according to the hospital system, United had failed to pay bills totaling $11 million. Marshall Kapp, director of FSU’s Center for Innovative Collaboration in Medicine and Law, is quoted in the story. Bay United Depth
Tallahassee is well positioned in offering local and regional residents with a variety of academic choices. Many people associated with the universities are engaged in what they can develop here in Tallahassee that can lead to advancements globally in several areas such as health care, business and product development. Their work essentially benefits us all in promoting this community as a top research and development community.
Tallahassee is well positioned in offering local and regional residents with a variety of academic choices. Many people associated with the universities are engaged in what they can develop here in Tallahassee that can lead to advancements globally in several areas such as health care, business and product development. Their work essentially benefits us all in promoting this community as a top research and development community.
Angelina R. Sutin and Antonio Terracciano from the Florida State University College of Medicine and the National Institute on Aging are researchers on this study. The focus of this study is on weight gain and changes in impulsivity-related personality traits. According to the study, personality traits, which reflect our characteristic ways of thinking, feeling, and behaving, contribute to abnormal weight and weight gain.
Angelina R. Sutin and Antonio Terracciano from the Florida State University College of Medicine and the National Institute on Aging are researchers on this study. The focus of this study is on weight gain and changes in impulsivity-related personality traits. According to the study, personality traits, which reflect our characteristic ways of thinking, feeling, and behaving, contribute to abnormal weight and weight gain.
Angelina Sutin of the Florida State University College of Medicine, working with colleagues at the National Institute on Aging, used data from two large and ongoing studies to see if the process of gaining weight might lead people to see themselves differently.
Angelina Sutin of the Florida State University College of Medicine, working with colleagues at the National Institute on Aging, used data from two large and ongoing studies to see if the process of gaining weight might lead people to see themselves differently.
November starts the season of temptation and while some people are conscientious and disciplined and know where to draw the line on indulging, others seem to lack control of their impulses and desires. Some experts have even suggested that there is an obese personality type - a neurotic style of thinking and feeling and acting that leads inevitably to unhealthy weight gain.
November starts the season of temptation and while some people are conscientious and disciplined and know where to draw the line on indulging, others seem to lack control of their impulses and desires. Some experts have even suggested that there is an obese personality type - a neurotic style of thinking and feeling and acting that leads inevitably to unhealthy weight gain.
What FSU's medical school means to Tallahassee: FSU's College of Medicine stands as both a health-care resource and an economic engine for the Big Bend.
What FSU's medical school means to Tallahassee: FSU's College of Medicine stands as both a health-care resource and an economic engine for the Big Bend.
For the first time, the Fort Pierce Regional Campus this year embarked on a campaign to provide scholarships to its students. At the recent Faculty Appreciation Celebration, FSU was able to provide four $5,000 scholarships to very deserving fourth-year students.
For the first time, the Fort Pierce Regional Campus this year embarked on a campaign to provide scholarships to its students. At the recent Faculty Appreciation Celebration, FSU was able to provide four $5,000 scholarships to very deserving fourth-year students.
Dr. Kristin Parsley was interviewed by WCTV (CBS) for a segment on hereditary types of breast cancer.
Dr. Kristin Parsley was interviewed by WCTV (CBS) for a segment on hereditary types of breast cancer.
Suzanne Harrison wrote this op-ed on domestic violence. She is a family physician and director of family medicine education at the Florida State University College of Medicine. Harrison is also the medical director for Refuge House and provides free medical care to survivors of domestic violence. October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month.
Suzanne Harrison wrote this op-ed on domestic violence. She is a family physician and director of family medicine education at the Florida State University College of Medicine. Harrison is also the medical director for Refuge House and provides free medical care to survivors of domestic violence. October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month.
Two prestigious awards were given out Sept. 20, when the Fort Pierce Regional Campus of the Florida State University College of Medicine gathered its faculty members for a night of appreciation and academic updates.
Two prestigious awards were given out Sept. 20, when the Fort Pierce Regional Campus of the Florida State University College of Medicine gathered its faculty members for a night of appreciation and academic updates.
Dr. Les Beitsch, associate dean for Health Affairs, is quoted in this article about health care. Millions of Americans have struggled to gain access to health care because of pre-existing conditions. Millions more are at risk of having the same problem.
Business owners bracing for more work in response to health care reform have a checklist that will grow in 2014 as more provisions of the Affordable Care Act take effect. Preparing for the changes was the subject of the Tuesday morning meeting of the Health Sciences & Human Performance Enhancement (Health Care) Roundtable of the Economic Development Council of Tallahassee-Leon County. The meeting was hosted by Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare. Marshall Kapp, director of FSU’s Center for Innovative Collaboration in Medicine and Law.
Dr. Les Beitsch, associate dean for Health Affairs, is quoted in this article about health care. Millions of Americans have struggled to gain access to health care because of pre-existing conditions. Millions more are at risk of having the same problem.
The Florida State University College of Medicine (FSU COM) was established in 2000, the first new MD-granting medical school in the United States in over 25 years. In its brief history, the FSU COM has developed rapidly in accordance with its founding mission to meet the need for primary care physicians, especially those caring for the elderly and the underserved. The school recently received a full continuation of accreditation for the maximum period, eight years, from the Liaison Committee on Medical Education
Sixteen extraordinary women from the Florida Panhandle will receive the prestigious Girl Scouts Women of Distinction Award on Nov. 1 during the Awards Gala and 100th Anniversary celebration at the Tallahassee-Leon County Civic Center. Dr. Charlotte Maguire, retired pediatrician, is among the honorees.
Kristopher R. “Ryan” Shannon, a second-year student in the Florida State University College of Medicine, has been named one of only 40 students nationwide to receive a 2012 Tylenol Future Care Scholarship. The scholarship will provide him with $10,000 to apply toward his studies.
Head football coach Jimbo Fisher and Candi Fisher, chairwoman of their nonprofit Kidz1stFund, were the special guests at a Nov. 9 seminar on Changing the Practice of Medicine: The FA Story. The FSU College of Medicine hosted the seminar, which was sponsored by Capital Regional Medical Center.
There are as many reactions to a breast cancer diagnosis as there are women who receive one. But the prospect of death almost always looms. Most of the one in eight women in the U.S. who get breast cancer don’t die of the disease. But the instant response of many to the diagnosis mirrors that of long-time state employee Vanda Ragans last summer.
The article quotes both Dr. Nancy Van Vessem and Dr. Lea Kristin Parsley who are faculty members of the College of Medicine.
Two Tallahassee physicians were honored in August as outstanding faculty members at the Florida State College of Medicine — where one of them graduated just seven years ago. The honorees were Alex Ho, an ER doctor at Tallahassee Memorial Hospital, and Eileen Venable, psychiatry clerkship director and practicing psychiatrist.
An interview about flu vaccines with Ricardo Jose Gonzalez-Rothi, M.D., chairman of the Department of Clinical Sciences at the Florida State University College of Medicine. Contact him at ric.gonzalez-rothi@med.fsu.edu . www.youtube.com/watch
Though Florida Supreme Court Justice Barbara Pariente was fit, healthy and happy and had no family history of breast cancer, her routine mammogram revealed she had an early stage of the disease that later would spread, ultimately resulting in two surgeries, a double mastectomy and breast reconstruction, followed by months of chemotherapy. She lost her hair, and one day boldly ditched the wig she hated and took to the bench bald.
Two College of Medicine faculty members, Nancy Van Vessem and Lea Parsley are quoted in the article.
Lisa Johnson, M.D. and Joedrecka Brown, M.D. are both faculty of the FSU College of Medicine and will be caring for patients in the Gadsden practice.
The Autism Institute at Florida State’s College of Medicine is part of a new $8.3 million study to measure risk and resilience factors for autism in infants and toddlers. The goal is to better understand developmental trajectories in children with autism and to improve early detection, intervention and outcomes.
A system where doctors routinely reported drivers who might be impaired by chronic illnesscut the risk of car crashes by 45 percent in a new study from Ontario, Canada.
Some medical schools’ first-year students have been waiting all summer for fall classes to begin. But at the Florida State University College of Medicine, the Class of 2016 already has wrapped up one semester, conquered the anatomy lab and begun wearing the timeless symbol of the profession: the white coat.
Florida State University’s colleges of law and medicine are among the 10 best in the nation for Hispanics, according to Hispanic Business magazine. The College of Law was ranked third among the nation’s law schools, while the College of Medicine was ranked seventh among medical schools. FSU Headlines
The Florida State University College of Medicine Fort Pierce Regional Campus recently honored their fourth graduating class. During the event, awards given by the students were presented to faculty.
Florida State University’s College of Medicine is ranked No. 7 in the nation for Hispanics, according to Hispanic Business magazine. The magazine based its rankings on percentage of Hispanic student enrollment; percentage of Hispanic faculty members; percentage of degrees conferred upon Hispanics; and progressive programs aimed at increasing enrollment of Hispanic students.
Members of Club 25, an organization formed from the “25 Women You Need to Know” program created by the Tallahassee Democrat , partnered with Capital Area Healthy Start Coalition to provide summer learning opportunities for Healthy Start's STRONGER Girls Program.
Hispanic Business Magazine recently released a list of top ranked Hispanic-American graduate programs—and Florida State University’s Colleges of Law and Medicine made the cut.
Florida State University’s College of Medicine welcomes 120 first year medical students with its annual White Coat Ceremony. The white coat celebrates two big milestones: the students are joining the medical profession and they have passed their first semester of summer classes.
Julie DeCesare, professor and program director of the OB-GYN residency program at Florida State University was a guest on the show and discusses the comments on women, rape and pregnancy by Republican U.S. Senate candidate from Missouri, Todd Akin.
The Florida Medical Association would like to recognize Christie Sain, M.D., a family medicine physician practicing at Patients first.
A Florida State University professor, Jacob VanLandingham, is developing a new drug that could help prevent concussions before they occur, or reduce the chance of long-term damage.
As our national population grows and grays, the need for doctors and nurses will only increase.
And perhaps no more than in Florida, known for having a large retirement population. About 13.3 percent of the U.S. population is 65 years old or older, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. In Florida, that age segment is 17.6 percent.
That's one reason why the success of the Daytona Beach Regional Campus of the Florida State University College of Medicine is a major plus for the area.
Twice in a seven-month span medical students from FSU made the cover of Academic Medicine, the journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.
Kimberly Driscoll, assistant professor of medical humanities and social sciences at the FSU College of Medicine, was awarded a four-year, $655,000 grant from the National Institutes of Health to pursue a study designed to improve insulin pump adherence in adolescents with Type 1 diabetes.