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03/18/2002
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE Leaders in the development and use of virtual reality technology, the Internet and other multimedia resources for medical education are among the recently hired faculty at Florida State University’s new College of Medicine.
  The college’s most recent hires include:
Dennis Baker, Ph.D., Dr. Anthony Costa, Graham Patrick, Ph.D., Philip Posner, Ph.D

03/02/2002
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE Dr. Anthony Costa, the newly appointed assistant dean for the FSU College of Medicine’s Regional Medical School Campus – Orlando, joined the college’s 30 first-year students for a tour of Florida Hospital and Orlando Regional Medical Center March 2. Costa will lead the development of the third- and fourth-year clinical training program for those FSU medical students who are assigned to Orlando beginning in July 2003. Costa, who currently serves as associate dean for clinical education at the Barberton campus of the Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine, will officially begin his new duties July 1.

02/01/2002
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE Dr. Charlotte Edwards Maguire, a distinguished pediatrician and supporter of the Florida State University College of Medicine, will be awarded an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree in a ceremony at 5 p.m. Feb. 14 in the College of Medicine Administration Building.

11/28/2001
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE A family physician from rural Milton, Fla., will serve as the assistant dean for the FSU College of Medicine’s regional campus in Pensacola. The college announced Monday that it has appointed Dr. Paul McLeod to lead the development of the first of several regional medical campuses it will establish throughout the state.

11/28/2001
med.fsu.edu
PRESS RELEASE The Florida State University College of Medicine has established a Center on Terrorism and Public Health that will serve as a resource for educating health professionals and the public on how to deal with weapons of mass destruction and bioterrorism. Dr. Robert G. Brooks, associate dean for health affairs and professor of family medicine at the FSU College of Medicine, will be the center’s director.
11/01/2001
med.fsu.edu

PRESS RELEASE Florida State University's new medical school dean envisions a future where patients correspond with their doctors by e-mail - even in rural Florida. And those same doctors, says Dr. Joseph Scherger, will be able to tap into the most up-to-date research to treat their patients, thanks to information provided by FSU's medical school via video feed or the Internet. "Patients deserve the best care no matter who they go to, even in the small towns in the Panhandle," said Scherger, who was chosen to lead the school Tuesday. Scherger's appointment by Provost Larry Abele is the result of a national search that took several months. He begins work July 1.

08/01/1972
The Gainesville Tribune

Students from Florida State University and Florida A&M University represent the first results of a new inter-institutional program linking them with University of Florida in a new pathway for medical education.

11/02/1023
USA Today

Gender-affirming care is life-saving, research shows. Why is it so controversial for trans kids? Ramiz Kseri, M.D., an assistant professor of internal medicine and pediatrics at Florida State University's College of Medicine, and Jonathan Appelbaum, M.D., chair of the college's Department of Clinical Sciences as well as its education director and a professor of internal medicine, are two of the many experts consulted for this USA Today article.

11/30/0212
Health News Florida

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

04/17/0018
Tallahassee Democrat

First-year medical students Gabe Lowenhaar and Harielle Deshommes traveled to Immokalee during spring break for FSUCares' annual medical outreach and served as interpreters.

parkinsonsnewstoday.com

Loneliness raises a person’s risk of developing Parkinson’s disease within 15 years, a long-term study of nearly half a million U.K. residents found, supporting calls into the therapeutic benefits of personally significant social bonds.

This work adds to evidence “that loneliness is a substantial psychosocial determinant of health,” the researchers wrote in the study “Loneliness and Risk of Parkinson Disease,” published in JAMA Neurology
.

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