FSU College of Medicine 2018 annual report 2018 Annual Report - FSU College of Medicine | Page 45
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EXPANDING PERSPECTIVE A CO M M U N I T Y CH E C K U P MEDICAL STUDENT RESEARCH
Jeffrey Harman, professor of
behavioral sciences and social medicine,
and Heidi Kinsell, assistant professor
of geriatrics, are working with an
international collaboration of researchers
on improving care for people who are
disabled or otherwise face complex
medical problems.
Their effort is to find common language
and the ability to interpret findings in
research involving vulnerable individuals
across a variety of health and social
service settings. Harman and Kinsell have access to relatable
data from
countries through interRAI, a collaborative
network of researchers and practitioners.
Developing such research tools has far-reaching
implications in Florida, where assessing health-care delivery
mechanisms is an important part of helping the state provide
ade uate resources.
So if we re looking at the uality of care in Florida nursing
homes, interRAI will provide benchmarks to help make
comparisons to the uality of care being provided in nursing
homes in other states or countries, Harman said. Likewise,
if Florida wants to assess community mental health care, you
could benchmark your data and compare it to levels of care
being provided in New York or Iowa or Canada or Russia or
Hong Kong. The first step toward improving health outcomes in
a community is also a most basic form of the college s
research mission assessing community health.
Claudia Blackburn, health officer for the Florida
Department of Health in Leon County, and assistant
professor of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine,
led a two-year effort to produce the Leon County
Community Health Assessment CHA .
The report, completed in
, involved contributions
from
community organizations and several
community members in a partnership also involving
United Way of the Big Bend and Tallahassee Memorial
HealthCare.
The report concludes that while people in Leon
County are generally healthy, challenges and disparities
are evident in neighborhoods facing socioeconomic
challenges. Mental health concerns are fre uently
identified as a priority issue, and high rates of sexually
transmitted infections and HIV persist.
Department of Behavioral
Sciences and Social Medicine
faculty members Les Beitsch and
Karen Geletko served on the CHA
steering group and a number of
FSU medical students participated
in conducting door-to-door surveys
in neighborhoods throughout Leon
County.
The next step will be the
development of a Community Health
Improvement Plan, including the
establishment of a set of goals, action
plans and evaluation criteria. Through the Summer Research Fellowships program FSU
medical students have an opportunity to conduct Ph.D.-level
research with faculty mentors and in some cases clerkship
faculty or faculty from other colleges and institutions on a
variety of clinical and biomedical research projects.
In the last two years,
students have each received
,
awards to conduct their research. More than
students have been funded since
.
The stipend is competitive with other summer research
fellowships around the country and aligns with trends
showing medical students are becoming more and more
likely to pursue research experiences,
said Suzanne Baker, assistant dean for
graduate programs and medical student
research.
There s an increased interest
specifically in clinically based research,
Baker said. This past year, we set up
a research agreement with Tallahassee
Orthopedic Clinic. They ll take a number of our students
every summer for projects, and we re working on developing
more relationships with community physicians and practices
who have an interest in doing research and working with our
students.