FSU College of Medicine 2018 annual report 2019 Annual Report | Page 5

2 0 1 9 A N N U A L R E P O R T 3 training site brings the total to more than 376,000 HOW WE’RE UNIQUE ∑ square feet. We’re community-based. Instead of learning in an ∑ academic medical center, seeing only the sickest (FSU PrimaryHealth) opened in 2019. patients and learning largely from residents, our ∑ students learn one-on-one from community health- S T U D E N T S (as of Dec. 31, 2019) care providers in their offices, clinics and other ∑ outpatient settings as well as in area hospitals. ∑ Medical students: 480 Those communities are all over the state, near ∑ 124 minorities underrepresented in medicine* our six regional campuses and our rural/clinical ∑ (73 Hisp/Lat, 51 Black/AA) training sites. ∑ 184 minorities in all (including Asian)* We’re mission-driven. A large part of our mission ∑ (73 Hisp/Lat, 51 Black/AA, 60 Asian) (see inside front cover) is to serve the underserved. ∑ 275 women That starts with choosing the right students. Test ∑ 205 men scores matter, but so do other factors, such as ∑ Bridge students: 11 where they grew up, what motivates them and how ∑ 9 minorities underrepresented in medicine* they’ve already served the community. We immerse ∑ 9 minorities in all (including Asian)* ∑ 7 women ∑ 4 men ∑ PA students: 107 ∑ 30 minorities underrepresented in medicine** ∑ 40 minorities in all (including Asian)** ∑ 79 women ∑ 28 men ∑ Ph.D. students: 46 ∑ 17 minorities ∑ 17 women On the main campus, the College of Medicine’s ∑ 29 men two buildings (including a research building) total ∑ Postdoctoral fellows: 21 300,000 gross square feet. ∑ 14 minorities Adding in the leased or owned buildings at the ∑ 8 women regional campuses and the Immokalee rural ∑ 13 men them in a culture that values diversity, mutual respect, teamwork and open communication – and ∑ A 10,000-square-foot primary-care health center ACADEMIC DEGREES prepares them to become lifelong learners. ∑ M.D. We’re focused on primary care. Through 2019, ∑ Ph.D. in Biomedical Sciences more than half of our M.D. alumni matched in ∑ M.S. in Biomedical Sciences–Bridge to Clinical Medicine Major one of these primary-care specialties: internal medicine, family medicine, pediatrics or obstetrics- ∑ M.S. in Physician Assistant Practice gynecology. Most of our alumni now practicing in ∑ B.S. in Interdisciplinary Medical Sciences Florida are in primary care, and a good percentage ∑ of those are in rural or other underserved settings, where recruiting new physicians can be a challenge. FACILITIES ∑ ∑ ∑ ∑ ∑ *(AMCAS – AAMC application) ∑ **(CASPA) ∑