Orlando Health Archives | 麻豆原创 News Central Florida Research, Arts, Technology, Student Life and College News, Stories and More Wed, 06 May 2026 19:26:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/blogs.dir/20/files/2019/05/cropped-logo-150x150.png Orlando Health Archives | 麻豆原创 News 32 32 The Next Elite Sports Physical Therapists /news/the-next-elite-sports-physical-therapists/ Wed, 06 May 2026 13:30:23 +0000 /news/?p=152951 The healthcare providers selected for the 麻豆原创 and Orlando Health Sports Physical Therapy program bring a unique blend of skills and passion for delivering care.

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Alvaro Zapata and Tsianna Barnwell have never feared the highest level of competition. They crave it. Growing up, soccer, track and football lit internal fires that burn to this day, which helps explain how they made it into an exclusive cohort: the 麻豆原创 and Orlando Health sports physical therapy residency. With just two residents accepted each year, Zapata and Barnwell made the cut from a list of 30 high-performing applicants, meaning they鈥檙e as elite as the athletes they work with.

“The residency accelerates clinical reasoning by three to five years, making [residents] more competitive candidates for the best jobs.” 鈥 Meredith Chaput, research coordinator and liaison for the 麻豆原创 and Orlando Health sports physical therapy聽 residency program

鈥淲e look for people who thrive on rigor,鈥 says Assistant Professor of Physical Therapy Meredith Chaput, the residency鈥檚 research coordinator and liaison. The payoff is priceless. 鈥淭he residency accelerates clinical reasoning by three to five years, making them more competitive candidates for the best jobs.鈥

Chaput鈥檚 sport-specific expertise, along with that of four of her colleagues in the 麻豆原创 Division of Physical Therapy who serve as didactic and clinical mentors, is an instant draw to the program. So, too, are 麻豆原创鈥檚 research labs, partnerships and the opportunity to teach students in the 麻豆原创 doctor of physical therapy program.

The residents are equally drawn to the opportunity to advance their skills alongside a seasoned clinical team at Orlando Health. They take on a caseload of sports and orthopedic patients, providing specialized care ranging from post-surgical rehabilitation to elite-level performance optimization, tapping into advanced rehabilitation technology to improve athlete recovery. Nearly 2 million people every year suffer sports-related injuries and receive treatment in emergency departments, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

With all of this in place, professionals are being prepared, two at a time, through a specialized 12-month program, to join the select group of 169 board-certified sports clinical specialist physical therapists in Florida. It鈥檚 a coveted residency and one designed to develop healthcare providers to better aid athletes of all levels. Central Florida is a premier sports destination, featuring a mix of professional franchises, elite collegiate athletics, large high schools and massive amateur complexes.

鈥淲hen we started this program in 2020, our mission initially aimed to strengthen the rehabilitation services provided to the local sports-based community within Central Florida by producing highly trained and skilled sports physical therapists,鈥 says Philip Agostinelli, residency program coordinator and rehab clinical operations manager with Orlando Health Sports Medicine and Rehab Center.聽 鈥淣ow, currently, in our sixth cohort of residents, that mission evolved to encompass the needs of athletes on a national scale, with multiple past graduates working in professional or semi-professional sports across the country.鈥

A man wearing an Orlando City soccer training jersey stands in front of a purple Orlando City logo wall.
Since entering the 麻豆原创 and Orlando Health Sports Physical Therapy program, Alvaro Zapata has accessed the inner circles of Orlando鈥檚 two professional soccer teams.

The Tireless Protege: Alvaro Zapata

Long days do not faze Alvaro Zapata, even as they turn into 60-hour weeks. To him, they鈥檙e part of the allure of the residency program.

鈥淚 ask myself, 鈥榃hen would I have this kind of opportunity again?鈥 and the answer is never,鈥 Zapata says. 鈥淭he program opens doors that would otherwise not be open.鈥

鈥淚鈥檓 gaining all the knowledge I could possibly need to eventually be at the top of my profession.鈥 鈥 Alvaro Zapata

Since entering the program last August, Zapata has stretched his aptitude alongside clinicians at Orlando Health and Jewett Orthopedic. He鈥檚 worked with athletes in high schools and at 麻豆原创 and accessed the inner circles of Orlando鈥檚 two professional soccer teams.

As Zapata puts it, 鈥淚鈥檓 gaining all the knowledge I could possibly need to eventually be at the top of my profession.鈥

Zapata was poised to climb the ladder with his Doctor of Physical Therapy from Boston University when he heard about Chaput heading up the residency program at 麻豆原创. He knew of her published research and presentations to global audiences.

鈥淪he鈥檚 a big reason I wanted this residency so badly,鈥 Zapata says.

麻豆原创 and Orlando Health Sports Physical Therapy program resident Alvaro-Zapata speaks at a podium in front of a large screen and signage reading 鈥淚sokinetic Conference: Return to Performance.鈥
At the 2026 Isokinetic Conference, Alvaro Zapata presented progress on a rehab model he co-developed, examining how ACL surgery can disrupt instinctive movement and coordination.

Here, he has had the opportunity to collaborate with Chaput and progress research on the 鈥渧isual-cognitive control-to-chaos continuum鈥 in rehab, a model for which Chaput is one of the original creators. After ACL reconstruction surgery, patients often develop inhibitions within the brain that limit the coordination of knee movement. Instead of movement in competition being instinctive, athletes are often consciously aware of deficiencies that were once automatic.

鈥淚f you can鈥檛 trust your knee, then you can鈥檛 get back to the top of your game,鈥 Zapata says. 鈥淩ehab is typically done in a controlled setting. The real sports environment is chaotic. We鈥檙e finding ways to challenge people the day after surgery, so inhibitions don鈥檛 set in.鈥

This means 鈥渧isual-cognitive鈥 challenges are added to rehab in the very early stages. For example, the physical therapists might have the patient look for colored lights on a screen. Red means squeeze the right leg. Blue means squeeze the left leg. Yellow means squeeze both.

The visual-cognitive control-to-chaos continuum calls for therapists to gradually make exercises more complex for the patient, from simple, controlled movements to more unpredictable, game-like situations. The goal is to better prepare patients to safely return to sports by training both the body and the brain.

鈥淲e want athletes to react instead of thinking first,鈥 Zapata says. 鈥淚t could be a game changer.鈥

A woman wearing an Orlando Health jersey walks on the soccer field as Orlando Pride teammates practice in the background.
Tsianna Barnwell is building her skill set through hands-on work with the Orlando Pride.

The Team Player: Tsianna Barnwell

At noon on a Monday, Tsianna Barnwell leaves Jewett Orthopedic Clinic, where she鈥檚 been broadening her skills since 7 a.m. She鈥檒l now drive to a local high school to work with athletes across a range of sports. Barnwell thrives in the residency program because no two days are the same. She might work with the Orlando Pride or Orlando City, provide expertise for USA Track or binge on insights at Orlando Health.

Some people call the program challenging. Barnwell calls it 鈥渋ncredible.鈥

鈥淚鈥檓 getting the best of all worlds,鈥 she says. She even immerses herself in the world of Orlando Ballet, calling it 鈥渁nother unique experience to add to my toolbox.鈥

A researcher kneels beside a fellow researcher performing a hamstring strength test on specialized equipment in the Cognition, Neuroplasticity and Sarcopenia Lab at 麻豆原创.
In the Cognition, Neuroplasticity and Sarcopenia Lab, Tsianna Barnwell (left), assisted by Alvaro Zapata (right), studies differences in hamstring muscles between men and women to inform rehabilitation, recovery and injury prevention.

Barnwell takes her toolbox into the Cognition, Neuroplasticity and Sarcopenia Lab, where she and Chaput are advancing research, which they recently presented in Athens, Greece, at the Isokinetic Conference. It started with a question Barnwell had from her days as a Division I soccer player: Why are female athletes two to six times more likely to suffer knee injuries than men? Through her sports residency, she鈥檚 discovered that females are more likely to be weaker in their hamstring muscles. Studying these anatomical and physiological differences can inform impactful changes in rehab, recovery and injury prevention, she notes.

“With this residency under my belt, my opportunities will be almost endless.” 鈥 Tsianna Barnwell

Barnwell knows firsthand what it鈥檚 like to suffer a torn ACL. She鈥檚 also known 鈥渢he team鈥 as her home away from home since leaving Qatar as an 18-year-old to study and play soccer at St. Bonaventure University. Ultimately, she wants to be part of a team again, perhaps as the director of rehabilitation for a professional women鈥檚 soccer team. That鈥檚 her preference, but when the residency ends, she鈥檒l be prepared to work with any team 鈥 even a ballet company, Cirque du Soleil or the rehab team at Orlando Health.

鈥淚鈥檓 fortunate to gain such a breadth of knowledge,鈥 Barnwell says. 鈥淲ith this residency under my belt, my opportunities will be almost endless.鈥

麻豆原创 alumnus Jeremy Wydra speaks at a conference podium with a 麻豆原创 logo displayed on the screen behind him.
Jeremy Wydra 鈥18 ’22DPT was among the presenters at the 2026 Isokinetic Conference in Athens, Greece.

The Empowered Graduate: Jeremy Wydra 鈥18 鈥22DPT

Jeremy Wydra 鈥18 ’22DPT is where Zapata and Barnwell will soon be: residency complete, now pursuing a path to find more effective ways to help athletes and performers recover and raise the bar.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the great outcome for me: variety,鈥 says Wydra, who finished the residency program in 2024 and is now practicing clinically, and working toward his doctorate in kinesiology at 麻豆原创, where he is collecting data on the recovery and return to performance after ACL reconstruction.

Wydra worked his way through 麻豆原创, first envisioning a career in mechanical engineering and ultimately earning a bachelor鈥檚 in health sciences. Along the way, he decided he wanted a people-facing profession and shadowed at a clinic, where he noticed physical therapists conversing with patients throughout treatment sessions, often for more than an hour. He saw it as personalized healthcare that he could optimize with physics and innovation.

A student-athlete jumps over cones during a training drill while 麻豆原创 alum Jeremy Wydra observes and holds a measuring stick in a gym setting.
Jeremy Wydra 鈥18 ’22DPT (right) works with a student-athlete in a training facility.

After finishing his doctorate in physical therapy at 麻豆原创, Wydra landed in a dream situation in Maryland, practicing as both a strength and conditioning coach and a physical therapist within sports performance centers. It begs the question: Why return for the residency?

鈥淚 wanted to work with mentors who would push me to be better,鈥 says Wydra.

Unlike Zapata and Barnwell, Wydra had little soccer experience. Gaining it became part of the push he desired.

“… the value of the residency for me: having access to such diversified people and environments.” 鈥 Jeremy Wydra 鈥18 鈥22DPT

鈥淒uring my second week in the residency, I stepped into the Orlando City Academy training room to work with high-level athletes,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 also helped on the sidelines and talked with the medical staff about team-centered communication with coaches and players. That was the value of the residency for me: having access to such diversified people and environments.鈥

Wydra sees himself taking full advantage of the variety still in front of him, perhaps as a physical therapist and sports scientist, reforming best practices and helping others be their best.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 what my mentors in the residency have done for me: made me a better person and professional,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 trade those 12 months for the world.鈥

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Alvaro-Zapata Screenshot Screenshot Tsianna-Barnwell Screenshot Screenshot Jeremy-Wydra Jeremy Wydra trains student athlete
麻豆原创,聽Orlando Health Co-Locate to Accelerate Healthcare Innovation聽 /news/ucf-orlando-health-co-locate-to-accelerate-healthcare-innovation/ Thu, 30 Apr 2026 14:15:27 +0000 /news/?p=152747 A ribbon-cutting ceremony formally welcomed Orlando Health as a tenant in SPRK and highlighted a shared commitment to accelerating healthcare solutions through proximity, collaboration and real-world application.

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Yesterday,聽Orlando Health celebrated the opening聽of Orlando Health Strategic Innovations聽located聽within SPRK, 麻豆原创鈥檚 innovation building, expanding the health system鈥檚 presence at the center of 麻豆原创鈥檚聽main聽campus.

Designed to accelerate innovation, the Orlando Health Strategic Innovations group connects real clinical and operational challenges with student and academic talent, creating a healthcare environment where ideas are tested, informed by feedback, and continually improved. The space serves as an extension of the system鈥檚 downtown headquarters and is jointly funded by Orlando Health Ventures and the Orlando Health Innovation teams.

Orlando Health鈥檚 presence within SPRK aligns with 麻豆原创鈥檚 broader co-location strategy, which brings industry partners onto campus to catalyze innovation through proximity. The approach emphasizes shared space, shared聽challenges聽and shared outcomes to accelerate problem-solving, support experiential聽learning聽and speed the translation of ideas into practice.

The co-location marks the latest milestone in聽Orlando Health鈥檚聽long-standing partnership with 麻豆原创.

鈥淏y working side by side at SPRK, we are accelerating innovation and moving real-world healthcare solutions more quickly into the communities we serve.鈥 聽鈥 Alexander N. Cartwright, 麻豆原创 president

The鈥疧rlando Health Jewett Orthopedic Institute鈥痯rovides comprehensive, year-round care for 麻豆原创 student-athletes, including on-field coverage, primary care sports medicine, and specialized imaging. As a聽Pegasus Partner,聽Orlando Health pledged $5 million toward the聽, which supports nursing internships, scholarships, and hiring, helping to address the state’s nursing shortage. In addition, Orlando Health and 麻豆原创 collaborate on advanced technology projects聽鈥斅爏uch as the鈥AI for Medical Surgery system聽鈥斅爅ointly offer specialized residency programs and聽collaborate in聽many聽additional聽ways.

鈥淥rlando Health has been an exceptional partner,聽demonstrating聽what is possible when industry and academia come together with shared聽purpose. This next phase of co-location builds on that foundation,鈥 says 麻豆原创 President Alexander N. Cartwright. 鈥淏y working side by side at SPRK, we are accelerating innovation and moving real-world healthcare solutions more quickly into the communities we serve.鈥

Healthcare Innovation at the Center of Campus

Located in聽approximately聽2,649聽square feet聽within SPRK, the聽Strategic Innovations group聽was intentionally placed, here,聽to foster continuous collaboration with faculty and students across disciplines.

This co-location enables a new operating model. Orlando Health brings real health system聽challenges聽directly into the academic environment, and interdisciplinary teams of students, faculty,聽and Orlando Health innovators rapidly design, test,聽and refine solutions.

Early collaboration has already begun to generate impact in areas such as cancer research, digital health, creation of AI聽models聽and various orthopedic innovations.

鈥淭he opening of an Orlando Health Strategic Innovations space at 麻豆原创 represents our shared commitment to advancing healthcare delivery through bold new ideas,鈥 says Jamal Hakim, M.D., chief physician officer, Orlando Health. 鈥淭hrough this partnership, we are creating a collaborative environment where clinicians, researchers, students and industry leaders can generate real-world solutions and drive innovations that will shape the future of how we care for patients.鈥

Built to Go For Launch

The latest milestone in , this co-location represents 麻豆原创’s deep commitment to the ecosystem of support powering our vision for the future.

Through聽a collective effort聽鈥斅燾ombining philanthropy and transformational giving with corporate聽partnerships, research聽commercialization聽and other revenue-generating endeavors聽鈥斅犅槎乖绰爄s charting聽a聽bold聽new path forward and building a future the world has only begun to imagine.

鈥淭his co-location with Orlando Health exemplifies the kind of partnership that powers Go for Launch, bringing industry and academia together to create real-world impact,鈥 says Rod Grabowski, 麻豆原创 vice president for Advancement and Partnership, and CEO of the 麻豆原创 Foundation. 鈥淏y aligning visionary partners with 麻豆原创鈥檚 innovation ecosystem, we are accelerating discovery, expanding opportunity and advancing solutions that improve lives.鈥

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Sharon Tucker Named Orlando Health Endowed Chair in Nursing /news/sharon-tucker-named-orlando-health-endowed-chair-in-nursing/ Tue, 21 Apr 2026 18:48:43 +0000 /news/?p=152585 The prestigious appointment from the 麻豆原创 Pegasus Partner will bolster Tucker鈥檚 nationally recognized research focused on helping practitioners and patients thrive.

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麻豆原创 Pegasus Partner Orlando Health has named , dean of 麻豆原创鈥檚 College of Nursing, the Orlando Health Endowed Chair in Nursing.

The prestigious endowed faculty position, which will support Tucker鈥檚 nursing research, teaching and scholarly activities, is just the latest example of how 麻豆原创 is leveraging industry partnerships to drive real-world impact.

Tucker is a distinguished scholar in both psychiatric mental health nursing and evidence-based practice who has made sustained impacts on the field, for nurses and patients alike. She is nationally board certified as an adult psychiatric-mental health clinical nurse specialist and integrative nurse coach.

Her research, which has been published in more than 100 peer-reviewed publications and presented around the world, focuses on behavior change through mental health and wellness interventions and organizational change through evidence-based practice.

鈥淲ith its partnership, Orlando Health is elevating excellence in education and research to support future Knight nurses and improve the health of our communities.鈥 鈥 Sharon Tucker

鈥淚 am incredibly honored to be named to this esteemed endowed position, and grateful for Orlando Health鈥檚 support of the college,鈥 says Tucker. 鈥淧artnerships are powerful and with its partnership, Orlando Health is elevating excellence in education and research to support future Knight nurses and improve the health of our communities.鈥

In addition to the new endowed chair appointment, Tucker holds the prestigious distinctions of fellow of the American Academy of Nursing and fellow of the National Academies of Practice in Nursing.

Orlando Health has been a long-standing partner of 麻豆原创 and the College of Nursing. The Orlando Health Endowed Chair in Nursing was established in 2009, and Tucker is the second faculty member to be named to the appointment. It was formerly held by Professor Emerita Mary Lou Sole, the previous dean and a renowned critical care researcher.

Kelly Edmondson, Orlando Health鈥檚 senior vice president of nursing and patient care services, says the partnership speaks to the organization鈥檚 mission to improve the health and quality of life of the individuals and communities they serve.

鈥淒r. Tucker鈥檚 research supports our efforts to empower nurses and elevate clinical excellence to deliver compassionate, evidence-based care,鈥 Edmondson says. 鈥淚t is an honor to continue to partner with 麻豆原创 to strengthen the nursing workforce and create a healthier future for all.鈥

In 2023, Orlando Health became one of 麻豆原创鈥檚 inaugural Pegasus Partners with a $5 million commitment to support the Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion as well as provide tuition assistance and additional paid internships for 麻豆原创 nursing students.

to support the College of Nursing

Philanthropic support is critical to the creation of endowed faculty positions, helping 麻豆原创 attract and retain nursing experts, and support groundbreaking research that impacts the profession and the health of communities. Help launch more faculty experts to lead nursing into the future by joining 麻豆原创鈥檚 Go for Launch campaign.

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Progressing the Final Frontier of Medicine: Space /news/progressing-the-final-frontier-of-medicine-space/ Wed, 18 Mar 2026 11:10:28 +0000 /news/?p=151572 麻豆原创 and a group of valued partners are leading a research event to explore how space medicine and commercial space flight are transforming the future of human health.

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麻豆原创鈥檚 leading space medicine experts, valued strategic partners and an astronaut who holds NASA鈥檚 record for spacewalks will gather April 10 in Lake Nona鈥檚 Medical City to discuss how they can work together to keep space travelers healthy and use that research to create groundbreaking clinical innovations on Earth.

The 鈥淪tar Nona 2026鈥 event is led by the Lake Nona Research Council, which is focused on encouraging interdisciplinary scientific partnerships between industry, academia and healthcare.

The council includes physicians and researchers from 麻豆原创, Orlando Health, AdventHealth, the , the Orlando VA Medical Center, Nemours Children鈥檚 Health, business and industry.

Star Nona 2026 Event Details

鈥淥ur goal is to bring together space medicine leaders and experts from academia, medicine and the space industry to find more ways we can work together to research the health impacts of space flight and how our discoveries can also improve healthcare on Earth,鈥 says Michal Masternak, 麻豆原创 professor of medicine.

An anti-aging and cancer researcher, Masternak leads the Lake Nona Research Council鈥檚 space medicine research group. He also leads the College of Medicine鈥檚 program that processes astronaut samples so physicians and scientists can analyze the immediate impact of space travel on astronauts鈥 bodies.

Sessions will include presentations on:

  • Microgravity and radiation exposure and their impact on human physical and mental health
  • How space travel affects muscles, bones, cells, vision and the brain
  • Protecting muscles in space (led by AdventHealth researchers)
  • Next generation of the space station
  • New technologies for diagnosing how space travel impacts human cells.
Portrait of man wearing white astronaut suit while holding helmet with gold visor in front of American flag.
Robert Curbeam holds the record for the most spacewalks (4) during a single spaceflight.

These presentations will feature 麻豆原创 researchers from medicine, , and . 麻豆原创 graduate students and post-doctoral scientists will also present research posters on space medicine.

The plenary speaker is NASA astronaut Robert Curbeam, a U.S. Navy captain who completed four spacewalks during space shuttle Discovery鈥檚 2006 mission to the International Space Station.

The Space Coast鈥檚 College of Medicine

Located 45 miles west of the Space Coast and Kennedy Space Center, 麻豆原创鈥檚 College of Medicine is the perfect partner to chart a new frontier in healthcare as humans prepare for longer missions to the moon and Mars, and commercial space flights take more civilians into space.

The goal: explore how factors such as microgravity, radiation and isolation impact the human body in space and how that knowledge can drive innovation into diagnostics, treatment and disease prevention on Earth.

To further those efforts, 麻豆原创 has created a new Center for Aerospace and Extreme Environments Medicine (CASEEM), which includes 麻豆原创 faculty experts in medicine, engineering, computer science, psychology, arts and educational leadership. This interdisciplinary group will work together to research and develop new technologies for keeping space travelers healthy, as well as soldiers on military missions, deep sea explorers and mountain climbers.

About the Lake Nona Research Council

Edward Ross, the College of Medicine鈥檚 chair of medicine and assistant dean for research, leads the Lake Nona Research Council.

Ross says Star Nona and the partnerships it creates will help solidify 麻豆原创 and Medical City鈥檚 reputation as a premier center for space medicine.

鈥淲hen people think of keeping space visitors healthy, we want them to immediately think 麻豆原创.鈥 鈥 Edward Ross, College of Medicine鈥檚 chair of medicine

鈥淎s a university, 麻豆原创 was born to create the workforce to send humans to the moon,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e continuing that legacy with space medicine. When people think of keeping space visitors healthy, we want them to immediately think 麻豆原创.鈥

Event Registration

Star Nona 2026 will be held at the 麻豆原创 Lake Nona Cancer Center, with registration beginning at 8:15 a.m. Star Nona is made possible by support and sponsorships from Dr. Jogi Pattisapu and the Hydrocephalus and Neuroscience Institute, Tavistock Development Company and the Florida Space Institute. To sign up to attend the event, please visit .

Celestial graphic with astronaut and 麻豆原创 tab logo that reads: Star Nona 2026 Space Translational Advances & Research Space: The Final Frontier of Medicine

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Robert_Curbeam-NASA Robert Curbeam holds the record for the most spacewalks (4) during a single spaceflight. STAR_NONA_event-promo-ucf-space-medicine
Pegasus Partner Orlando Health Boosts 麻豆原创 Clinic With New Name and Major Support /news/pegasus-partner-orlando-health-boosts-ucf-clinic-with-new-name-and-major-support/ Thu, 26 Jun 2025 13:33:39 +0000 /news/?p=147978 Orlando Health Jewett Orthopedic Institute Athletic Training Clinic brings one of the state鈥檚 most respected orthopedic and sports medicine practices to the 麻豆原创 Recreation and Wellness Center.

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Pegasus Partner Orlando Health continues to deepen its longstanding relationship with 麻豆原创 through the newly renamed Orlando Health Jewett Orthopedic Institute Athletic Training Clinic at the 麻豆原创 Recreation and Wellness Center (RWC).

Through this enhanced partnership, clinicians will continue to deliver exceptional care to 麻豆原创 students 鈥 offering injury evaluation, treatment, rehabilitation and preventive services 鈥 now bolstered by direct access to one of Central Florida鈥檚 premier healthcare systems.

鈥淭his collaboration ensures our students receive top-tier care from highly qualified athletic trainers.鈥 鈥 Jim Wilkening, 麻豆原创 RWC executive director

The agreement also supports expanded staffing, upgraded equipment, enhanced programming and streamlined referral pathways for students requiring additional care. These enhancements further solidify the RWC鈥檚 role as a cornerstone of student well-being at 麻豆原创.

All RWC services 鈥 including appointments at the athletic training clinic 鈥 are free for students who have paid the university鈥檚 activity and service fee.

麻豆原创鈥檚 Pegasus Partner program provides select organizations with opportunities to engage across the university in ways that foster meaningful, long-term relationships.

鈥淲e鈥檙e thrilled to partner with Orlando Health for the continued health and safety of our students,鈥 says聽Jim Wilkening, executive director of the RWC. 鈥淭his collaboration ensures our students receive top-tier care from highly qualified athletic trainers.鈥

The image shows a physical therapy or rehabilitation room with two black padded treatment tables. Each table has a blue bolster and a black armrest device on top. The room has shelves with various medical supplies, including rolls of tape, bottles of lotion, and exercise mats. On the wall above the counter is a sign that reads 'Orlando Health Jewett Orthopedic Institute' with the 麻豆原创 logo next to it. There are anatomical charts on another wall and a full-length mirror leaning against the wall.
Inside the Orlando Health Jewett Orthopedic Institute Athletic Training Clinic at the 麻豆原创 Recreation and Wellness Center. (Photo by Kristin Nurnberg)

鈥淎s the official medical provider for 麻豆原创 Athletics, expanding our role to provide the same expert care to the entire student body was a logical step for us,鈥 says Orlando Health Jewett Orthopedic Institute sports medicine physician Fred Soliman, who also serves as a team physician for 麻豆原创. 聽鈥淭hrough this partnership, students will have easier access to high-level medical care at the RWC.鈥

鈥淭hrough this partnership, students will have easier access to high-level medical care at the RWC.鈥 鈥 Fred Soliman, Orlando Health Jewett Orthopedic Institute sports medicine physician

Since becoming one of 麻豆原创鈥檚 first Pegasus Partners in 2023, Orlando Health has made significant contributions to the university, including support for the new Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion in Lake Nona, which will open this fall; student scholarships; and internships aimed at addressing Florida鈥檚 nursing shortage.

Orlando Health also recently partnered with a 麻豆原创 biomedical engineer and several engineering students on a pilot program that uses artificial intelligence and computer vision to track surgical staples in operating rooms. The AI software directs a camera to record each staple鈥檚 use, enabling data analysis that improves efficiency and reduces costs. This technology has the potential to be applied to other surgical processes, such as tracking instrument usage during non-robotic procedures.

鈥淔rom Pilates and rock climbing to open-water SCUBA, the RWC empowers students to stay active 鈥 and now, with enhanced support from Orlando Health, they can climb higher, swim deeper and run faster, with even greater confidence in their care,鈥 says聽Rod Grabowski, 麻豆原创鈥檚 senior vice president for Advancement and Partnerships. 鈥淲e are grateful not only for Orlando Health鈥檚 continued trust in our mission and programs, but also for their shared commitment to our students 鈥 and their future.鈥

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麻豆原创_Orlando Health Jewett Orthopedic Institute_3 Inside the Orlando Health Jewett Orthopedic Institute Athletic Training Clinic at the 麻豆原创 Recreation and Wellness Center