Mercer University School of Medicine Columbus Dean Elected Chair of Georgia Composite Medical Board
Staff Report From Columbus CEO, Staff Report From Middle Georgia CEO
Thursday, September 3rd, 2015
Alice House, M.D., FAAFP, regional dean of the Columbus campus of Mercer University School of Medicine, was recently elected chair of the Georgia Composite Medical Board for fiscal year 2015-2016.
The board – composed of 16 members appointed by the governor and confirmed by the state senate – licenses physicians, physician assistants, respiratory care professionals, perfusionists, acupuncturists, orthotists, prosthetists, auricular detoxification specialists and residency training permits. The board also investigates complaints and disciplines those who violate the Medical Practice Act or other laws governing the professional behavior of its licensees.
“It has been a pleasure to serve the citizens of Georgia on the Composite State Medical Board. I am humbled by this honor entrusted to me, and I look forward to continuing the work of the many talented and dedicated physicians who have worked so diligently to form one of the best medical boards in the country,” said Dr. House, who was originally appointed to the Georgia Composite Medical Board by Gov. Sonny Perdue in January 2010 and served as its vice chair during fiscal year 2014-2015.
As the current chair of the Georgia Composite Medical Board, Dr. House also serves a standing appointment on the Georgia Commission on Medical Cannabis.
The commission is composed of 11 members appointed by the governor and includes the commissioner of public health, director of the GBI, director of the Georgia Drugs and Narcotics Agency, commissioner of agriculture, chair of the Georgia Composite Medical Board and governor’s executive counsel. It is responsible for establishing comprehensive recommendations regarding the potential regulation of medical cannabis.
The commission was created as part of a law passed by the Georgia General Assembly earlier this year allowing people with certain medical conditions to legally possess cannabis oil in Georgia with a doctor’s approval. It met for the first time on June 16.
The commission met for a second time on Aug. 26, the same day that Dr. House was sworn in as a member by Gov. Nathan Deal.
Dr. House is a 1995 graduate of the School of Medicine. She completed her family medicine residency training at the Medical Center, Navicent Health, in Macon, and went into private practice in Byron before joining the Mercer faculty in 2002.
She was appointed regional dean of Mercer’s Columbus campus, which enrolls up to 80 third- and fourth-year medical students, in July 2014. Previously, she served as senior associate dean for student affairs and admissions, director of student advising, professionalism program director and family medicine clerkship director.