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Record Funding Award
Given to Ohio
University College
of Osteopathic
Medicine
College to Open
Extension Medical
Campus in Columbus,
Further Diabetes
Research
ATHENS, Ohio (April
30, 2011) – The
Osteopathic Heritage
Foundations’ $105
million award to
Ohio University’s
College of
Osteopathic Medicine
represents the
largest private
donation ever given
to a college or
university in Ohio.
This gift will be
used to address some
of the most pressing
health care issues
across the state and
the nation – the
impending shortage
of primary care
physicians and the
diabetes epidemic.
The transformational
gift was jointly
announced by the
Ohio University
College of
Osteopathic Medicine
(OU-COM) and the
Osteopathic Heritage
Foundations in
Columbus, Ohio,
during the Ohio
Osteopathic
Symposium held at
the Hilton Columbus
Easton Town Center.
“We have never
before considered a
grant or an award of
this magnitude,”
said Richard A.
Vincent, President
and CEO of the
Osteopathic Heritage
Foundations.
“Nor have we
considered an award
that has the
potential impact
that this one will
have in both central
and southeast Ohio.
Given the urgent
needs in health
care, like an
impending shortage
of primary care
physicians and a
burgeoning epidemic
of diabetes and
related illnesses,
the time was right
and the choice of a
recipient was
clear.”
“We feel that Ohio
University, and its
College of
Osteopathic
Medicine,
specifically, are in
the best position to
facilitate
addressing these
issues,” he said.
“The money is going
to Ohio University
and its College of
Osteopathic
Medicine, but it’s
going there because
it is, we feel, the
best position to
facilitate the
impact in the
community with
regard to service
and education.”
In recognition of
the award, the
medical school will
be renamed the
Ohio University
Heritage College
of Osteopathic
Medicine,
pending approval by
Ohio University’s
Board of Trustees at
its June meeting.
According to a
Chronicle of Higher
Education report
published in March
detailing private
cash gifts given to
universities and
colleges since 1968,
the Osteopathic
Heritage
Foundations’ award:
·
is the largest gift
given to a higher
education
institution in Ohio;
·
is the fourth
largest gift in 2011
to an institution of
higher education in
the U.S.;
·
is the fourth
largest gift ever
given to a U.S.
medical school; and
·
ranks among the top
50 gifts ever given
to a higher
education
institution in the
U.S.
“This is a really
remarkable gift, one
that will be
transformational for
both Ohio University
and the College of
Osteopathic
Medicine,” said Dr.
Jack A. Brose, Dean
of OU-COM. “We have
had a very long and
valuable
relationship with
the Osteopathic
Heritage
Foundations. They
have been central to
many of the exciting
things that we have
done as a medical
school. They have
worked with us to
help us determine
the direction of the
college.”
”This historic gift
from the Osteopathic
Heritage Foundations
will forever change
Ohio University and
our College of
Osteopathic
Medicine,” said
Roderick J. McDavis,
Ohio University
President. “We are
grateful to the
Osteopathic Heritage
Foundations for
their commitment
which will
dramatically broaden
our ability to
improve the human
condition of the
people of Ohio. This
gift will transform
lives.”
Closing the “Doctor
Gap” by Building in
Central Ohio
By the year 2025,
some experts predict
there will be a
shortage of at least
124,000 physicians
in the U,S,¹,
particularly primary
care physicians.
“Primary care is
desperately needed
in this country yet
the number of
physicians going
into primary care
continues to
decrease,” said Dr.
Brose. “ We must
reverse that trend.”
To help turn those
numbers around,
OU-COM plans to
expand its class
size and build an
extension campus in
central Ohio. Mr.
Vincent believes
that Ohio
University’s plans
will further enhance
central Ohio’s
growing national
reputation as a
destination for
medical education.
“Central Ohio has a
number of highly
respected health
care systems.
OhioHealth,
Nationwide
Children’s Hospital,
Mount Carmel Health
and The Ohio State
University Medical
Center, all of which
offer graduate
medical education,”
said Mr. Vincent,
“Having Ohio
University’s
extension campus
established in
central Ohio will
enhance medical
education
opportunities and
lead to more
physicians remaining
in Ohio to
practice.”
Since its inception
in 1975, OU-COM has
specialized in the
recruitment,
training and
placement of primary
care physicians,
which includes
family practice,
general internal
medicine and
pediatrics.
More than half of
the medical school’s
practicing graduates
serve as primary
care physicians and
60 percent stay in
Ohio to practice.
That makes OU-COM
number one in Ohio,
and near the top ten
nationally in
medical schools that
graduate physicians
who practice primary
care, particularly
in under-served
rural areas.²
“Our goal is to
become nothing less
than the leader of
primary care
education,” said Dr.
Brose. “This gives
us an opportunity on
our new central Ohio
campus to focus in
on the needs of
central Ohio.
It also broadens our
ability to service
communities of need
throughout the
entire state.”
The location for the
new site is still
being finalized.
However, the campus
is slated to take
its first incoming
class by August,
2014.
Once open, it will
enroll 50 new
students each year,
in addition to the
140 who are admitted
annually at the
Athens campus.
By 2019, it is
anticipated that the
Heritage medical
college will be
graduating 200
students annually.
Enhancing Research
into Diabetes
On the Athens
campus, this funding
award will also help
expand research and
treatment of
diabetes, a disease
expected to
skyrocket in the
U.S. by a staggering
165 percent by
2050³, eventually
affecting one in
three Americans.
Appalachian Ohio has
the highest
incidence of
diabetes, obesity
and related
metabolic diseases
in the state (11.3
percent), and rates
that are much higher
than the national
average (7.5
percent).⁴
There is a firm
foundation for
diabetes research on
the Athens campus,
and the Osteopathic
Heritage Foundations
funding award will
facilitate expanded
research into this
devastating disease.
“In order to enhance
that type of
research you need an
infrastructure - a
modern, up-to-date,
state-of-the-art
infrastructure, and
this award is
certainly going to
help in that
arena.,” said John
Kopchick, PhD,
professor of
molecular biology at
OU-COM.
As a result of this
award, the college
plans to build a new
Diabetes/Endocrine
Clinical Treatment
Research Center on
the Athens campus,
which will attract
prominent
researchers to
Athens. The new
center will also
serve diabetic
patients better and
enhance programs
designed to prepare
primary care
physicians in
diabetes management
and research.
Dr. Kopchick, the
Goll-Ohio Eminent
Scholar, says the
commitment by the
Osteopathic Heritage
Foundations is
unique, in that it
will impact patients
immediately and
support research
leading to future
treatments and
cures. “To be able
to increase the
research
capabilities, the
clinical
capabilities like
this, it’s a game
changer,” Dr.
Kopchick said.
Taking Aim at the
Leading Cause of
Disability in the
U.S
Another critical
issue facing health
care in this country
is the cost of
treating
musculoskeletal
disorders and
diseases. These
conditions are the
leading cause of
disability in the
U.S. Despite the
enormous related
health care costs,
however, funding for
research to reduce
the pain and
suffering created by
these conditions is
less than 2 percent
of the budget of the
National Institutes
of Health.
Part of the award
from the Osteopathic
Heritage Foundations
will help fund a new
research facility
for the Ohio
Musculoskeletal and
Neurological
Institute (OMNI).
For more than a
quarter of a
century, physicians
and scientists at
Ohio University have
worked together to
conduct
groundbreaking,
interdisciplinary
research into these
conditions, making
it one of the
longest running
research entities at
OU-COM.
“Helping people
address and live
with chronic pain,
low back pain,
especially, is right
in line with our
mission,” said Mr.
Vincent. “Our
priorities are
community health and
quality of life,
osteopathic medical
care, and research,”
he said. “All are
components targeted
by the OMNI project,
and OU-COM as an
institution.”
“Just the Beginning”
While the $105
million dollar award
will make Ohio
philanthropic
history, the future
benefits to the
community at large
and the
transformational
projects that it
will support will
have a dramatic
effect on the
future.
Administrators at
OU-COM and the
Osteopathic Heritage
Foundations hope
this
transformational
gift will energize
the University’s
alumni, as well as
other corporations
and individuals to
invest further in
OU-COM.
“We’re very excited
about the award.
It gives me chills,”
says Dr. Kopchick.
“But, it’s a
starting place.
To think that this
is the end-all, this
is all we need and
we’re going to rest
on our laurels, we
don’t do that.”
MULTIMEDIA:
Downloadable B-Roll,
sound bites, still
photos and other
story elements
available at:
http://bit.ly/eHeIER.
¹The Complexities of
Physician Supply and
Demand: Projections
Through 2025,
Association of
American Medical
Colleges,
October 2008.
²Academic
Medicine, April
2010.
³Projection of
Diabetes Burden
Through 2050, Impact
of changing
demography and
disease prevalence
in the U.S.,
American Diabetes
Association,
November 2001.
Online at:
http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/24/11/1936.full
⁴Research
from OU-COM and
OHIO’s
Appalachian Rural
Health Institute
(ARHI) online at:
http://www.ohio.edu/compass/stories/10-11/10/appalachia-rising-diabetes-903.cfm
⁵The
Burden of
Musculoskeletal
Diseases, Bone and
Join Burden.org,
Retrieved online
April 2011 at:
http://www.boneandjointburden.org/pdfs/bums_executive_summary_low.pdf
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