Ohio Auditor of State Betty
Montgomery, J.D., took a trip
Wednesday to Southeastern Ohio to OU-COM and spoke with its
staff and faculty.
John
Schriner, director of admissions, and George Dunigan,
director of governmental relations, led Montgomery on a tour
of the college and its facilities. For Montgomery, Ohio’s
first female state auditor, it was the first time at the college.
“We invited
Montgomery to our campus for an educational visit,” says
Dunigan. “We wanted to share the college with her and
information about the valuable health-care services we
provide in Southeastern Ohio and throughout the state.”
Montgomery’s
first stop was a press conference in which concerns were
raised over state
budget cuts in higher education, an area Montgomery found
crucially important to the state of Ohio.
“Higher education is inextricably linked
to a robust economy; there’s a direct relation,” she said,
acknowledging that Ohio’s shift away from its more
traditional manufacturing oriented economy will require a
more educated populace to keep up with the changes of the
shifting economy.
But Montgomery indicated
that there was no relief in sight for universities depending
on state funding.
“There’s going to be a real
demand this year on the budget process,” she said.
Questions were also raised
on the professional liability insurance crisis.
“While I
think we’ve done a wonderful job, we still have a long way
to go,” said Montgomery of the tort reform laws now on the
books. Ultimately, Montgomery said, it will likely be the
test of the constitutionality of those laws that that will
determine whether the medical liability crisis has been
solved. And it will take a while to see the effect of those
laws on the price of physicians’ insurance premiums, she
said.
Montgomery
met with Dean Jack Brose, D.O., who made a
presentation on the college’s history and accomplishments,
particularly how OU-COM continues to meet and exceed the
legislative mandate accompanying its founding in 1975: To
train primary care physicians to serve the underserved of
Ohio.
She praised
OU-COM for its past awards as the top medical school for
producing the highest percentage of primary care physicians
in the nation, adding this feat was impressive for the
college.
She also met
with Ohio University President Roderick McDavis, Ph.D.
“It was
really an introductory conversation with her, my first
meeting with the auditor of the state,” said McDavis.
“This meeting
provided me with an opportunity to discuss with her how we
at Ohio University intend to increase our productivity and
be more collaborative with other universities in the state.”
Montgomery
also toured Edison Biotechnology Institute with David Wight,
Ph.D., director of Edison, and met with John Kopchick,
Ph.D., OU-COM professor of biomedical sciences and Goll-Ohio
Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology. Kopchick is a
principal investigator at Edison and undertook a major
diabetes research project several years ago.
“I was very
happy that she was able to visit OU-COM, Edison and,
particularly, my group,” said Kopchick.
“She’s very
aware of the importance of medical biotechnology industry
and its benefits, in terms of economics and health care, to
the people of Ohio. We hope that she takes back to Columbus
our message that the medical biotechnology industry is
alive, well and growing in Southeastern Ohio and reinforces
that with her colleagues.”
Montgomery
lauded the establishment of the
Appalachian Rural Health Institute’s Diabetes/Endocrine
Center, which along with Edison, is also a major player in
diabetes research — research that will likely play a crucial
role in fighting diabetes and improving the treatment
options for the region’s diabetic population, which is more
than twice the national percentage average. The center was
established two years ago.
“Given what
we know about the American public and obesity, which is
directly tied to diabetes, I think the center is a wonderful
addition and certainly needed,” Montgomery said.