|
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
|