Guest opinion: Medical school debate misses bigger picture – Sat, 28 Mar 2015 PST

The Spokane medical school debate is peaking as Washington State University has successfully received the Legislatures support, pending Gov. Jay Inslees signing of the bill, to change a 1917 law that would give WSU the authority to create its own independently accredited medical school on the WSU Health Sciences Spokanecampus.

Simultaneously, the University of Washington School of Medicine is asking the Legislature that the Spokane-based, four-year WWAMI medical school program, which teaches students from Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho, be expanded without negatively impacting the creation of WSUs new medical school. The debate about how

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The Spokane medical school debate is peaking as Washington State University has successfully received the Legislatures support, pending Gov. Jay Inslees signing of the bill, to change a 1917 law that would give WSU the authority to create its own independently accredited medical school on the WSU Health Sciences Spokanecampus.

Simultaneously, the University of Washington School of Medicine is asking the Legislature that the Spokane-based, four-year WWAMI medical school program, which teaches students from Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho, be expanded without negatively impacting the creation of WSUs new medical school. The debate about how medical education should be delivered in the state misses the big-picture opportunity for ourregion.

That opportunity is the advancement of a comprehensive vision for the growth of medical education, associated health and bioscience research, the spinoff of businesses from that research, and improved quality health care access in our community. As a top priority for Greater Spokane Incorporated, this vision with the capacity for being the single-largest economic development driver for our region has been over a decade in the making. In large part, this is because its built on one of the greater Spokane regions largest industries health care which currently generates more than $6 billion in economic impact. Realizing the full build-out of this transformational vision has the potential to generate sustained economic impact of more than $1.7 billion annually, and the creation of more than 9,000 new jobs in the region by2030.

The foundation of this vision is medical education, both four-year medical education and graduate medical education (residencies). The debate has centered on our states critical physician shortage, particularly the growing shortage of primary care physicians in the rural and underserved areas of Eastern Washington. The statistics shared by each university are compelling, and we applaud the Legislature for recognizing thischallenge.

Now, its time for the Legislature to support and fund each universitys expansion plans. The combined and complementary approaches in Spokane of the nationally recognized WWAMI four-year medical school and the creation of a new WSU medical school as part of WSUs health sciences-focused Spokane campus are the best long-term solutions to addressing this challenge in the region and thestate.

As a community, the larger opportunity is the potential to create a foundation for a vibrant and growing health care and bioscience industry economy around a pair of medical schools with strong university research programs. Whether the research is translated into promising medical advances or commercialized to grow the economy, the people of our region will benefit through better health care and betterjobs.

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Guest opinion: Medical school debate misses bigger picture - Sat, 28 Mar 2015 PST

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