Dayton wants $30M for U med school

Gov. Mark Dayton laid out a funding plan Wednesday designed to elevate the University of Minnesota Medical School's national reputation and bolster its role as a driver of health innovation and job creation.

As part of his slow rollout of pieces of his budget plan, which will be revealed in full Tuesday, Dayton said he'll ask for $30 million this two-year budget cycle for the medical school.

He said he intends to follow that up with $50 million in the next biennium and envisions a total of $230 million for the decade.

The money, which Dayton said he would not pit against other funding requests the U has made this session, would pay for 50 more medical researchers over the next eight years. The school has lost about 100 tenured faculty over the past 20 years, officials said.

The new faculty would form "medical discovery teams" to tackle pressing health issues and attempt to attract additional National Institutes of Health grants.

Dr. Brooks Jackson, the medical school dean, said the U ranks 30th out of 144 medical schools, based on NIH grants.

Jackson's goal with the new funding would be to get to 20th within five years. Within a decade, he said, he hopes to move the school into the top 14 or even the top 10.

The new money "really will be transformative in the sense that it will allow us to leverage our current strengths to really become a world-class medical school, not just in terms of research but as well as training the next generation of students," Jackson said.

The chairs of the higher education committees in the state Senate and House said Wednesday they supported the governor's plan in concept.

Richard Beeson, who chairs the Board of Regents, the U's governing body, said the board will take up the proposal next month. He said regents are generally supportive of the plan because it is intended to be in addition to the funding requests they've made.

See the original post here:

Dayton wants $30M for U med school

State board holds up downtown medical USF medical school

TAMPA The effort to build a University of South Florida medical school downtown hit a snag Wednesday when a committee overseeing the states 12 public universities delayed funding for the project until it hears more details.

USF officials will provide additional information on the $157 million project before the next State University System Board of Governors meeting on Feb. 19. The board technically does not fund projects, but prepares a legislative budget request to the Florida Legislature that indicates what projects are priorities for the system.

On Wednesday in Jacksonville, the boards facilities committee pulled a request for $17 million for the medical school from its list of recommended 2015-16 construction projects when members complained of a lack of specifics.

Whatever they ask for, were happy to give them, USF System President Judy Genshaft said after the committee action. Weve done so much work on this, were really ready to present whenever and however much they want.

The Board of Governors typically prepares its legislative budget request in January, but Mark Walsh, assistant vice president for government relations, said USF was assured that there would be ample time for the medical school request to move forward once the board is briefed.

The committee did recommend a $15.8 million allocation for the USF Health Heart Institute, which is slated to join the medical school downtown. With prior allocations, the new funding covers that projects full $50 million construction cost.

The panel also recommends another $12.3 million for the Tiedemann College of Business at USF St. Petersburg, allowing completion of that project. And the Florida Institute of Oceanography, a consortium hosted by USF, got the nod for a $6 million research vessel to replace an aging ship.

Genshaft said she did not consider Wednesdays move a setback, noting that the committee did free up a prior $5 million allocation to study the relocation of the medical school money USF hadnt been able to tap until board members signed off. Thats great, we can go ahead and spend that money, Genshaft said, adding that Wednesdays caution was not a send-it-back-to-the-drawing-board signal.

USF is seeking the $17 million this year, then $20 million the following two years to complete a 12-story building at Channelside Drive and Meridian Avenue. The Morsani College of Medicine would then relocate from the main Tampa campus.

Wednesdays move came despite pitches from Tampa Mayor Bob Buckhorn and from Tampa Bay Lightning owner Jeff Vinik, who donated land for the medical school.

Read the original here:

State board holds up downtown medical USF medical school

Medical school will be Roche tenant

By Ron Leir

Observer Correspondent

NUTLEY

Roche USA, the Swiss-basedpharmaceutical companythat is marketing its118-acre property straddlingNutley and Clifton, continuesto seek a buyer for the sitebut has inked a tenant for partof the site.

Roche spokeswomanDarien Wilson said last weekthat the Tom Lyon, vicepresident of Roche Nutley (asthe property is designated),has signed a letter of intentwith Robert C. Garrett, president/CEO of HackensackUniversity Health Network,for the leasing of one ofRoches former researchbuildings for the operation ofa medical school.

Terms of the lease remainto be negotiated, Wilson said.

At the same time, Wilsonsaid, Roche which last yearpaid $7.1 million in taxes toNutley (supplemented by$2.7 million in special statetransitional aid) is stillin the process of identifyinga buyer for the [entire]site. Asked when Rocheanticipated a sale, Wilsonsaid: Were very close . We expect to identify a newowner by middle of the year.

Asked why the company wasentering into an lease agreementfor just a small part ofits property (about 13 acres)before disposing of the wholesite, Wilson acknowledged itcould be considered an atypicalapproach, but that all ofthe potential buyers were fullyaware, along with the Nutley-Clifton Joint RepurposingCommittee, that this was anopportunity that Roche wantedto pursue.

Wilson said that talks withHackensackUHN have beengoing on for a year and ahalf. She added that the leasebetween the parties would beassigned to whoever the newowner is.

The new four-year medicalschool, according to a statementposted on the HackensackUniversity MedicalSchool website, will be a jointventure by HackensackUHNand Seton Hall University andwill be the only private schoolof medicine currently in thestate.

Continued here:

Medical school will be Roche tenant

Dayton Presses $30M Plan To Boost University Med School

CBS Minnesota (con't)

Affordable Care Act Updates: CBSMinnesota.com/ACA

Health News & Information: CBSMinnesota.com/Health

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO/AP) Gov. Mark Dayton pledged $30 million in new state funding for the University of Minnesota Medical School on Wednesday to help boost the schools national standing and research capability, calling it a down payment on life-enhancing innovations.

Dayton, who wants the state to make a $230 million commitment over the next decade, will include the initial funding proposal in a two-year budget plan he gives lawmakers next week. The money would come from an anticipated $1 billion state surplus.

School leaders say the immediate infusion would help recruit and retain 50 medical researchers renowned in their fields, leverage more grants for studies of diabetes and other chronic diseases, and result in spinoff companies.

Success breeds success. Thats true financially as well if were really good researchers, said Dr. Brooks Jackson, the medical school dean. This will result in more biotech companies being formed, more jobs being formed. It will allow us to attract the best and brightest students, the best faculty.

Jackson said the money is instrumental in helping the school reach a goal of rising into the top 20 medical schools by measure of federal research funding. The school currently ranks 30th in the country, according to a report released this month by a commission Dayton appointed.

We shouldnt settle for 20th. We should aim for being top five, top 10, Dayton said while surrounded by more than a dozen lab-coated medical students.

The billion-dollar state surplus projected by state finance officials is the result of climbing tax collections from the economic recovery. And the governor isnt the only one sizing up the money for health advances.

Originally posted here:

Dayton Presses $30M Plan To Boost University Med School

Spokane legislators introduce bill to set up medical school

By NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS - Associated Press - Wednesday, January 21, 2015

SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - Two Spokane legislators introduced bills Wednesday that would help pave the way for a new Washington State University medical school in Spokane.

State Sen. Michael Baumgartner, a Republican, and state Rep. Marcus Riccelli, a Democrat, introduced the bills in each chamber. Baumgartners bill has a total of 17 co-sponsors and Riccellis has 60 co-sponsors, which he said showed broad support.

The bills would eliminate a restriction dating from 1917 that gives the University of Washington in Seattle the exclusive right to operate a public medical school in the state of Washington. The UW medical school admits only 120 Washington medical students each year.

A lot of folks on both sides of the aisle support stronger, more vibrant medical instruction in Washington, Riccelli said. Multiple medical schools are the norm in most states.

Washington State has proposed opening its own medical school in Spokane to address a big shortage of doctors across the state, especially in rural areas. The school commissioned a study showing it is well-positioned to pursue an accredited medical school.

The University of Washington has proposed that its existing medical programs be expanded, and has commissioned a study showing that is the most cost-effective way to produce more doctors in Washington.

The two universities have agreed not to oppose each others proposals in the Legislature. Lawmakers will decide which, if any, expansion of medical education to fund.

Washington State University proposes to expand an existing medical training facility at its branch campus in Spokane into a new medical school. The university will seek an appropriation of $2.5 million in this years operating budget to begin the accreditation process, the lawmakers said.

I am pleased but not at all surprised by the strong support for this bill, Baumgartner said. Were saying a law written nearly 100 years ago should not dictate the way we teach medicine in the 21st century.

Go here to see the original:

Spokane legislators introduce bill to set up medical school

News where, when and how you want it

Originally published January 21, 2015 at 1:00 PM | Page modified January 21, 2015 at 2:50 PM

SPOKANE Two Spokane legislators introduced bills Wednesday that would help pave the way for a new Washington State University medical school in Spokane.

State Sen. Michael Baumgartner, a Republican, and state Rep. Marcus Riccelli, a Democrat, introduced the bills in each chamber. Baumgartners bill has a total of 17 co-sponsors and Riccellis has 60 co-sponsors, which he said showed broad support.

The bills would eliminate a restriction dating from 1917 that gives the University of Washington in Seattle the exclusive right to operate a public medical school in the state of Washington. The UW medical school admits only 120 Washington medical students each year.

A lot of folks on both sides of the aisle support stronger, more vibrant medical instruction in Washington, Riccelli said. Multiple medical schools are the norm in most states.

Washington state has proposed opening its own medical school in Spokane to address a shortage of doctors across the state, especially in rural areas. The school commissioned a study showing it is well-positioned to pursue an accredited medical school.

The University of Washington has proposed that its existing medical programs be expanded, and has commissioned a study showing that is the most cost-effective way to produce more doctors in Washington.

The two universities have agreed not to oppose each others proposals in the Legislature. Lawmakers will decide which, if any, expansion of medical education to fund.

Washington State University proposes to expand an existing medical training facility at its branch campus in Spokane into a new medical school. The university will seek an appropriation of $2.5 million in this years operating budget to begin the accreditation process, the lawmakers said.

I am pleased but not at all surprised by the strong support for this bill, Baumgartner said. Were saying a law written nearly 100 years ago should not dictate the way we teach medicine in the 21st century.

Go here to see the original:

News where, when and how you want it

WSU med school bills introduced – Wed, 21 Jan 2015 PST

OLYMPIA Spokane legislators introduced a pair of bills today that would pave the way for Washington State University to start its own medical school. Rep. Marcus Riccielli, a Democrat, and Sen. Mike Baumgartner, a Republican, introduced matching legislation that would remove the provision in state law that gives medical school education exclusively to the University of Washington. In the works since late last year, the legislators delayed introducing the bills until today while they gathered bipartisan support from around the state. Riccellis bill, HB 1559, already has 60 co-sponsors in the 98-member House. Baumgartners bill, SB 5487, has

You have viewed 20 free articles or blogs allowed within a 30-day period. FREE registration is now required for uninterrupted access.

S-R Media, The Spokesman-Review and Spokesman.com are happy to assist you. Contact Customer Service by email or call 800-338-8801

OLYMPIA Spokane legislators introduced a pair of bills today that would pave the way for Washington State University to start its own medical school.

Rep. Marcus Riccielli, a Democrat, and Sen. Mike Baumgartner, a Republican, introduced matching legislation that would remove the provision in state law that gives medical school education exclusively to the University of Washington.

In the works since late last year, the legislators delayed introducing the bills until today while they gathered bipartisan support from around the state.

Riccellis bill, HB 1559, already has 60 co-sponsors in the 98-member House. Baumgartners bill, SB 5487, has 17 co-sponsors in the 49-member Senate.

The bills are expected to get their first reading on Thursday, the same day that WSU President Elson Floyd and UW President Michael Young are scheduled to appear before the Senate Higher Education Committee to explain their respective schools plans for medical school education in Spokane.

Some 130 government, business and education representatives from the Spokane area are also in the capital lobbying for their legislative priorities this week, and medical school expansion in Spokane is prominent on their list.

Since 1917, state law has put limits on some of the academic major lines the two universities can offer. Those restrictive majors have changed over the decades, but right now only UW can offer medicine. The identical bills introduced today would remove medicine, as well as forestry, from the majors exclusive to UW and add them to the list of majors available to both of the states major four-year research universities.

More:

WSU med school bills introduced - Wed, 21 Jan 2015 PST

Mark Dayton presses $30M plan to boost UMN med school

Gov. Mark Dayton pledged $30 million in new state funding for the University of Minnesota Medical School on Wednesday to help boost the school's national standing and research capability, calling it a down payment on life-enhancing innovations.

Dayton, who wants the state to make a $230 million commitment over the next decade, will include the initial funding proposal in a two-year budget plan he gives lawmakers next week. The money would come from an anticipated $1 billion state surplus.

School leaders say the immediate infusion would help recruit and retain 50 medical researchers renowned in their fields, leverage more grants for studies of diabetes and other chronic diseases, and result in spinoff companies.

"Success breeds success. That's true financially as well if we're really good researchers," said Dr. Brooks Jackson, the medical school dean. "This will result in more biotech companies being formed, more jobs being formed. It will allow us to attract the best and brightest students, the best faculty."

Jackson said the money is instrumental in helping the school reach a goal of rising into the top 20 medical schools by measure of federal research funding. The school currently ranks 30th in the country, according to a report released this month by a commission Dayton appointed.

"We shouldn't settle for 20th. We should aim for being top five, top 10," Dayton said while surrounded by more than a dozen lab-coated medical students.

The billion-dollar state surplus projected by state finance officials is the result of climbing tax collections from the economic recovery. And the governor isn't the only one sizing up the money for health advances.

Majority Senate Democrats are pressing for a loan-forgiveness program that would reward new physicians who practice in underserved rural areas. On Wednesday, a bipartisan group of lawmakers proposed competitive research grants to study Alzheimer's disease and dementia.

The governor said he's open to such ideas and was "very receptive" to the loan forgiveness program, which could alleviate doctor shortages as a bulge of physicians, dentists and other medical professionals reaches retirement.

Dayton, a former pre-med student, said Minnesota's medical sector is a cornerstone of the state's economy. Now that state finances have improved, he said it is imperative to invest in the long-term future of a "treasured asset" like the medical school.

Read the original post:

Mark Dayton presses $30M plan to boost UMN med school

Dayton proposes $30M to boost U medical school

Updated 1:15 p.m. | Posted 11:53 a.m.

Gov. Mark Dayton wants to fund the hiring of 50 researchers for the University of Minnesota Medical School over the next eight years.

The plan is part of a two-year, $30 million proposal aimed at restoring the medical school to national prominence. It ranked 30th last year in federal research funding, a key indicator of success. Dayton says the school was ranked eighth in 1968.

"While it has deserved prominence in many areas, including clinical practice, from a research standpoint it's not in the top eight anymore, and it should be, and we need it to be," Dayton told reporters Wednesday.

Medical school officials say more researchers would bring in more research money.

Dr. Brooks Jackson, dean of the medical school, says he'd like to see it in the top 20 within five years and the top 15 within a decade.

Dayton's proposal would fund half the number of researchers suggested by the governor's medical school review panel.

State Rep. Bud Nornes, R-Fergus Falls, chairman of the House Higher Education Policy and Finance Committee, said he was not opposed to the governor's proposal.

More here:

Dayton proposes $30M to boost U medical school

Living longer, not healthier

New research by UMass Medical School suggest genes that extend lifespan won't necessarily improve health in advanced age

WORCESTER, MA - A study of long-lived mutant C. elegans by scientists at the University of Massachusetts Medical School shows that the genetically altered worms spend a greater portion of their life in a frail state and exhibit less activity as they age then typical nematodes. These findings, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggest that genes that increase longevity may not significantly increase healthy lifespan and point to the need to measure health as part of aging studies going forward.

"Our study reveals that if we want to find the genes that help us remain physically active as we age, the genes that will allow us to play tennis when we're 70 similar to when we were 40, we have to look beyond longevity as the sole criteria. We have to start looking at new genes that might play a part in 'healthspan.'" said Heidi A. Tissenbaum, PhD, professor of molecular, cellular & cancer biology and the program in molecular medicine at UMass Medical School, and principal investigator of the study.

Genomic and technological advances have allowed scientists to identify several groups of genes that control longevity in C. elegans, a nematode used as a model system for genetic studies in the lab, as well as in yeast and flies. These genes, when examined, have analogs in mammals. The underlying assumption by scientists has always been that extending lifespan would also increase the time spent by the organism in a healthy state. However, for various reasons, most studies only closely examine these model animals while they're still relatively young and neglect to closely examine the latter portion of the animals' lives.

Challenging the assumption that longevity and health are intrinsically connected, Dr. Tissenbaum and colleagues sought to investigate how healthy long-lived C. elegans mutants were as they aged.

"The term healthspan is poorly defined in the lab, and in C. elegans few parameters have been identified for measuring health," said Tissenbaum. "So we set out to create a definition of healthspan by identifying traits that could be easily verified and measured as the worms aged."

Identifying both frailty and movement as measureable physical attributes that declined in the nematode with age and that could be tested, Ankita Bansal, PhD, now a postdoctoral scientist at the University of Pennsylvania, took four different C. elegans mutant specimen (daf-2, eat-2, ife-2 and clk-1) known to live longer than typical nematodes and measured their resistance to heat stress, oxidative stress and activity levels on solids and in liquids as they aged.

When Tissenbaum and her colleagues, Dr. Bansal; Kelvin Yen, PhD, now assistant research professor at the University of Southern California; and Lihua Julie Zhu, PhD, research associate professor of molecular, cellular & cancer biology at UMMS, compared these results with wild-type nematodes they found that all the animals--wild-type and mutants--declined physically as they aged. And depending on the mutant specimen and trait being measured, each declined at different rates. Overall they found that the mutant worms, despite having longer lifespans, spent a greater percentage of their lives at less than 50 percent of measured maximum function when compared to wild-type nematodes. The increased lifespan experienced by the mutants was spent, instead, in a frail and debilitated state.

"What this means, is that the mutant nematodes were living longer, but most of that extra time wasn't healthy time for the worm," said Tissenbaum. "While we saw some extension in health as the mutants aged for certain traits, invariably the trade off was an extended period of frailty and inactivity for the animal. In fact, as a percentage of total lifespan, the wild-type worms spent more time in a healthy state than the long-lived mutants."

The implication for scientists, according to Tissenbaum, is that the set of genes that influence longevity may be distinct from the genes that control healthspan. "This study suggests that there is a separate and unexplored group of genes that allow us to perform at a higher level physically as we age. When we study aging we can no longer look at lifespan as the only parameter; we also have to consider health as a distinct factor of its own."

Original post:

Living longer, not healthier

More big votes on tap for USF's downtown medical school proposal

TAMPA The movement to build the University of South Florida's next medical school inside Jeff Vinik's downtown redevelopment project has scored two wins at home.

Now it needs to win on the road.

USF's proposal needs $62million in state funding. That must be approved by the Florida Board of Governors, which oversees the State University System.

The board is set to hold two votes on the proposal when it meets today and Thursday at the University of North Florida in Jacksonville.

If the idea wins both votes this week, then it will move up the chain of command to the Florida Legislature for final approval. The 2015 session is set to start on March 3.

"Until the votes have been cast," said Mayor Bob Buckhorn, "I never take anything for granted."

The project was endorsed in October by a committee of USF trustees that oversees the university's medical operations. Buckhorn helped pitch the idea.

Then in December, Vinik himself appeared before the full board of trustees when it gave its approval.

Buckhorn, Vinik, USF president Judy Genshaft and Dr. Charles Lockwood, the dean of USF's medical school, will all be on hand today in case the governors' facilities committee needs convincing as well.

That committee considers all the state's higher education capital projects like USF's urban medical school and the University of Central Florida's proposed downtown Orlando campus.

Here is the original post:

More big votes on tap for USF's downtown medical school proposal

Couple suing Dr. Atiq Durrani, questioning if he was a licensed doctor – Video


Couple suing Dr. Atiq Durrani, questioning if he was a licensed doctor
A Taylor Mill couple is suing Dr. Durrani for damages and claims he never went to medical school. The couple #39;s spokesperson, Erik Deters, said there is no record of Durrani at the medical school...

By: WLWT

More here:

Couple suing Dr. Atiq Durrani, questioning if he was a licensed doctor - Video

Military medical teams earn wings at Wright-Patt aeromedical school

DAYTON, Ohio Shauntel Hass worked as a registered nurse at a hospital when she decided to take her career in another direction. Upward.

The 35-year-old Mountain Home, Idaho, native joined the Air Force and spent her first day in training this month at the U.S. Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. There, she will earn flight nurse status, a job that will likely jet her across continents and oceans to care for wounded soldiers returning from battle.

Before boarding a U.S. military plane to treat wounded servicemembers, medical teams from the Air Force, Army and Navy earn the wings on their flight suits at the school, which was transferred to Wright-Patt three years ago as part of the Base Realignment and Closure commission.

Reporters from this newspaper this month accompanied members of the Air Force Reserve 445th Airlift Wing, based at Wright-Patterson, on a 12,000-mile journey to Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan that also included an evacuation and transport of 11 wounded patients from Ramstein Air Base in Germany to Joint Base Andrews in Maryland.

The reserve wing has an aeromedical team, drawn largely from the ranks of civilian health care professionals in the Miami Valley.

Patient care at high altitudes has its challenges part of the training at the School of Aerospace Medicine. The school graduates about 300 flight nurses and technicians from its weekslong aeromedical courses each year.

"What we're teaching them is how to take those skills and those capabilities and how to step it up to a point where they are going to be working in an environment at 35,000 feet, which is very unusual," said Lt. Col. Karey M. Dufour, the Wright-Patt school's flight nurse course director and contingency operations chief.

"When you take a patient up to altitude, those stresses of flight really do make a big difference in how we treat our patients. There's certain considerations that we have to make. Otherwise, our patients can really deteriorate very quickly."

Critical care teams of flight doctors and nurses tend to the most severely wounded troops.

"The patients we take in the air are more critical than you're ever going to see in any level one trauma center because of all of the multiple trauma that they have," said Lt. Col. Elena Schlenker, the school's director of critical care courses, which graduate another 125 students or so a year.

See more here:

Military medical teams earn wings at Wright-Patt aeromedical school