College of Public Health

 

College of Public Health


 



UNMC College of Public Health now fully operational with new faculty being recruited, programs being developed

by Tom O’Connor, UNMC public affairs

Less than six months after it was approved by the University of Nebraska Board of Regents, the College of Public Health at the University of Nebraska Medical Center is now fully operational. The announcement was made today at a news conference at UNMC.

“We have been working extremely hard to make this happen,” said Jay Noren, M.D., dean of the College of Public Health. “We now have the only public health college in Nebraska and the only one in a large north central section of the country, spanning 1,400 miles east-west and 800 miles north-south. This is truly a landmark event for our state to celebrate.”

Although there are 125 academic medical centers in the U.S. similar to UNMC, only 38 of these centers have accredited schools or colleges of public health. UNMC’s college will be the 39th when it is fully accredited. It is the first new college at UNMC since 1968.

Dr. Noren said public health education, research, and practice have become critical issues to ensure a healthy future in the U.S., particularly given the national concerns about pandemic disease, childhood obesity, health care costs, improved methods for prevention of major chronic diseases (Alzheimer’s/dementia, heart disease, cancer and stroke), environmental health risks, bioterrorism preparedness and health disparities.

“UNMC is well positioned to be an important regional and national player through the growth of the new College of Public Health,” said Harold M. Maurer, M.D., UNMC chancellor. “The college will enhance access to additional federal and state resources and programs that are typically only available to colleges of public health. It is a very important addition that gives UNMC all the assets it needs to achieve its goal of becoming a world-class academic medical center.”

As the College of Public Health has become operational, Dr. Noren said several key developments have taken place or will occur in the near future. These include:

• Bringing together all faculty, staff, programs, space and budgets of the Department of Preventive and Societal Medicine, the Rural Health Education Network, the Health Professions Tracking Center, Center for Health Services Research (including Centers for Rural Health Research and Rural Health Policy Analysis), Center for Health Disparities, and the UNMC components of the Center for Biosecurity and Center for Biopreparedness Education into the College of Public Health.

• The joint Master of Public Health Program involving UNMC and the University of Nebraska at Omaha will transfer to the new college and continue as a joint effort of the two campuses.

• UNMC will assign initial space for the college in newly acquired facilities in the campus area.

• Within the next few years the college will be housed in a new building, which is the top priority on UNMC’s facilities expansion plan.

• New, expanded relationships are emerging with the joint Environmental Toxicology Center involving UNMC and the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

• Increasing partnerships are developing with UNO faculty in Public Administration, Sociology, Gerontology, Social Work, Health Education, and other elements of the School of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation.

• Enhanced partnerships with the Nebraska Health and Human Services System (HHSS).

Dr. Noren said the college hopes to recruit 10 new faculty in the next two years and 20 new faculty in the next four years. “Our goal is to have at least six new faculty in place for the fall 2007 semester,” he said. “This is very ambitious, but we’re optimistic we can get it done. The ads for the faculty positions have already been placed.”

In addition, Dr. Noren said an external advisory council has been established by the College of Public Health. The External Advisory Council presently includes 30 people from around the state – many with public health expertise. Being connected to individuals and organizations around the state is the norm for colleges of public health, Dr. Noren said.

“Public health is very much a multidisciplinary endeavor. It’s vital that we establish strong ties in the state with experts in many different areas, including medicine, dentistry, nursing, pharmacy, all allied health areas, public administration, education, government, behavioral sciences, political science, social work, law and communications,” he said. “We also will be dealing extensively with colleagues in health and human services and education institutions throughout the community.”

“Nebraska, along with the rest of the nation, is experiencing a public health workforce shortage,” said Joann Schaefer, M.D., chief medical officer for the Nebraska Health and Human Services System. “One of the most difficult challenges facing our state today is ensuring there are enough people to respond to public health threats. The UNMC College of Public Health will bring much-needed people into our public health pipeline.”

Dr. Noren said three new doctoral programs are planned – Health Services Research/Health Administration, Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Research, and Environmental Health Sciences – and the college plans to implement these programs by the fall 2008 semester.

In addition, the College of Public Health plans to provide several expanded areas of specialization in the existing Master of Public Health program with UNO. These expanded areas include Biostatistics/Epidemiology, Health Promotion/ Disease Prevention, and Environmental Health, which will be additions to the existing specializations in Community Health Education and Public Health Administration.

“This is an exciting day for the entire university system. This new college will be paying ongoing dividends to our city, our state, the region and the nation,” said John Christensen, Ph.D., interim UNO chancellor. “Public health practice is important to all us. The work and research in the college will contribute to overall better health and to the potential reduction in costs for critical care.”

Dr. Christensen added that the UNO-UNMC relationship on public health policy development, thanks to work already being done in the Masters of Public Health Program, will only be strengthened as the new college grows. Collaboration naturally leads to innovation when different academic professionals concentrate on an issue, he said.

Dr. Maurer noted the potential economic impact of the college. Among the current 38 colleges of public health nationally, the average external grant funding is $38 million. As the new UNMC College of Public Health develops, its external grant funding will increase and could result in as much as $30 million in new funds resulting in a $67.5 million boon to the state’s economy, which equates to about 700 to 750 new jobs.

UNMC’s planned investment in establishing the College of Public Health is estimated at approximately $12 million in the first five years. These expenses will be met by reallocating nearly $3.5 million in existing resources from several UNMC departments, infusing more than $5 million in state and University funds and bringing in more than $3.5 million in extramural grants, contracts, and gifts.

The College of Public Health is initially being housed in existing campus facilities where current faculty work. Rubens Pamies, M.D., vice chancellor for academic affairs and dean of graduate studies, said UNMC hopes to eventually consolidate all the college’s activities into a new facility that would be located on 40th Street, just to the south of the UNMC Eye Clinic on Dewey Avenue.