By Mila Koumpilova
mkoumpilova@pioneerpress.com
The University of Minnesota's Academic Health Center needs a
clearer vision of its future to shake off a "malaise" that has plagued
it, said an outside review committee.
U President Eric Kaler launched the review of the center, which
includes the university's medical school, the main training ground for
physicians in the state. While some health science schools at the U rank
high nationally, the med school's reputation and rankings have flagged
-- an issue Kaler has deemed a priority.
In a report the U released publicly Monday, Dec. 17, the
three-member committee offered few specific prescriptions but stressed
the need for the AHC community to rally around a common vision. Kaler
responded by charging Medical School Dean Aaron Friedman with appointing
a faculty-led group to produce a strategic plan by next summer.
"We need a vision and plan that brings together our faculty and
staff and sets a foundation for growth and investment," Kaler said,
adding that the U's health sciences community needs to refocus on its
many strengths.
Other than that, U Director of Public Relations Chuck Tombarge
pointed out, the external review will not trigger any immediate changes
at the health center.
Kaler tapped Dr. Kenneth Kaushansky, the school of medicine dean
at his former institution, Stony Brook University in New York, to head
the committee. The group surveyed and interviewed faculty and staff and
reviewed budget and accreditation documents.
"Our overall impression was that the University of
Minnesota's health sciences are strong, but are at risk from several
external and internal forces," the committee wrote.
The Academic Health Center has excellent faculty and students as well
as a strong research portfolio, the report said. But a long-standing
debate over the center's administrative structure has consumed too much
energy amid a rapidly changing health care environment.
Many faculty spoke of the need for greater transparency, the
report said. There were also concerns Friedman's dual role as medical
school dean and vice president of health sciences makes the job too
unwieldy.
Above all, though, the medical school needs "a vision of where it
is going and how it will get there." The report also suggested the U
seek out new clinical partnerships even as it continues to negotiate
with its main partner, Fairview Health Services, on overhauling a
relationship many at the university criticized.
Kaler said those negotiations delayed the release of the report and his response.
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