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The hospital expansion was built at the site of the old student dormitory, which was imploded on Feb. 19, 2006. The dorm was replaced with a {{convert|92000|sqft|m2|sing=on}}, 177-unit Residence Hall, which opened to students in August 2006<ref>http://www.uamshealth.com/?id=1675&sid=1</ref>.
The hospital expansion was built at the site of the old student dormitory, which was imploded on Feb. 19, 2006. The dorm was replaced with a {{convert|92000|sqft|m2|sing=on}}, 177-unit Residence Hall, which opened to students in August 2006<ref>http://www.uamshealth.com/?id=1675&sid=1</ref>.


The five-floor, {{convert|100000|sqft|m2|sing=on}} Psychiatric Research Institute facility, built adjacent to the hospital expansion, includes space for inpatient and outpatient treatment, education, research and administration. It opened in December 2008<ref>http://www.uamshealth.com/news/?id=5350&sid=1&nid=8496&cid=5</ref>. A 1,000-car parking deck is being built adjoining the hospital expansion and PRI.
The six-floor, {{convert|110000|sqft|m2|sing=on}} Psychiatric Research Institute facility, a 40 bed facility built adjacent to the hospital expansion, includes space for inpatient and outpatient treatment, education, research and administration<ref>http://www.uamshealth.com/news/?id=5350&sid=1&nid=8496&cid=5</ref>. It opened in December 2008<ref>http://www.uamshealth.com/news/?id=5350&sid=1&nid=8496&cid=5</ref>. A 1,000-car parking deck is being built adjoining the hospital expansion and PRI.


[[Image:Hospitalsite1006.JPG|left|275px|thumb|A 2006 view of the new site for the University Hospital expansion along with a new emergency room, the Psychiatric Research Institute, and a parking deck.]]
[[Image:Hospitalsite1006.JPG|left|275px|thumb|A 2006 view of the new site for the University Hospital expansion along with a new emergency room, the Psychiatric Research Institute, and a parking deck.]]

Revision as of 01:16, 9 January 2011

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
TypePublic
Established1879
ChancellorDan Rahn
DeanMedicine
Debra Fiser
Public Health
James M. Raczynski
Graduate
Robert E. McGehee, Jr.
CHRP
Ronald H. Winters
Pharmacy
Stephanie Gardner
Nursing
Claudia P. Barone
Postgraduates2,320
Location, ,
CampusUrban
WebsiteOfficial website

The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) is part of the University of Arkansas System, a state-run university in the U.S. state of Arkansas. The main campus is located in Little Rock and consists of five colleges including one graduate school, six institutes, a statewide network of community educational centers, and the UAMS Medical Center.

Organization

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

UAMS has 6 academic units:

  1. UAMS College of Medicine
  2. UAMS College of Pharmacy
  3. UAMS College of Nursing
  4. UAMS College of Health Related Professions [1]
  5. Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health
  6. UAMS Graduate School

UAMS is an academic health center and includes the only medical school in Arkansas. It combines its education efforts with the patient care resources of a hospital and outpatient center and the specialized care and research at the following institutes:

  1. Winthrop Paul Rockefeller Cancer Institute (formerly the Arkansas Cancer Research Center)
  2. Harvey and Bernice Jones Eye Institute
  3. Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging
  4. Myeloma Institute for Research and Therapy
  5. Psychiatric Research Institute
  6. Jackson T. Stephens Spine & Neurosciences Institute.

The Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System is an affiliate of UAMS. Arkansas Children's Hospital contracts UAMS's physicians for clinical services. UAMS doctors are on staff at the two facilities and both serve as clinical locations for UAMS students and resident physicians to receive hands-on experience treating patients.

The community outreach efforts of UAMS include seven Area Health Education Centers [2] (AHECs) in Fayetteville, Pine Bluff, El Dorado, Texarkana, Fort Smith, Jonesboro, and Helena, Arkansas; networks of senior health centers and centers for young children with special health care needs; and interactive video education and medical consultation services to community hospitals around the state.

The UAMS College of Health Related Professions (CHRP) [3] offers accredited educational programs in: Speech Pathology, Cytotechnology, Dental Hygiene, Diagnostic Medical Sonography [4], Dietetics & Nutrition, Emergency Medical Sciences, Genetic Counseling, Health Information Management, Medical Dosimetry, Medical Technology, Nuclear Medicine Imaging Sciences, Ophthalmic Technologies, Radiation Therapy, Radiologic Imaging Sciences, Radiologist Assistant, Respiratory Care, Surgical Technology

UAMS is the state’s largest basic and applied research institution, with more than $100 million in annual research funding, grants and contracts and internationally renowned programs in multiple myeloma, aging and other areas.

UAMS is one of the largest public employers in the state with about 9,400 employees. As of fall 2006, UAMS had 2,538 students, including 604 medical students, 429 in the College of Pharmacy, 321 in the College of Nursing, 517 in the College of Health Related Professions, 150 in the College of Public Health and 517 in the Graduate School. There were also 733 resident physicians.

UAMS and its affiliates have a total economic impact in Arkansas of about $5 billion per year.

History

In 1889, eight physicians, led by P.O. Hooper of Little Rock, each invested $625 to secure a charter for a medical school from Arkansas Industrial University (which later became the University of Arkansas). They purchased the Sperindio Restaurant and Hotel building on West Second Street in Little Rock for $5,000 to house the school, which opened on Oct. 7, 1879 with 22 students.

File:Building1-sm.jpeg
The first home of the medical school, in the old Sperindo Restaurant and Hotel.

In 1880, Dr. Tom Pinson was the first graduate of the medical school.

In 1935, the medical school was moved to a new building next to the City Hospital in Little Rock.[1] The five-story, $450,000 structure gave the School of Medicine a boost in clinical instruction of medical students. The hospital’s physicians were members of the school’s teaching faculty. The medical school building now houses the University of Arkansas at Little Rock's William H. Bowen School of Law; the hospital building was torn down and became the law school's parking lot.

The next move came in 1950, when a 26-acre (110,000 m2) tract of land on West Markham Street was formally deeded to the university by the Arkansas State Hospital, a state-owned psychiatric hospital. In 1956, the university, then known as University of Arkansas Medical Center (UAMC), moved to the West Markham campus where it is currently. The university also assumed control of City Hospital, which moved with it; it became known as University Hospital, and more recently UAMS Medical Center.

The education mission of the institution also has grown. In 1951, the School of Pharmacy was established, followed in 1953 by the School of Nursing. In 1970, the School of Health Related Professions was approved by the University of Arkansas System Board of Trustees.

In 1995, the UAMS Graduate School was granted independent status from the Graduate School at the University of Arkansas. In 2003, the College of Public Health opened. In 2005, the College of Public Health was named for the late Dr. Fay W. Boozman, a UAMS graduate who led the Arkansas Department of Health from 1998 until his death in 2005.

In 1975, the names of the schools on campus were changed to colleges and the executive officer’s title became chancellor. In 1980, after being known by several different names through history, the institution’s name changed to the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).

Dr. I. Dodd Wilson is the current UAMS chancellor. Wilson came to UAMS in 1986 as a professor and dean of the UAMS College of Medicine from the University of Minnesota Medical School, where he was a professor and vice chairman of the Department of Medicine. He was named executive vice chancellor at UAMS in July 1994. He was named chancellor in 2000.

Wilson succeeded Dr. Harry P. Ward, who served 21 years as chancellor and is credited with leading UAMS’ transformation from a small medical school with a charity hospital to an academic health center and research leader. The hospital’s Harry P. Ward Tower is named for him.

Dr. James L. Dennis was the first chancellor. He was originally named vice president of health sciences in 1970, becoming chancellor in 1975 when the title of the institution’s executive officer was changed. To honor his achievements they named the Section of Pediatrics building after him[2].

Campus

An aerial view of the UAMS main campus.‎

The UAMS campus, now encompassing more than 84 acres (340,000 m2), is located on Markham Street in Little Rock. The university moved to the property in 1956. The campus includes an estimated 5,200,000 square feet (480,000 m2) of buildings.

Adjacent to the UAMS campus to the south is the John L. McClellan Veterans Administration Hospital, a part of the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System. To the west are the Arkansas State Hospital grounds. Just south of the VA hospital is Interstate 630, a major east-west thoroughfare through Little Rock.

Off campus, UAMS owns or leases several properties, including its seven AHECs, 11 locations across Arkansas of its Kids First pediatric day health clinics, the Westmark building near their main campus, the Westside Campus facility on the Arkansas Children's Hospital campus and a portion of the Freeway Medical building in Little Rock. UAMS also owns over two dozen single family homes and numerous empty lots and parking lots immediately to the east of their main campus. Their master plan calls for the space between Pine street and Cedar street to continue to be purchased when possible as a target zone for future campus growth.[3]

Campus Expansion

In 2004, UAMS embarked on the most significant expansion efforts in its history with a slate of projects to provide additional space for its education, patient care, research and outreach programs. The nearly $500 million[4][5] expansion effort will encompass several expansion and renovation projects.

UAMS officials said the expansion effort also was necessary because many programs had outgrown their current facilities. In addition, the predicted increase in the number of persons aged 65 or older that could overburden a health care system that already faces shortages of health care professionals.

File:Construction2006 implosion.jpeg
View of the February 2006 implosion of the old UAMS Student Dormitory.

The largest project was a 553,282-square-foot (51,401.6 m2), $197 million expansion of the UAMS Medical Center, which includes new patient rooms, operating rooms and space for other programs and services. The hospital expansion is needed to replace the outdated original hospital building, which opened in 1956. The original hospital will undergo renovation in phases to host new academic and research facilities[6]

The 10-floor new hospital expansion includes 234 adult beds and 60 neonatal beds initially, with space for growth that would bring the total capacity to 393 private adult patient rooms between the new facility and the hospital’s existing Ward Tower. It opened on January 19, 2009[7].

The hospital expansion was built at the site of the old student dormitory, which was imploded on Feb. 19, 2006. The dorm was replaced with a 92,000-square-foot (8,500 m2), 177-unit Residence Hall, which opened to students in August 2006[8].

The six-floor, 110,000-square-foot (10,000 m2) Psychiatric Research Institute facility, a 40 bed facility built adjacent to the hospital expansion, includes space for inpatient and outpatient treatment, education, research and administration[9]. It opened in December 2008[10]. A 1,000-car parking deck is being built adjoining the hospital expansion and PRI.

File:Hospitalsite1006.JPG
A 2006 view of the new site for the University Hospital expansion along with a new emergency room, the Psychiatric Research Institute, and a parking deck.

On Sept. 28, 2007, UAMS honored the late Winthrop P. Rockefeller, former Arkansas lieutenant governor, by renaming its Arkansas Cancer Research Center (ACRC) for him while celebrating the groundbreaking for a major expansion to the facility. The 12-floor, $130 million, 330,000-square-foot (31,000 m2) addition, located just north of the existing 11 story 200,000-square-foot (19,000 m2) facility, will allow the institute to treat more patients and host more research into new treatments.[11] The addition opened in July, 2010.[12]

A five-floor, 56,000-square-foot (5,200 m2) addition to the Jones Eye Institute opened in April 2006. It is named the Pat Walker Tower for the Springdale philanthropist whose gift made the project possible.

In 2010, construction began on a four-floor, 55,000-square-foot (5,100 m2) addition to the Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging[13]. The $30.4 million addition will be built on top of the existing four-story, 96,000-square-foot (8,900 m2) building established by a similar grant from the Donald W Reynolds Foundation in 2000[14].

An approximately 43,000-square-foot (4,000 m2) I. Dodd Wilson Education Building was completed in 2008, including 14 25-seat classrooms, two 40-seat classrooms and two 214-seat auditoriums.[15]

UAMS, assisted with the construction of a 148,000-square-foot (13,700 m2) state hospital in return for the land where the new residence hall is located and some state hospital buildings that transferred to UAMS when construction is completed in 2008. Those buildings will be renovated to house the UAMS College of Health Related Professions until longer term plans for the facilities are decided.

A satellite campus in Northwest Arkansas has also opened for the 2009-2010 academic year in the former Washington Regional Medical Center hospital and is in its second year of use. The UAMS Northwest campus is being planned in order to further expand the UAMS student enrollment in medicine, pharmacy, nursing, and allied health and accommodate additional medical residents[16]. Template:Geolinks-US-streetscale

References