UNMC Medical Technology Division is University-wide Department of the Year

Virtually every conceivable bodily fluid or substance sent to a laboratory

for analysis will be processed by a medical technologist.  Whether

looking for the AIDS virus, leukemia, blood type for a simple transfusion

or tissue match for a transplant, the med techs run the tests, analyze

the data and hover over the microscopes trying to identify one more piece

of a patients health puzzle.  No clinical laboratory can function

without medical technologists, and the program that produces 80 percent

of the medical technologists in Nebraska just received its highest award

ever.

The University of Nebraska Medical Centers Division of Medical Technology

is the 2001 university-wide department of the year. The formal announcement

was made on March 7 by University of Nebraska Executive Vice President

and Provost Lee B. Jones.  This is UNMCs first university-wide department

of the year honoree since the Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy won

in 1995.

We are really proud of the success of our distance learning program,

said Phyllis Muellenberg, associate professor, chair and program director

of the division of medical technology.  We have graduated 79 rural

Nebraskans from our distance program in the past nine years, and there

has been no difference in the certification board test scores and first

time success rates between campus students and distance learners.

In fact, the success rate of the rural affiliate distance learning program

has no comparative equal in the United States today.  The program

now includes clinical affiliations with St. Francis Medical Center, Grand

Island; Mary Lanning Memorial Hospital, Hastings; Good Samaritan Hospital,

Kearney; and Great Plains Regional Medical Center, North Platte. Many of

the distance learning graduates, such as Gina Lauby, never attended a single

class in Omaha. Lectures and clinical case conferences are delivered by

satellite television or televideo.

I only spent two days in Omaha during my entire year and that was

for orientation, said Lauby, of Litchfield, Neb., a 2000 grad and now

employed as a research technologist at UNMC. I never felt slighted in

any of my education.  In fact, I think I got an even better deal. 

In Kearney, there were just two distance med tech students in my class.

We received extraordinary laboratory bench time, and more personal attention

from the technologists and professional volunteers. As good as things are

in Omaha, I know that just having more students and demands on the labs

we probably could never have gotten all the extra opportunities people

were able to give us in Kearney.  We felt special all the time.

In addition to program partners in Omaha, Nebraska Methodist Hospital

and the Nebraska Health System, clinical education support is provided

by affiliates at VA Medical Center, Childrens Hospital, Alegent Bergan

Mercy, Physicians Laboratory and the Omaha Regional Red Cross.

Well-educated medical technologists are essential for UNMCs strategic

focus laboratories in cancer, transplantation, molecular genetics, neuroscience

and advanced biomedical technology research.  During the 2000-2001

academic year, the medical technology faculty also is providing courses

and lectures for 841 health professions students from the fields of medicine,

pharmacy, physician assistant, master-level nursing, clinical perfusion,

phlebotomy, and radiography.

Medical technology education began at UNMC in 1931, and is the second

oldest medical technology program in the United States.  The baccalaureate

degree was first offered in 1947.  In 1968, the UNMC educational program

formed a consortium with the educational programs at Nebraska Methodist

and Bishop Clarkson Memorial Hospitals in Omaha with UNMC as the bachelor

of science degree granting partner.  Since 1988, UNMC has provided

the only medical technology/clinical laboratory bachelor of science degree

program in Nebraska.

The program consistently ranks in the top 20 percent of all programs

nationally with a first time pass rate of 97-100 percent and program mean

well above (558/468) the national average.

I heard about UNMCs med tech program while a student at the University

of South Dakota, said Regina English, from Council Bluffs, a 2000 grad

and now a medical technologist at Alegent Health Immanuel Medical Center. 

All the alumni I talked with told me that the faculty was extremely well

prepared and took great personal interest in each student.

Later, I returned home, enrolled at UNO and took an introduction to

hematology class taught by Linda Sykora.  She really impressed me

as a great instructor.  I knew after that first class with Linda that

all the med tech instructors must be very good, and there would be a high

standard of excellence.  Yet the faculty really cared about us as

people.  When some of my classmates were hospitalized, the faculty

really worked extra hard to encourage them not to quit, then helped them

keep up and graduate with the rest of us.  Ill never forget that.

Six medical technology faculty members have received the Outstanding

Clinical Instructor Award in recent years.  James Newland, M.D., professor

and medical director of the division of medical technology, has received

the University of Nebraska Outstanding Teaching and Instructional Creativity

Award. Dr. Newland, Muellenberg, and Linda Fell, associate program director

and education coordinator, all share national appointments to their disciplines

top associations including the National Accrediting Agency for Clinical

Laboratory Science and the American Society of Clinical Pathologists.

The division has attracted more that $1.2 million in external funding. 

Current projects include developing cultural competency courses for practitioners,

a web-based curriculum in clinical laboratory sciences with seven national

partners and increasing the number of minority and disadvantaged students

through multimedia recruitment modules.

A formal presentation of the divisions award will be made on April

4 during a special lunch with  University of Nebraska President L.

Dennis Smith.  The division also will be featured during activities

planned for the week of April 15-21 — 2001 National Medical Laboratory

Week.

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