UNMC details its economic impact on Nebraska at Board of Regents meeting in Valentine

The University of Nebraska Medical Center is one of the leading economic

drivers in the state, bringing in millions of dollars each year through

research and patient care services, while providing a variety of key programs

to rural and underserved areas of the state.

That was the message delivered Saturday by UNMC Chancellor Harold M.

Maurer, M.D., at the University of Nebraska Board of Regents meeting at

the Holiday Inn Express in Valentine.

Were very proud of all we do for the state, Dr. Maurer said. Without

a doubt, the Medical Center is an economic engine for Nebraska. But, even

more importantly, the research were doing and the clinical programs we

provide are making a difference in peoples lives.

Mary Claire Mohrfeld, interim director of Keya Paha/Cherry County Developmental

Services (KPCCDS) in Valentine, detailed how the Munroe-Meyer Institute

at UNMC reaches out to her program by providing videoconferences for her

staff at least three times per year. KPCCDS provides assistance to 17 people

with developmental disabilities in Keya Paha and Cherry County. The videoconferences

deal with a variety of topics relevant to the developmental disability

field.

Were a perfect example of how UNMC has a 500-mile campus, Mohrfeld

said. Theres no way an agency our size could afford to bring in the speakers

that UNMC provides via the videoconferences. The videoconferences bring

university-quality training right to our doorstep. It keeps our staff current

on key issues in our field, and at the same time, it saves us money by

not having to incur travel expenses.

Dr. Maurer said UNMCs economic impact can best be demonstrated by looking

at its research expenditures as well as the clinical revenues generated

by its world-class transplant programs for cancer patients and solid organ

recipients.

Since 1998, UNMC has spent more than $355 million on its research activities,

including new construction, Dr. Maurer said. Using a conservative 2.25

multiplier effect established by the Center for Public Affairs Research

at the University of Nebraska at Omaha, this figure soars to $755 million.

UNMCs external research funding is expected to reach $53 million at

the end of fiscal 2002 and $68 million by the end of fiscal 2003. These

are dollars that would not exist in Nebraska without the research activity

at UNMC, Dr. Maurer said.

The transplant programs for UNMC and its clinical partner, Nebraska

Health System, have brought in more than $397 million since 1990. Using

the 2.25 multiplier effect, this figure climbs to nearly $900 million.

 

Some of the other ways that UNMC is contributing to the Nebraska economy

include:

· Nine Nebraska companies have spun off from UNMCs biotechnology

research. These companies have brought in more than $381,000 in revenues.

Over the past 11 years, UNMC researchers have patented more than 300 scientific

disclosures.

· UNMC has educated more than half of all the physicians, pharmacists,

dentists and nurses with bachelors degrees in the state. Through its distance

education programs, UNMC has helped hundreds of students get their degrees

at sites in greater Nebraska. The vast majority of these students have

remained in rural communities, where the shortage of health-care professionals

is most severe.

· A variety of rural health programs that have been recognized

nationally as a model for the education and recruitment of health professionals.

These programs include: student rotations in rural communities; medical

residency programs in Grand Island, Kearney, North Platte and Scottsbluff;

the Rural Health Education Network (RHEN); and the Rural Health Opportunities

Program (RHOP), which allows students from Chadron State College and Wayne

State College to gain early acceptance to UNMCs colleges of medicine,

dentistry, pharmacy and nursing as well as the School of Allied Health

Professions. A total of 374 Nebraskans have participated in RHOP since

it began in 1992, and more than 70 percent of graduates from the program

have returned to rural areas to practice.

· UNMC received a $2.08 million grant last year for the development

of Area Health Education Centers (AHEC). The Central Nebraska AHEC was

established in Grand Island last year, while a Northern Nebraska AHEC will

be established in 2002-03. These centers will help communities establish

their health-care priorities and implement programs to meet these needs.

· UNMC provided continuing education programs to more than 23,000

health-care professionals around the country, including more than 5,000

Nebraskans.

· Since 1990, UNMC has served as the headquarters for the Nebraska

Center for Rural Health Research. The center conducts research and analysis

related to improving health-care delivery in rural areas.

 

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