University of Nebraska Board of Regents hears update on bioterrorism projects, proposals

At the University of Nebraska Board of Regents meeting today, Steven

Hinrichs, M.D., presented an update on bioterrorism proposals and projects

involving faculty and researchers from the four University of Nebraska

campuses. Dr. Hinrichs is director of the University of Nebraska Center

for Biosecurity and professor in the department of pathology and microbiology

at the University of Nebraska Medical Center.

A great deal of progress has been made this year and much of it is due to

contributions by leaders in Nebraska, including the governor and our

congressional delegation, said UNMC Chancellor Harold M. Maurer, M.D.

We also are very pleased with the support provided by the business community.

 At the meeting, Dr. Hinrichs highlighted a variety of bioterrorism-related

projects involving the University of Nebraska, the U.S. Department of Homeland

Security (DHS), the Nebraska Health and Human Services System (HHSS) and

private business.

Nebraska has been unique in that it has had tremendous collaboration

among government, academia and the private business sector, Dr. Hinrichs

said. This collaboration has received much attention and is now being

referred to as the Nebraska Model.

Last month, DHS announced the University of Nebraska was one of 12 universities

(out of 72) invited to submit a full grant proposal for a university-based

research center related to the economic consequences of terrorism. The

$12 million grant would examine the concept that alternative strategies

can be developed to minimize the economic impact of terrorist attacks on

the transportation and supply distribution infrastructure of the United

States. It would be housed at the University of Nebraskas Peter Kiewit

Institute, located at the University of Nebraska at Omahas south campus,

under principal investigator Gerald Wagner, Ph.D., of the UNO College of

Information Science and Technology

Richard Raymond, M.D., chief medical officer for  Nebraska HHSS,

spoke about the combined efforts of HHSS and the university. "This partnership

has benefited all Nebraskans," Raymond said. "It has put us on the national

map."

We have been very successful in developing university projects that

have received or will be receiving federal funding in cooperation with

the Nebraska HHSS, Dr. Hinrichs said.

Listed below are some of the units which have received project funding:

· The Nebraska Public Health Laboratory;

· The UNL Center for Advanced Land Management and Information

Technology;

· The Health Professions Tracking Center at UNMC;

· The UNO Aviation Institute;

· The Nebraska Center for Bioterrorism Education;

· A UNK chemistry laboratory will house special equipment acquired

by the Nebraska Emergency Management Agency for the identification of potential

chemical agents;

· A high-risk isolation facility at UNMC.

The university continues to seek designation by the U.S. Centers for Disease

Control and Prevention (CDC) as a national bioterrorism preparedness center.

The university has received additional federal funding in the

form of

a Department of Defense appropriations bill that provides $2.5 million

for UNMC to take its clinical laboratory automation technology to the next

level. The allocation to UNMC would be used to develop portable and networked

automation testing technology that would efficiently and rapidly process

specimens to detect the existence of biological agents in the event of

a biological attack.

UNMC recently received a two-year, $650,000 federal grant from the Health

Resources Services Administration (HRSA) to develop a bioterrorism-related

curriculum, which will benefit all UNMC students and may be used by students

nationally. UNMC was one of 12 universities nationwide to receive curriculum-development

funding through the Health and Human Services Bioterrorism Training and

Curriculum Development Program.