Samuel Bierner, M.D., a Texas physician with more than 25 years of experience in the specialty of physical medicine and rehabilitation (PM&R), has been selected as professor and founding chair of the new PM&R program at UNMC.
The announcement today by Bradley Britigan, M.D., dean of the UNMC College of Medicine, marks the culmination of a nationwide search for the position. Dr. Bierner’s appointment is effective April 1, pending approval by the University of Nebraska Board of Regents.
PM&R is the medical specialty that cares for adults and children who experience disabling conditions including traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord injuries, and impairments from stroke, musculoskeletal and neurological diseases. PM&R physicians also are known as physiatrists.
‘A key role’
Paul Dongilli Jr., Ph.D. |
“We are excited about Dr. Bierner’s appointment. He is a highly-respected physiatrist who brings a wealth of clinical knowledge and academic excellence to lay the foundation for the new PM&R residency program,” said Paul Dongilli Jr., Ph.D., president and CEO of Madonna Rehabilitation Hospital.
“This hire signals a milestone in creating the first PM&R residency program in Nebraska and in a larger five-state region. Dr. Bierner will have a key role in training the next generation of PM&R physicians, all while improving patient outcomes and rebuilding patients’ lives.”
“We are delighted to land a physician of Dr. Bierner’s stature,” Dr. Britigan said. “He has an incredibly strong background in physical medicine and rehabilitation and has worked in an academic medicine setting for the past 12 years. He stood out among all the candidates we interviewed and was undoubtedly our top choice. We look for him to provide outstanding leadership as we launch our PM&R program.”
“The biggest attraction for me to come to Nebraska is to be a part of establishing a brand new program at UNMC,” Dr. Bierner said. “It’s a great opportunity for me to have an impact that would put a capstone on my career.”
Noting a sparsity of PM&R residency programs in the upper Midwest, Dr. Bierner thinks the UNMC program could have a major impact.
“I look for the future PM&R physicians we train to spread out from Omaha and practice in the surrounding heartland area,” he said. “Our department will be able to leave a mark that will continue for decades to come.”
UNMC’s PM&R program will partner with the new Madonna Rehabilitation Hospital-Omaha Campus that is being built in the Village Pointe area. The new facility is scheduled to open in October. In addition, Dr. Bierner hopes to extend PM&R services to Children’s Hospital & Medical Center and the VA Medical Center.
“Madonna has a very high-class operation,” Dr. Bierner said. “It is highly ranked nationally among PM&R facilities. I’m thrilled to be associated with this great organization.”
Dr. Bierner’s first order of business when he gets to UNMC will be recruitment of new PM&R faculty, so that Madonna will be staffed when it opens in October. His goal is to have four inpatient physicians practicing at Madonna and three to four other physiatrists practicing on the main UNMC/Nebraska Medicine campus. He expects that a residency program can be started within three years and can train three to four resident physicians each year.