Omahans invited to April 29 forum to learn about UNMC’s impact, budget cuts, give feedback to Chancellor Harold M. Maurer, M.D.

The University of Nebraska Medical Center invites Omahans to attend

a forum Tuesday, April 29, presented by Harold M. Maurer, M.D., chancellor

of the University of Nebraska Medical Center. The forum, which will begin

at 6:30 p.m., will be held in the Westside Community Conference Center

Lighthouse Room, 3534 S. 108th St.

The purpose of the forum is to share how UNMC is shaping the future

of health care for Nebraska and beyond and discuss the impact of the budget

cuts on education, research and economic growth for the University, particularly

UNMC. It also will be an opportunity to share their thoughts, concerns

and ideas about the University of Nebraska system and UNMC in particular.

A native of New York, Dr. Maurer joined UNMC as dean of the College

of Medicine in 1993 and was appointed as the universitys chancellor in

1998.  Prior to joining UNMC, Dr. Maurer spent 25 years at the Medical

College of Virginia, serving as professor and chair of the Department of

Pediatrics for 17 of those years.

Dr. Maurer is internationally known for his expertise in rhabdomyosarcoma,

a childhood cancer. He served as principal investigator of NIH research

grant awards and chaired the national Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study

Group for 26 years. The group has been credited with raising the cure rate

for that cancer from 20 to 75 percent. For his leadership of this group

and his own significant work in research and treatment of this disease,

last month Dr. Maurer was awarded the prestigious Lifetime Achievement

Award by the Childrens Oncology Group, a major pediatric cancer treatment

and research group.

His achievements at UNMC as dean include leading the merger of University

Hospital and Clarkson Hospital to form the Nebraska Health System, increasing

research funding with the College of Medicine, bringing together the faculty

practice through reorganization, and expanding the family medicine rural

residency.

In 1999, Dr. Maurer set a goal to double UNMCs externally funded research

in five years to $62 million and triple it in 10 years. Already, resources

that have been reallocated to strengthen the research infrastructure have

paid dividends, as UNMC received more than $52 million in research support

primarily from the National Institutes of Health in 2001-2002.

Dr. Maurer has articulated a new vision and strategic plan to become

a world-renowned health sciences center, repositioning the UNMC from a

regional to a national center of excellence in the 21st century. Private

gifts and commitments totaling more than $100 million have been designated

for construction projects at UNMC. In 2003, construction is expected to

be completed on the Durham Research Center, a 10-story facility funded

without state dollars.