Northern Nebraska Area Health Education Center formed through federal grant provided to UNMC

A health education center will be formed over the next year to address

health-care needs in 22 counties in northern Nebraska, as part of a federal

grant that has been awarded to the University of Nebraska Medical Center.

The Northern Nebraska Area Health Education Center (NN-AHEC) will be

centered in Norfolk. The federal AHEC program allows medical schools and

community centers to cooperate to recruit and train health-care professionals

to serve in rural areas. Officials formally announced the forming of the

NN-AHEC at a news conference Friday.

Ultimately, the overall health of northern Nebraskans will benefit

because of the AHEC, said Michael Sitorius, M.D., chairman of the UNMC

department of family medicine and director of the AHEC program in Nebraska.

The AHEC centers provide a means to augment what the state, university

and rural communities already are doing to recruit, educate and train students

to practice in rural Nebraska. We look forward to partnering with rural

communities to educate students and practitioners for rural health care.

The health education center in northern Nebraska is the second AHEC

in the state. The Central Nebraska AHEC was organized over the past year

and serves 28 counties. A three-year, $2.08 million grant awarded to UNMC

in September 2001 provides funding for the centers.

The Northern Nebraska AHEC soon will hire an executive director and

staff. The executive director will report to a board of directors. The

federal grant stipulates that 75 percent of the money must be spent in

the rural Nebraska centers, and UNMC can receive 25 percent for administrative

support.

We have a great opportunity to work with diverse partnerships in our

22-county area to assess the educational needs of our current health-care

providers, to promote health-care careers in our youth and to promote community-based

health education, said Sally McKenzie, director of outreach and medical

staff development at Faith Regional Health Services in Norfolk and chairperson

of the NN-AHEC Board of Directors. The addition of a family practice residency

program in Norfolk will provide future family practice physicians for the

region.

McKenzie indicated that recruitment has begun for the programs executive

director, with a target start date of Nov. 1, 2002.

UNMC was awarded the grant through a competitive process. Dr. Sitorius,

a Cozad native, said the Nebraska congressional delegation and state officials

including Gov. Mike Johanns were supportive of UNMCs funding application

for the centers. Rep. Doug Bereuter, R-Neb., will be on hand for the formal

announcement of the Northern Nebraska AHEC today.

UNMC formalized its commitment to rural Nebraska nearly a decade ago

when it formed the Rural Health Education Network (RHEN), which has begun

several programs including eighth-grade science meets and the highly

successful Rural Health Opportunities Program (RHOP) to address rural

health-care shortages.

AHEC will build on the success of RHEN and will provide for more community

decision-making, in terms of their health-care needs and resources, said

Roxanna Jokela, coordinator of RHEN and deputy director of the UNMC AHEC

program.

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