HomepageDirectoryGuideBlog

Credit Guides And Credit Services

Search

Create the future you want! Learn to make money online. Visit our website and start today!  www.exclusivebizopps.com

UW Medical School to build Health Sciences Learning Center

UW Medical School to build Health Sciences Learning Center

Credit Pacific Service Union By Mike Klein and Jason Stitt • 05/19/04 MADISON The University of Wisconsin-Madison Medical School has a new home: Health Sciences Learning Center, a $55 million, 160,600-square-foot building that will unify the health sciences on the UW-Madison campus.

Part of this is about creating the future of medicine, said Paul DeLuca, associate dean for research and graduate studies at UW Medical School.

The center will bring together medicine, nursing, pharmacy and physical therapy students in one facility. DeLuca said the Medical Schools new headquarters will help foster interaction among the disciplines. It will also serve as a symbol of the schools growth into an institution that earned $110 million in federal research grants in 2001-02, more than double what it received 10 years before that.

In the 24 examination rooms of the buildings clinical assessment center, students will practice on mock patients, then watch their own performance captured on video. And the entire building will offer wireless Internet access for students and staff who have laptop computers.

The Medical School used to be located in Wisconsin General Hospital on University Avenue, a building that opened in 1924 and is starting to show its age. The new facility is adjacent to the Clinical Science Center, which houses UW Hospital and UW Clinics, on the west edge of campus. Faculty and staff are already preparing to move to their new offices starting in June and teach classes in the building this fall.

The School of Nursing has announced plans to move 90 percent of its classes into the new building this fall. This facility, with its focus on interdisciplinary instruction, will help us enormously as we educate the healthcare providers of tomorrow, said School of Nursing Dean Katharyn May.

May noted that nursing classes have been taught in crowded classrooms in the Clinical Science Center for 25 years. The new Health Sciences Learning Center will include four extra-large halls, one with 350 seats. While not as big as Ingraham Halls room B10, which has 503 seats, or Agriculture Halls auditorium, which has 593, it will still rank with some of the larger rooms in Psychology, Engineering Hall and other central university buildings.

In order to bring the various health-science fields even closer, the campuss three health science libraries will consolidate into Ebling Library, which will provide room for 350 and span three floors. Middleton Health Sciences Library, Powers Pharmaceutical Library and Weston Clinical Sciences center Library will all move their staff and collections to Ebling.

Construction began in 2001 and was officially finished at a May 7 dedication, where Gov. Jim Doyle and Medical School Dean Philip Farrell said the new facility would serve the state as a whole.

Today, we are redefining our capacity as a statewide resource as we dedicate this new and vital expression of the Wisconsin Idea, which extends the influence of this great university to the far corners of the state, Farrell said. With this building, we clearly see the emergence of one of the finest health sciences campuses in the country.

DeLuca said the new facility was not just meant as an aid for instruction, but for research as well. Part of the goal he has in mind for this building is to put research from different disciplines in a central location in order to speed up the pace of medical advances by making researchers more aware of each other.

Well be able to take new discoveries and apply them to human disease, DeLuca said.

About the Authors Patricia Daniels has written extensively on science and health. Life's Human Body, Childhood Medical Guide, and … Patricia Daniels has written extensively on science and health. Life's Human Body, Childhood Medical Guide, and Medical Advisor. Trisha Gura holds a Ph.D in molecular biology from Northwestern University. Her articles can frequently be found in Science, Nature, New Scientist, and Scientific American.

[ Comment, Edit or Article Submission ]

Share this:

Add To Ask Add To Windows Live Add To Slashdot Stumble This Digg This Add To Del.icio.us Add To Reddit Add To Yahoo MyWeb Add To Google Bookmarks Add To Furl Fav This With Technorati Add To Newsvine Add To Bloglines

More about:

Dec January 2009 Feb
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Credit Guides And Credit Services Blog on Technorati Related Blog of Credit Guides And Credit Services on Sphere