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The first
University-sponsored School of Medicine was established in
1879, though there is evidence that medical instruction was
given in Chapel Hill before the Civil War.
Dr. Thomas
W. Harris, an honor graduate of the Class of 1859 at the
University of North Carolina, was dean and professor of
anatomy. His only faculty colleagues were Professor A.
Fletcher Redd in chemistry and Professor Frederic W. Simonds
in botany and physiology. Courses in anatomy formed the
basis of the two-year curriculum. Dr. Harris introduced
students to clinical medicine and surgery through the free
clinics he established in the community. Dr. Harris received
no salary from the University and therefore maintained a
large medical practice. When the burden of his practice and
teaching responsibilities became too great, he resigned in
1885 to devote his time to the practice of medicine in the
growing town of Durham. At that time thirty-seven students
had attended the School of Medicine.
The school
reopened in 1890 with Dr. Richard H. Whitehead as dean and
professor of anatomy. His ability as a scientist and teacher
established the academic reputation of the school during the
next fifteen years. The school’s reputation has persisted
through succeeding generations of faculty.
In 1902
University President Francis P. Venable, along with Drs.
Whitehead and Hubert A. Royster, Sr., of Raleigh,
established the University Medical Department at Raleigh.
Dr. Royster was appointed dean and professor of gynecology.
Despite the inability of the state of North Carolina and the
University to adequately finance this expanded operation,
the leading physicians of Raleigh, many of whom were already
on the faculty of the Leonard Medical College of Shaw
University, provided clinical instruction for junior and
senior students in the Rex, St. Agnes, and Dorothea Dix
Hospitals and the Raleigh Dispensary. In 1910 the Carnegie
Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching published the
Flexner Report, which recommended standards for medical
schools. Because the University could not afford to upgrade
both the preclinical and clinical programs to meet the
recommendations in this report, the University Medical
Department in Raleigh closed.
Dr. Isaac
Hall Manning, the first professor of physiology and
biological chemistry, succeeded Dr. Whitehead as dean in
1905. A member of the medical Class of 1895, Dr. Manning and
a few able colleagues strengthened the basic science
departments and improved the preclinical science teaching
programs. The reputation of the school continued to grow and
increasing numbers of students were accepted for transfer to
the junior class of leading medical schools in the East,
South, and Midwest. Many of these students returned to
practice in North Carolina. At the time of the medical
school’s expansion to a four-year program in 1954,
approximately twenty-five percent of the physicians
practicing in North Carolina had attended the state’s
two-year medical school program.
Caldwell
Hall, the first University building planned with adequate
laboratories, classrooms, and library space for medical
instruction, was completed in 1912. Here the School of
Medicine functioned until 1938, when it was moved to
MacNider Hall, a new and enlarged basic science building.
In 1923 and
again in 1937 state commissions were appointed to study the
advisability of expanding the school’s program to four
years. Although the University, the medical alumni, and many
leading citizens of the state actively supported these
efforts, the lack of funds and the controversy over the
location of the expanded school foiled these early attempts.
During this period Duke University and Wake Forest College
established four-year programs.
Dr. Walter
Reece Berryhill became dean of the School of Medicine in
1941. His energy, wisdom, and foresight, coupled with the
support of his able faculty colleagues, ushered in an era of
progress for medical education in North Carolina.
In 1947 the
North Carolina General Assembly appropriated funds for the
construction of the 400-bed North Carolina Memorial
Hospital, for a modest enlargement of the medical science
building, and for educational and dormitory facilities for a
school of nursing. This brought to a successful conclusion
the statewide effort proposed by Governor J. Melville
Broughton in 1944 to improve the health care of North
Carolina through state (and subsequently federal) financial
aid for constructing needed hospitals and health centers,
increasing medical and health manpower, and expanding The
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of
Medicine’s program to four years.
The North
Carolina Memorial Hospital (renamed in 1989 as the UNC
Hospitals) opened in 1952 and the forty-eight members of the
first class in the newly expanded program of the School of
Medicine received their M.D. degrees in 1954. An
exceptionally able group of clinical department chairs and
faculty together with strengthened basic science departments
established the school on a firm basis. The first chairs of
the clinical departments were Dr. Kenneth Brinkhous in
Pathology, Dr. Charles H. Burnett in Medicine, Dr. Edward
Curnen in Pediatrics, Dr. George Ham in Psychiatry, Dr.
Robert A. Ross in Obstetrics and Gynecology, Dr. Nathan A.
Womack in Surgery, and Dr. Ernest Wood in Radiology.
Dr. Isaac
M. Taylor succeeded Dr. Berryhill, who retired from the
deanship in 1964, and began the development of community
clinical education programs. Dean Taylor instituted many
changes as faculty committees carefully reevaluated the
school’s curriculum in light of the many changes that had
occurred in medical education and the complex roles that
physicians were required to fulfill. A new interdisciplinary
and more flexible curriculum and a pass-fail, end-of-year
examination system began in 1967. The Morehead Fellowship
Program in medicine also was established.
During the
late 1960s the School of Medicine and the UNC Hospitals
expanded with funds obtained through state, federal, and
private sources. Projects resulting from these efforts
included Berryhill Hall (basic medical sciences teaching
facility), the Brinkhous-Bullitt Building (preclinical
education building), the Burnett-Womack Building (clinical
science building), and the Bed Tower and Spencer Love
Clinics in the North Carolina Memorial Hospital.
In mid-1971
the General Assembly approved legislation to create a board
of directors for the North Carolina Memorial Hospital and to
separate the hospital organizationally from the
administration of The University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill. Dr. Taylor remained as dean of the School of Medicine
until June 30, 1971. He was succeeded on September 1, 1971
by Dr. Christopher C. Fordham III.
During the
past thirty-five years many important changes have occurred in
the academic medical center in Chapel Hill. The number of
medical students grew from approximately 340 students during
the 1970-71 year to 640 students during the 1979-80 year,
remaining at that number to the present. The number of
faculty has increased to approximately 1,200 full-time members,
including many promising and distinguished scholars and
physicians at junior and senior levels. Significant growth
has occurred in all educational programs, notably in the
graduate education programs for the training of both basic
scientists and clinical specialists, and in the allied
health sciences area.
The
partnership between the UNC Hospitals and the School of
Medicine enhances the learning environment while maintaining
the highest standards for patient care. The relationship
between the School of Medicine and the UNC Hospitals is both
strong and collegial. The UNC Hospitals’ board of directors
appointed Mr. John Danielson as the first general director
in January 1972, and Mr. Dennis Barry succeeded him in 1975.
Mr. Eric Munson was named as the hospital’s executive
director in 1980 following Mr. Barry’s resignation. Dr.
William Easterling was associate dean for clinical affairs
until 1989 and was followed in this position by Dr. Stanley
Mandel from 1989 to 2002. Currently Dr. Brian Goldstein
serves as executive associate dean for clinical affairs and
chief of staff. Mr. Gary Park became president of UNC Hospitals in 2004.
Dr. Taylor
established strong community-hospital relationships, one of
his most important legacies. Health manpower legislation in
1971 created funding for the development of the Area Health
Education Centers (AHEC) Program, establishing three AHECs
in North Carolina. The $8.5 million represented the largest
federal grant and, at that time, the largest single contract
to date in the University’s history. Mr. Glenn Wilson, the
first director, played a major role in establishing the AHEC
Program.
The
original AHEC contract had envisioned a program that would
eventually become statewide. In late 1973 the University of
North Carolina Board of Governors adopted a statewide plan
for medical and health education and submitted it to the
North Carolina General Assembly. As a result, the General
Assembly appropriated $28.2 million in 1974 to strengthen
and expand the AHEC Program. Under the leadership of Dr.
Christopher C. Fordham, the program developed into a
statewide system of nine AHECs in cooperation with the other
UNC-Chapel Hill health science schools (Dentistry, Nursing,
Pharmacy, and Public Health); the Duke University Medical
Center; the Bowman Gray School of Medicine of Wake Forest
University; and the East Carolina University health science
schools (Medicine, Allied Health, Social Work, and Nursing).
Each AHEC
accepts the responsibility for community-based health
science student rotations and health manpower development in
a defined geographic area. The partnership between the
academic medical centers and the communities of North
Carolina has provided high-quality, easily accessible
education for health professionals in all one hundred
counties. This imaginative regional program of health
professional education significantly helps address North
Carolina’s problem of access to good medical care through
better distribution of physicians and other health
professionals, both geographically and by specialty. Dr.
Eugene S. Mayer succeeded Mr. Wilson as director in 1978.
As a result of Dr. Mayer’s strong leadership before his death in
1994, the AHEC Program was poised to continue to contribute to
the major changes that were underway in the health care arena. Dr.
Thomas Bacon was appointed Director of the AHEC Program in
August 1996.
Dr. Fordham
assumed the additional responsibilities of vice chancellor
of Health Affairs in 1977. He relinquished his duties as
dean of the School of Medicine in June 1979 and continued as
vice chancellor until March 1980 when he became chancellor
of the University. Dr. Stuart Bondurant succeeded Dr.
Fordham as dean of the School of Medicine in 1979. He
assumed his duties just as a great decade in the school’s
history culminated with accreditation by the Liaison
Committee on Medical Education.
Dr.
Bondurant’s priorities during his tenure as dean reflected
his commitment to continuing and enhancing the tradition of
excellence in education at The University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill School of Medicine. Dr. Bondurant appointed a
faculty curriculum review committee and established a
Student Research and Academic Enrichment Program. A
substantial number of medical students now carry out
research with a faculty mentor, with some of their research
leading to publication.
Innovative
partnerships between the School of Medicine and other
institutions, including University programs, industry, and
state government, were also hallmarks of Dr. Bondurant’s
years as dean. The Department of Nutrition, for example, is the
first in the country to be shared between a medical school
and a school of public health.
Under Dean
Bondurant’s leadership, a major curriculum review reached a
successful conclusion with full faculty approval in the
spring of 1983. With the dramatic changes in the health
care arena, another curriculum review began in 1992, charged
to design an educational program that was dynamic and
perpetually responsive to the changing health care
environment. That curriculum reflected the goals of faculty
and students for the education of physicians in the
twenty-first century, giving special emphasis to education
for practice as a generalist physician and for practice in
the ambulatory care setting. The curriculum also emphasized
teaching students and young physicians to adapt to changing
needs, including understanding and using new technologies
and incorporating health promotion and disease prevention
into their practices.
During Dr.
Bondurant’s tenure the School of Medicine greatly increased
the scope of its activities and reinforced its commitment to
excellence. Five new departments were added during his
15-year tenure as dean: Biomedical Engineering, Emergency
Medicine, Nutrition, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation,
and Radiation Oncology. Many new centers, institutes, and
specialized programs were created and nurtured, from the
Ambulatory Care Center and Cystic Fibrosis/Pulmonary
Research and Treatment Center to the Program on Molecular Biology
and Biotechnology and Gene Therapy Center, the latter developing
from initiatives originally begun by Dean Berryhill and
sustained by Drs. Brinkhous and Graham and others. Dr.
Bondurant remained as dean until July 1994.
Dr.
Michael A. Simmons served as dean from July 1994 to July
1996. Under his leadership, a Department of Orthopaedics
was established. Two new centers were established: the UNC Center for Cardiovascular Disease, and
the UNC Neuroscience Center, which incorporates the former
Brain and Development Research Center and focuses on the
neurosciences more broadly.
At Dr.
Simmons’ resignation in July 1996, Dr. Bondurant returned as
interim dean for one year during which time the School was
accorded re-accreditation by the Liaison Committee on
Medical Education for the maximum seven-year period.
Dr. Jeffrey
L. Houpt was named vice chancellor for medical affairs and
dean of the School of Medicine in June 1997. In
1998 the N.C. General Assembly passed legislation that established the UNC Health Care System, bringing
under one entity UNC Hospitals and the clinical programs of
the School of Medicine. Dr. Houpt was named Chief Executive
Officer. Mr. Munson’s title changed to President of the
650-bed UNC Hospitals, and he was named Chief Operating
Officer of the UNC Health Care System. In 2000 Rex
Healthcare in Raleigh became a wholly-owned subsidiary of
UNC Health Care, while retaining its identity and
authorities subject to ratification by the UNC Health Care
Board of Directors. The creation and expansion of this
integrated health care system has better positioned North
Carolina's only state-owned university hospital to operate
competitively in a rapidly changing health care
environment.
During Dr.
Houpt’s tenure, the school
continued its deep commitment to service in education,
research, and patient care to serve the people of North
Carolina and beyond. In addition, the School enhanced its
already high degree of collegiality and willingness to work
together, and was recognized nationally as a leader in
diversity and in its outreach to the State.
The
medical education program was enhanced through new teaching
and assessment methods, minority student recruitment
programs, and an enhanced admissions process. A department
chair-led committee undertook a comprehensive review of the
curriculum to set priorities for curricular outcomes, and
recommendations are being implemented.
Dr. Houpt
recruited twenty department chairs and five center directors
between 1997-2004 to ensure the School's leadership into the
coming decades. During this time, the School of
Medicine established two new academic departments and five
new centers: Department of Genetics, Department of
Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, UNC Center for
Infectious Disease, Neurodevelopmental Disorders Research Center, Center for
Maternal and Infant Health, the Carolina Center for Genome
Sciences, and the Carolina Cardiovascular Biology Center.
The Department of Genetics and the Carolina Center for
Genome Sciences, have fostered faculty collaborations from
the entire university. Medical school funding from the
National Institutes of Health more than doubled during these
years, exceeding $213 million in fiscal year 2004.
Dr. Houpt initiated planning for
additional growth and revitalization of the physical plant.
The state’s voters approved a bond issue for higher
education in November 2000, and the School launched
new construction and renovation plans for 1 million square feet of existing
medical school space. Construction has begun on 600,000
square feet of research space and 100,000 square feet of
office space. New facilities completed and dedicated
include the Neuroscience Research Building, the
Bioinformatics Building, the Biomolecular Research Building
and, at UNC Hospitals, the North Carolina Women’s and
Children’s Hospitals. Among the new facilities being
planned is a $77 million genetic medicine building that will
open in 2006. Complete renovations of two aging campus landmarks – the Burnett-Womack Building and the Medical Sciences Research Wing of
MacNider Building - were completed in early 2006. Renovations for a third aging building, Berryhill Hall,
will begin in the summer of 2006.
Dr. William L.
Roper was named chief executive officer of
the University of North Carolina Health Care System in March
2004. He serves concurrently as dean of the School of
Medicine and vice chancellor for medical affairs at
UNC-Chapel Hill. As CEO, vice chancellor, and dean, Dr.
Roper oversees an integrated health care system that
includes its top-ranked public medical school and modern
hospitals for children, women, neurological and psychiatric
patients, and general adult patient care. In the overarching
role of CEO, he reports directly to the President of the UNC
System. As UNC-Chapel Hill vice chancellor and dean, he
reports to the chancellor.
Upon his
arrival, Dr. Roper appointed a leadership team comprised of
vice dean Robert Golden, president of UNC Hospitals
Gary Park, president of UNC Physicians and Associates
Dr. Marshall Runge, and Chief Financial Officer of
the integrated health care system Alan Stewart. In October
2005, Charles Ayscue will become the Chief Financial
Officer.
In 2005 the
School has as its vision to be the nation’s leading public
school of medicine. The School is strongly
based on scholarship and fundamentally committed to the
scientific medicine of the present and future. The school
expresses these commitments by expanding innovative
educational programs in Chapel Hill and throughout the
state. The School of Medicine is equally proud of the
achievements of its nationally and internationally prominent
faculty in its generation of new knowledge and its excellent
teaching of students, house staff, and practicing
professionals.
As the
academic medical center has grown in size and complexity, it
maintains its strong tradition of delivering the very best
medical care with sensitivity, compassion, and genuine
interest in people and their families. Among its values the
UNC Hospitals, as the School of Medicine’s primary teaching
hospital, is dedicated to delivering quality health care and
outstanding service, while maintaining its obligation and
capacity to keep clinical care at the cutting edge of
medical science.
With this balance of efforts, the
School of Medicine continues its tradition of service for
the benefit of the health and medical care of the citizens
of North Carolina and the nation.
March 2006 |