Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Makhija selected as Walton medical school dean, CEO

- GARRETT MOORE Makhija Garrett Moore can be reached by email at gmoore@nwaonline.com.

BENTONVILL­E — Dr. Sharmila Makhija will be the founding dean and chief executive officer of the Alice L. Walton School of Medicine.

She will begin the new role in May, according to a Monday news release from the school.

Makhija is a surgeon and “an internatio­nal expert on gynecologi­c cancer,” the release states.

“We are excited to welcome Dr. Makhija to the team,” Alice Walton, Walmart heiress and founder of the school, stated in the release. “Her background and commitment to medical education will advance our work in equipping physicians to tackle challenges of the 21st century by focusing on the physical, mental, social and emotional health of the people and communitie­s we serve.”

Makhija has held faculty positions at the University of Pittsburgh, the University of Alabama at Birmingham, Emory University and the University of Louisville. She most recently occupied the Chella and Moise Safra Endowed Chair at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Health System in New York. She was also department chair of obstetrics and gynecology and women’s health and a professor of gynecologi­c oncology at the school, according to the release.

Makhija received a bachelor of arts in chemistry from Cornell University, a medical degree from the University of Alabama at Birmingham and an executive master in business administra­tion from Emory University. She serves on the board of the nonprofit Every Mother Counts, is the associate editor-in-chief of a peer-reviewed medical and health care journal and has received awards for dedication to women’s health, the release states.

She stated in the release the Walton school opportunit­y was “a dream come true.”

“Health care delivery is fractured and in need of transforma­tion so that all Americans can have access to the respectful care they deserve. Training the doctors of the future, within a culture of diversity and inclusivit­y, is central to that transforma­tion,” Makhija stated in the release.

The Walton School of Medicine aims to create a four- year medical degree program, according to school leaders. Constructi­on of the school’s 154,000-square-foot building on the campus of Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art is scheduled to begin this spring, according to Beth Bobbitt, communicat­ions director.

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