The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

'All boats are going to rise' Upgraded Georgia Southern University medical campus will help keep docs in Savannah.

- BywAbraham­wKenmore Savannah Morning News

Georgia’s public medical school is expanding by upgrading its clinical campus for third- and fourth-year students at Georgia Southern University to a full four-year satellite school.

The new campus of the Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Southern will accept its first class of 40 first-year medical students next year, pending approval from an accreditin­g body.

“We’re really, really excited about the opportunit­ies it’s going to present for us and and for the state of Georgia,” said Brooks Keel, president of Augusta University, which contains MCG.

The campus has three main partners — MCG will recruit and provide the students, Georgia Southern the classroom space, and St. Joseph’s/Candler health system will provide the clinical training space. It will join MCG’s main four-year campus in Augusta and one in Athens.

“What we’re going to do is provide the clinical exposure to the medical students,” said Paul P. Hinchey, president and CEO of the St. Joseph’s/Candler hospital system, in a news conference on Thursday. “So their book learning is done essentiall­y in the first and second year. Then they’ve got to put on a white jacket and get out and follow patients. Our job is to train them and prepare them to go into their residency.”

The relationsh­ip between MCG and St. Joseph’s/Candler started 15 years ago with a weeks long clinical rotation, Hinchey said. In 2011 they started the clinical campus, where third- and fourthyear students could get hands-on experience. Discussion­s started on a full campus about two years ago, and the final announceme­nt took involvemen­t not only from the universiti­es and health system but also state elected officials and the Board of Regents.

“This partnershi­p with Augusta University and the Medical College of Georgia is another example of how together, the governor, our legislator­s, the University System of Georgia and Georgia Southern University are collaborat­ing to meet the growing needs of southeast Georgia,” Georgia Southern University President Kyle Marrero was quoted as saying in a news release.

Soon, students will be able to complete all four years of medical training in the Savannah area. Currently, each class has 264 students, putting MCG eight or ninth in size for public medical schools.

“Adding 40 students should make us the fourth or fifth largest medical school in the country and although that’s exciting, and we’re really proud to be expanding like we are, more important than that is that we will be producing more doctors that hopefully will stay in Georgia,” said Keel, including ones who work in underserve­d areas of the state.

The announceme­nt comes as the Wellstar Health System is set to merge with the AU Health System attached to MCG in Augusta, forming Wellstar MCG Health. As part of that, MCG will be establishi­ng a clinical campus at Wellstar Kennestone Regional Medical Center in Marietta. Wellstar’s investment in medical education in Augusta will help the fouryear campus in Savannah, Hinchey said.

“Wellstar has agreed to put in the resources ... like informatio­n technology, faculty, training centers, and will really beef up the availabili­ty in Augusta, which is going to allow the satellite sites like us to even do a better job.”

The University System of Georgia Board of Regents on Tuesday voted to approve a $1.69 million bond to renovate 23,000 square feet of space at the Armstrong Center and Health Profession­s Building at Georgia Southern. This will provide an anatomy lab, which Hinchey said is the only thing missing to upgrade the clinical campus to a full four-year school.

If the current classroom space is insufficie­nt, St. Joseph’s/Candler will pay for any expansion. The clinical campus currently has 80 faculty members who are unpaid, practicing doctors. Keel also said the University will hire some new staff to support students in Savannah as well as expanding the pool of instructor­s.

“We may be hiring a faculty ourselves, that would be based out of Savannah, but we’ll also be taking advantage of some of the faculty that Georgia Southern has and we will be sort of using their time to help teach some of the courses, especially some of the more basic science courses,” Keel said.

The agreement will benefit the Savannah area in multiple ways, Hinchey said.

“Having the students here and trained here, in addition to the nurses that are already here ... the probabilit­y of them staying here when they graduate and finishing their residency is really high,” Hinchey said. “So that’s going to benefit everybody here and all boats are going to rise.”

Hinchey said he hopes 50% of students will stay local after graduation. Having doctors who trained in Savannah would make it easier to compete for medical talent during a national shortage of physicians.

 ?? ?? MCG students talk at St. Joseph’s/Candler in the MCG Southeast Campus classrooms at Candler Hospital in Savannah. Training more medical students in Savannah, organizers hope, will result in more doctors and better health care in the area.
MCG students talk at St. Joseph’s/Candler in the MCG Southeast Campus classrooms at Candler Hospital in Savannah. Training more medical students in Savannah, organizers hope, will result in more doctors and better health care in the area.
 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY OF SCOTT M. LARSON/PROVIDED BY ST. JOSEPH’S/CANDLER ?? Students at the MCG Southeast Campus at Candler Hospital in Savannah include Brennen Bogdanovic­h (left), Seena Mansouri and Tommy Bui.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF SCOTT M. LARSON/PROVIDED BY ST. JOSEPH’S/CANDLER Students at the MCG Southeast Campus at Candler Hospital in Savannah include Brennen Bogdanovic­h (left), Seena Mansouri and Tommy Bui.
 ?? ?? Paul M. Hinchey is president and CEO of St. Joseph’s/ Candler.
Paul M. Hinchey is president and CEO of St. Joseph’s/ Candler.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States