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UA Announces Restructuring Plans for Health Sciences

AHSC

University of Arizona President Robert N. Shelton announced a major restructuring of the University's health sciences area.

The plan will create a new position of vice president for health affairs. Deans of each of the colleges at the Arizona Health Sciences Center will report to the person who fills that position.

In addition to the new organizational structure, College of Medicine Dean Keith Joiner, who has served in the position since March 2004, has announced that he will step down from his position and return to the faculty. Joiner holds professorships in medicine, public health and also in cell biology and anatomy.

"With the Phoenix campus now established and important structural changes completed at our Tucson campus, it is a perfect time for new leadership in the college and for me to return to my professional interests as a physician scientist," Joiner said.

"My major focus now will be on directing the state-wide program – Health Research Alliance Arizona – a unique initiative in Arizona linking Universities, research institutes, hospitals, community clinics and more," he added.

Shelton praised Joiner's contributions to the college.

"We are most grateful for the good work and hard decisions that Keith Joiner has brought to his tenure as dean," Shelton said. "He has made important improvements to the college and to advancing health care in our community."

With the announcement of Joiner's resignation, Shelton has appointed Steve Goldschmid as the interim dean of the College of Medicine campus in Tucson. Currently, Goldschmid serves as head of the department of medicine.

Executive Vice President and Provost Meredith Hay is overseeing the search for the new vice president for health affairs, and has appointed a search advisory committee that will review and meet with finalists for the position. An appointment to the new position is expected by the start of the fall semester.

"The new vice president for health affairs will focus on advancing The University of Arizona's health care delivery capabilities, health professional education, and citizen access to state-of-the-art patient care," Hay said. "We believe this change will greatly enhance our ability to serve the entire state."

The vice president for health affairs will be responsible to the University president for the coordination and the administration of overall academic and medical services in The University of Arizona College of Medicine at both Tucson and Phoenix; the colleges of Pharmacy, Public Health, and Nursing; the Arizona Cancer Center; and all agreements with University Medical Center, the University Physicians Healthcare and UPH-Hospital at Kino.

The new vice president will also work in partnership with the executive vice president and provost in the development of strategic academic priorities for the health sciences academic units and in the execution of the plans that result.

"This restructuring is going to facilitate better coordination of all areas of the Arizona Health Sciences Center," Shelton said.

"Our health sciences enterprise is an extraordinarily complicated and sophisticated effort," he added. "The changes we are making will allow the University to improve the quality and efficiency of what we offer in teaching, research and patient care, and make us a better university."

Hay also noted that once the vice president for health affairs is appointed, searches will be launched to permanently fill the dean positions at both the Tucson and Phoenix campuses of the College of Medicine.