Medical school launches $70-million campaign

`Building a Bridge' nearly halfway to goal



By Scott J. Turner

Brown's School of Medicine, one of the nation's youngest, has launched a $70-million fund-raising campaign that will run through June 30, 2002.

"Building a Bridge," as the campaign is called, is more than $34 million toward its goal, according to an announcement made by campaign chair Artemis A. W. Joukowsky, chancellor emeritus, at a May 27 gala celebrating the school's 25th anniversary.

The campaign will build upon the School of Medicine's distinctive qualities and will enable groundbreaking interdisciplinary studies, said Ann Paton, executive dean for advancement.

Most Brown medical students are products of an unusual eight-year Program in Liberal Medical Education, considered to be among the most selective university programs in the nation. In an arrangement rare in higher education, biology faculty and those in the School of Medicine are combined under one division, sharing basic science training and undergraduate biology instruction.

In 1996, the medical school unveiled a curriculum reform called MD2000, which emphasizes mastery of nine abilities that focus on those things a good doctor must be able to do. Brown is also one of the few medical schools that does not own or operate its own teaching hospital. Medical education is a joint endeavor between the school and seven affiliated hospitals.

"An integrated faculty and close relationships with affiliated hospitals help the School of Medicine train a new generation of humanistic physicians and medical scientists," Paton said. "It also positions the school to conduct `translational research,' performed at the intersections where basic science discoveries generated in laboratories are efficiently and responsibly transferred to innovations in patient care."

However, the challenges of practicing academic medicine in the current health care environment are greater than ever due to increasing pressures on physicians to maintain revenues by seeing more patients - leaving less time and opportunity for teaching and research, she said.

According to Paton, the campaign's goals are to raise: