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A prescription for growth
Medical school, clinic
could change the face
of Southwest Virginia
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by Rod Belcher
for Virginia Business
September 2007
In the 1880s, the Norfolk and Western
Railway made Roanoke the “Star City,” quickly
turning a small village into a thriving industrial
hub that built locomotives and shipped coal around
the world. Today, area leaders are planning a second
transformation, turning the Roanoke region into a medical
and R&D destination.
The driving forces behind this change
are two plans involving Carilion Health System, a nonprofit
health-care network that employs 10,000 workers at
75 locations in Southwest Virginia. Carilion is converting
to a multispecialty physician clinic similar to the
Minnesota’s famed Mayo Clinic. Carilion also
is partnering with nearby Virginia Tech in the creation
of a medical school in Roanoke that will place a heavy
emph
asis on research. The first 40-member
class is expected to enroll in 2010. “We had been promoting
bio-medicine and medical technology industries for
quite a while,” says Wayne Strickland, executive
director of the Roanoke Valley-Alleghany Regional Commission. “The
medical school, with its emphasis on research, will
anchor us on the map as a life-sciences center and
a site for emerging technologies.”
Plans for the clinic and medical
school dovetail nicely with a recent shift in strategy
by economic development leaders in Southwest Virginia.
Instead of courting large companies that might employ
hundreds or thousands, officials are trying their hands
at “economic gardening.” That’s a
concept that encourages the creation of new businesses
and the growth of existing companies. “Eighty
percent of [new] jobs come from small businesses,” says
Strickland. “Small businesses also tend to stay
in the same region. If they are successful, they are
usually more stable. We’re
taking on more of an advocacy role for existing businesses.”
In preparing a fertile ground for
business growth, local officials are trying to create
a larger work force (the area’s population is
currently growing at only 0.5 percent) and to attract
more young professionals. The medical school is expected
to be a great help in those causes as it trains new
doctors and spurs the creation of research-related
businesses. “It’s been hard to attract
medical professionals to southwestern Virginia,” says
Strickland. “This
might be a way to do it for the entire southwestern
and western regions.”
Despite resistance from some local
independent physicians, Carilion already has recruited
90 doctors for the clinic, creating a team of 400 physicians
so far. “We’ve had good response to recruiting
many national leaders in our field,” says Dr.
Edward Murphy, Carilion’s CEO. “A
lot of people are looking at what we are doing here.”
Carilion’s transformation,
in fact, was the subject of the June 2006 cover story
in Modern Healthcare magazine. In May, the same magazine
ranked Murphy as the fourth most powerful physician
executive in the country in a national poll of health-care
and physician executives. The head of the Mayo Clinic
was ranked fifth.
The changeover, however, is not a
ploy for publicity but a necessary strategy for Carilion’s
future viability, says Murphy. Carilion’s expenses
are growing faster than its revenues. Although its
hospitals operate as part of an “integrated delivery
system,” they
largely have functioned as independent businesses.
Under the clinic model, salaried Carilion physicians
and other health-care workers will pursue a team approach
to patient care. Hospitals would stop being independent
businesses and instead become ancillary services to
physician practices.
When Carilion announced its plans last year, they included establishing a clinical research institute with Virginia Tech. That partnership took on extra meaning in January with the announcement of plans for the medical school.
The focus of the five-year school will be to train
research physicians — doctors who will make
research a significant part of their career. All
students will be required to write a thesis based
on original research. Having Virginia Tech nearby
will be a plus as they draw upon its extensive resources
in areas such as computer science, engineering, epidemiology,
health services and bioinformatics. “A research
medical center in Roanoke will most likely produce
spinoff research-based businesses and industries
that feed into the new school and the existing Jefferson
College of Health Sciences,” says
Strickland.
The medical school also could help
catapult Virginia Tech into the prestigious top 30
of research universities in the nation by creating
additional avenues of research funding. Tech currently
is ranked 52nd. Reaching the top-30 tier could produce
an additional $1.7 billion annually for the region’s
economy.
“The joint venture of the medical
school with Carilion will enable Virginia Tech to enhance
its life science capabilities and provide a much more
robust research profile,” says Mark McNamee,
Tech’s provost and vice president for academic
affairs.
The medical school’s curriculum
is under development. “Not many new medical schools
get created. And the process for each one is different,” explains
McNamee. “You can’t just pull someone’s
model off the shelf and use it. Each school, each community
is unique.”
Meanwhile, the search for the school’s dean has been narrowed to a half dozen candidates. “We have had a very strong response,” says
Murphy.
“Between Virginia Tech and
the health-care industry I believe we are going to
see an evolution in the economy of Roanoke toward a
health-care and research-based economy. I think the
medical school will have a dramatic impact on that.”
Research-related companies already
are major factors in the economy of the New River Valley
area surrounding Tech. The Virginia Tech Corporate
Research Center now has 23 buildings housing 140 private
companies and researchers. “We definitely have
tenants who want in,” says Joe Meredith, the
center’s president. “We have three additional
buildings in the design or construction stages currently.
We’ve
completed an additional 750,000 square feet already,
and we have 167,000 square feet under construction.”
This expansion, the final stage of
the center’s first phase, should be finished
in the next year, adds Meredith. The second phase of
the project, planned to begin next year or in 2009,
will add another 95 acres to the park, creating 900,000
square feet of additional office space. “SAIC,
which is a national technology, engineering and systems
solutions company, is ready to move in now,” says
Meredith. “They
should be in by late September. There are lots of interesting
things happening here right now, lots of future expansions
and products potential.”
The high-paying jobs created by the
companies have helped stimulate demand for retail development. “The
main activity in the New River Valley has been retail,” says
Aric Bopp, executive director of the New River Valley
Economic Development Alliance. “There
has been over $100 million in new retail development
announced this last year in Montgomery County alone.”
All the developments suggest that
the clinic/medical school plans could be a tipping
point for the Roanoke area. “The medical school
is going to transform the region,” says Phil
Sparks, executive director of the Roanoke Valley Economic
Development Partnership. “Like
the railroad did.”
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