UAMS expansion to NWA
#21
Posted 29 September 2008 - 11:12 AM
#22
Posted 29 September 2008 - 04:06 PM
#23
Posted 17 November 2008 - 05:07 PM
#24
Posted 17 November 2008 - 06:15 PM
#25
Posted 18 November 2008 - 05:38 AM
butttrumpet, on Nov 17 2008, 06:15 PM, said:
#27
Posted 14 January 2009 - 12:54 PM
#28
Posted 14 January 2009 - 02:25 PM
butttrumpet, on Jan 14 2009, 12:54 PM, said:
#29
Posted 27 June 2009 - 05:55 AM
http://www.nwanews.c...dg/News/262928/
#30
Posted 13 July 2009 - 03:15 PM
#31
Posted 15 January 2011 - 03:33 AM
Apparently renovations are ongoing at the UAMS Northwest campus beyond the Phase I renovations they completed earlier. Additional classrooms, teaching labs, and distance learning facilities (which they're calling Phase II) are supposed to be complete by this fall, when a group of third year pharmacy students will move up to the campus. Medicine will also be sending the largest group of third year medical students up there this year (14), which they'll send this year and next, and that group is supposed to increase again in 2013 if the rumor mill is accurate.
2011 will also see the addition of some new(exact number for Fayetteville to be released, 30 positions are being added at four sites over six years in the state) primary care resident physicians at the UAMS NW AHEC/UAMS NW. This is significant for healthcare in Arkansas since we have a serious primary care shortage and new residency positions are difficult to obtain, but it's also significant since it shows UAMS placing some focus on adding residencies in NWA.
#32
Posted 15 January 2011 - 10:08 AM
thewizard16, on 15 January 2011 - 03:33 AM, said:
Apparently renovations are ongoing at the UAMS Northwest campus beyond the Phase I renovations they completed earlier. Additional classrooms, teaching labs, and distance learning facilities (which they're calling Phase II) are supposed to be complete by this fall, when a group of third year pharmacy students will move up to the campus. Medicine will also be sending the largest group of third year medical students up there this year (14), which they'll send this year and next, and that group is supposed to increase again in 2013 if the rumor mill is accurate.
2011 will also see the addition of some new(exact number for Fayetteville to be released, 30 positions are being added at four sites over six years in the state) primary care resident physicians at the UAMS NW AHEC/UAMS NW. This is significant for healthcare in Arkansas since we have a serious primary care shortage and new residency positions are difficult to obtain, but it's also significant since it shows UAMS placing some focus on adding residencies in NWA.
#33
Posted 15 January 2011 - 03:43 PM
Mith242, on 15 January 2011 - 10:08 AM, said:
I'd really like to see what their master plan for the NWA campus is (if they've developed an official one yet), though. They have some space there and that building isn't going to fulfill all their needs long term, so it'd be really nice to see some UAMS level construction happen at that location- it could do wonders for that section of college if they increase their footprint, building density, and employment in the next several years.
#34
Posted 15 January 2011 - 04:02 PM
thewizard16, on 15 January 2011 - 03:43 PM, said:
I'd really like to see what their master plan for the NWA campus is (if they've developed an official one yet), though. They have some space there and that building isn't going to fulfill all their needs long term, so it'd be really nice to see some UAMS level construction happen at that location- it could do wonders for that section of college if they increase their footprint, building density, and employment in the next several years.
#35
Posted 15 January 2011 - 07:55 PM
Mith242, on 15 January 2011 - 04:02 PM, said:
As far as another (private, of course) medical school moving in- that may be true but it had never gotten to a very serious planning stage, just expressed interest. I do feel it's much better for NWA to have a regional campus for the state's large research medical school than a branch of a private osteopathic med school with no real research facilities or connection to other training programs like pharmacy, nursing, etc. though, so things probably worked out in the best long-term interests of the region. It'll be a long time before Arkansas is large enough to support a full fledged second medical school, but I imagine when the time comes Little Rock or NWA would be at the top of the list of any future medical school's location list.
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