Building On Success | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's note: The author of this post, Amy Ellis, is a contributor to ECU News Services.

McCrory budget to support Brody School of Medicine


    Gov. Pat McCrory announced during his March 2 visit to the East Carolina Heart Institute at East Carolina University that his budget will allocate $16 million over the next two years to stabilize the financial challenges at the Brody School of Medicine.

    "With those funds, my goal is for all of us to use the next two years to develop a long-term plan for a sustainable economic model that will allow the school to continue producing the doctors North Carolina needs for generations to come," said McCrory.

    Following a private meeting with ECU Chancellor Steve Ballard, Vice Chancellor for Administration and Finance Rick Niswander and Brody administrators, the governor toured the heart center's Robotics Lab and tried his hand at a robotic surgery simulation.

    Also in attendance were Dr. Aldona Wos, secretary for the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services, N.C. Sen. Louis Pate and N.C. Rep. Brian Brown.

N.C. Gov. Pat McCrory, left, and Dr. Wiley Nifong examine an interactive display illustrating that ECU has trained surgeons from 33 states in the use of the robotic da Vinci Surgical System.
    At a press conference following the tour the governor said, "The Brody School has continued to deliver on the mission our state legislature set forth for it. Now we need to find a way to build upon those successes and expand them.

    "I don't see ECU as being only for eastern North Carolina. I see it as being for all of North Carolina,"
he added.

    Wos said, "It's critical that we continue to fulfill the promise of 1974 — to provide access to care for the citizens of this region. The only way to do that is to have a viable medical community here that's training the next generation of providers. The majority of physicians who train here, stay here. And I want to thank Brody for that."

    Ballard told McCrory, "I assure you that ECU will do our part. We'll continue to spruce up the long-term plan we've been working on. It focuses on increasing efficiencies and continuing the excellent relationship we have with Vidant Medical Center, who is instrumental to our long-term plan.

    "This funding means a flagship program of ours will be sustained,"
he said, "and we'll be able to continue impacting health care and economic development in the east."

    The governor's recommended budget will soon be delivered to the legislature for consideration.


N.C. Secretary of Health and Human Services Aldona Wos, left, and N.C. Gov. Pat McCrory at East Carolina University March 2.


North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory, far right, toured the East Carolina Heart Institute March 2 with N.C. Secretary of Health and Human Services Aldona Wos, seated at the da Vinci surgical system console. ECU physician Dr. Wiley Nifong, center, explained how surgeons are trained on the system. (Photos by Cliff Hollis)

Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )



Comment

( March 4th, 2015 @ 7:14 am )
 
I can assure you that the Governor's general outlook on paying for Education is not on a par with his words here. Based on his State of the State address and empty programs vs. PR introductions of appointees as if they had a clue.

Now, Mr. Governor, how are we going to pay for a government when taxes give the rich and corps big breaks and unbalance income vs. expense even when cut drastically with a miser's pen? We don't need tool roads / mental health done privately / jails fixing to become private and for profit.

If Duke Energy pays for Haw River cleanups / if Fracking is stopped / if offshore drilling beside our Outer Banks and the pristine Gulf Stream is passed over, then I know we have a Governor of wisdom rather than a lobbyist for Energy of Duke and Koch variety . . .



State Responds To Winter Storm East Carolina University, School News, The Region, Neighboring Counties Prescription For Innovation

HbAD0

 
Back to Top