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Training and serving in some of the east's finest
institutions never gave Dr. James A. Hallock what he found in eastern North
Carolina: A mission that really counted.
That mission - to serve the
region, teach minority physicians and develop family doctors - drew him to
Greenville in 1988 as dean of the medical school.
"We are one of the most
rural, most poor regions of the country," he says. "We have a medical
school whose mission, in part, is to serve the healthcare needs of the region.
Our hospital partner bought into that mission, county commissioners bought
into that mission and they all said that Yes, they would serve the region."
That commitment still defines
the relationship between the hospital and medical school, an accomplishment
Hallock believes is rare. "We have made some very wise decisions along
the way," he says.
During Hallock's tenure the
medical school has developed in research, telemedicine and robotics, but it
has never lost its dedication to the people it serves. He credits that success
to a strong relationship with the hospital.
Hallock, a New Jersey native
and graduate of Georgetown University's medical school, worked as a pediatrician
in Philadelphia and at the Air Force in Biloxie, Miss., before accepting a
post as faculty member and associate dean at the University of South Florida.
He stepped down as dean in February, 2001.
He first met the hospital's
administrative staff as part of his interview for the dean's post at ECU.
"All of those were very, very pleasant interactions," he remembers.
His overall impression is
still a potent memory. "Every single person I bumpted into, whether at
the hospital or the medical school, knew the mission. We have been able to
use that service mission as the binding force between the medical school,
the university, the hospital, the practicing community and the region."
Another vital force in the
medical center's success is what he calls the "synergy," or dynamic
cooperation, between its many sections. He noticed its positive effects early
on. "The relationship between the hospital and the medical school is
crafted in a way very different from what I was used to at other community-based
medical schools," he says. "It seemed the folks had put the relationship
together here and solved problems in the correct ways."
He praises the hospital's
stability as a key factor in the medical school's ability to flourish. "The
healthcare evolution that took place in this country - the change in reimbursements,
the buying and selling of hospitals and medical practices - caused a lot of
distress around the country," he says. "We seem to have been able
to avoid these, by virtue of our demographics, our geographics and wisdom
on our part in not making some of those decisions." |
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