Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center
Motto Your Life, Our Purpose.
Type State university
Established May 1969
Endowment US$267 million[1]
Chancellor Robert L. Duncan [2]
President Tedd L. Mitchell, M.D.
Dean Brandt Schneider, Ph.D. (Biomedical Sciences); Lori Rice-Spearman, Ph.D. (Health Professions); Steven L. Berk, M.D. (Medicine); Jose Manuel de la Rosa, M.D. (Foster School of Medicine); Michael Evans, Ph.D., R.N. (Nursing); Quentin Smith, Ph.D. (Pharmacy)
Students 4,463 (Fall 2014)
Location Abilene, Amarillo, Dallas, El Paso, Lubbock, Midland–Odessa, Texas, U.S.
Campus Urban
Affiliations Texas Tech University System
Website www.ttuhsc.edu
University Medical Center, the teaching hospital of Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center in Lubbock

The Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center (TTUHSC) offers programs in health professions, biomedical sciences, medicine, nursing, and pharmacy. TTUHSC is a multi-campus institution based in Lubbock with additional campuses located in Abilene, Amarillo, Dallas, El Paso and the Permian Basin. TTUHSC serves more than 100 counties in the western portion of Texas. The university is a separate institution from Texas Tech University, and both universities are part of the Texas Tech University System.

History

The Texas Tech University School of Medicine was created by the 61st Texas Legislature in May 1969 as a multi-campus institution with Lubbock as the administrative center and with regional campuses at Amarillo, El Paso and the Permian Basin. In 1979, the charter was expanded to become the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, which grew to include the Schools of Nursing, Health Professions and the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. In 1993, the Legislature authorized the establishment of a School of Pharmacy in Amarillo.[3] School of Health Professions programs also were expanded to Amarillo and the Permian Basin. In fall 2007, the School of Pharmacy expanded to Abilene. The Paul L. Foster School of Medicine in El Paso received preliminary accreditation in February 2008 and opened in 2009. TTUHSC currently employs more than 6,000 people and more than 3,200 students are enrolled in the university.

Schools

Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences

The Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences is located in Lubbock and was part of the School of Medicine until 1994. The school is dedicated to training biomedical scientists.

The Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences offers master’s and doctoral degrees in cell and molecular biology; biochemistry and molecular genetics; immunology and infectious diseases; pharmaceutical sciences; pharmacology and neuroscience; and physiology. Master’s degrees are also offered in health services research and biotechnology.[4]

The Department of Public Health was established in 2014. The program is co-located on the Abilene Campus and a new building is being built.

School of Health Professions

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center School of Health Professions trains health professionals in a many specific fields.

The school began in 1983 as the School of Allied Health Sciences and currently has campuses in Amarillo, Lubbock, and the Permian Basin. More than 1,100 students are currently enrolled in 18 different degree programs at the doctoral, master’s and baccalaureate degree levels. These programs include areas of study, such as athletic training, audiology, clinical management, medical laboratory science, molecular pathology, physical and occupational therapy, physician assistant, rehabilitation, and speech-language pathology.[5]

School of Medicine

The Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center School of Medicine in Lubbock has awarded more than 3,000 Doctor of Medicine degrees since its first graduating class in 1974.[3][6] The school was commissioned to train physicians to help meet the health care needs of residents of West Texas, a population that now includes more than 2.5 million people. When the school opened, West Texas had one physician for every 1,300 residents. Currently, the ratio is about one physician for every 750 residents. Students spend their first two years of study in Lubbock and their last two years studying in Amarillo, Odessa or Lubbock. A self-proclaimed major initiative for the school is to "recruit creative, innovative research faculty and to develop graduate students and postdoctoral fellows for lifelong careers in medical research." [3]

School of Nursing

The school has campuses in Lubbock, Permian Basin, Highland Lakes, and Abilene; and it educates more than 1,000 students each year. Bachelors, masters, and doctoral degrees in nursing are issued by the school. The School of Nursing offers the only Doctor of Nursing Practice program in West Texas. The school is known for its alternatives to traditional educational opportunities including online coursework for a registered nurse to obtain a Bachelor of Science in Nursing, a second-degree Bachelor of Science in Nursing program for students with a bachelor's degree in another subject, and a Veteran to Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree for veterans with military medical experience who wish to earn a nursing degree but already have considerable knowledge that distinguishes them from a traditional nursing student.[7]

School of Pharmacy

The School of Pharmacy’s administrative hub is located in Amarillo and the school has regional campus sites in Lubbock, Dallas and Abilene. The school has two Dallas-area regional sites: one located on the grounds of the North Texas Veterans Administration Medical Center and the second located within the central Dallas medical district.

Lubbock faculty and residents also operate the TTUHSC Pharmacy, which provides medications and biologicals to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Montford Unit Regional Medical Facility; the TTUHSC International Pain Institute; the Garrison Geriatric Education and Care Center; and TTUHSC clinics in Lubbock, Odessa and El Paso. The TTUHSC Pharmacy also provides telepharmacy services to the rural communities of Turkey and Earth, Texas. The first telepharmacy prescription dispensed in Texas occurred September 18, 2002, between the TTUHSC Pharmacy and the Turkey Medical Clinic.[3]

[8]

Campuses

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center is a multi-campus university based in Lubbock, Texas. The university has campuses in Abilene, Amarillo, Dallas, El Paso, and Midland–Odessa. TTUHSC also offers programs through distance learning. The Lubbock campus is the largest physical campus by enrollment. Not including distance education, the Lubbock campus is largest by enrollment, and larger than the other five campuses combined.

When TTUHSC was founded in 1969, the university had campuses in Amarillo, El Paso, Lubbock, and Midland–Odessa. In 1997, the Dallas campus opened. In 2007, the Abilene campus opened. The El Paso campus saw separate schools of medicine and nursing opened in 2009 and 2011 respectively. In 2014, both schools were spun off from the TTUHSC to form the separate university: Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at El Paso (TTUHSC El Paso). While TTUHSC El Paso offers masters programs in Biomedical Sciences, TTUHSC continues to offer doctoral programs in Biomedical Sciences in El Paso.

Fall 2014 enrollment by campus[9]
Campus Allied Health Biomedical Medicine Nursing Pharmacy Total
Abilene 7 154 145 306
Amarillo 51 38 101 298 488
Dallas 146 146
Distance 565 1,102 1,667
El Paso 21 21
Lubbock 627 102 477 344 36 1,586
Permian Basin

161 50 38 249
Total 1,404 168 628 1,638 625 4,463

Institutes & Centers

Objectives

The Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center has as its major objectives the provision of quality education and the development of academic, research, patient care, and community service programs to meet the health care needs of the 108 counties of West Texas, which comprise 48% of the land mass and 12.5% of the population of the total state. This 131,000-square-mile (340,000 km2) service area and population of 2.6 million has been, and remains highly underserved by health care access. The lack of a single locus of population density has resulted in the regionalization of medical and health care education and patient care on four geographically separated campuses that are able to provide more localized access to West Texas residents.

The presence of TTUHSC has impacted the access to health care in West Texas. Over 20% of the physicians currently practicing in West Texas are TTUHSC medical school or residency graduates. The schools of Nursing and Allied Health Sciences impact West Texas, with most of their graduates remaining in West Texas to pursue their chosen profession. Over 80% of School of Pharmacy graduates have chosen to practice in Texas.[10]

Traditions

White Coat Ceremony

Usually held in August, a new group of first-year medical students participate in the White Coat Ceremony each year. This event is a rite of passage for first-year medical students as they don their coats and take a Hippocratic oath affirming their commitment to the highest standards of ethics and patient care. At the TTUHSC School of Medicine in Lubbock, the ceremony is held at the Lubbock Memorial Civic Center.[11]

Scrub Party

The TTUHSC Office of Alumni Relations hosts the event, which brings students, families, faculty and administration together to welcome a new class of future colleagues. The tradition provides each student entering medical school with their first set of green scrubs. The color green represents the quest for the green velvet hood the students will receive once they earn the title of Doctor of Medicine

Priscilla Carter-Snodgrass, M.D., (School of Medicine Class of 1988) and her husband, Brad Snodgrass, M.D., (School of Medicine Class of 1988) began the tradition in 2003, by annually presenting green scrubs to first-year medical students at the School of Medicine's Scrub Party. The event was hosted at the Snodgrass home and later it expanded and was held on the TTUHSC campus.

People

Alumni

NASA astronaut Bernard A. Harris, Jr.

Faculty

Presidents

References

  1. "Leading the Way - 2011 Performance and Accountability Report" (PDF). 2011 Texas Tech University Performance and Accountability Report. Texas Tech University System.
  2. http://texastech.edu/stories/14-06-senator-robert-duncan-approved-as-ttu-system-chancellor.php
  3. 1 2 3 4 State of Texas and Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. "About our school". Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  4. State of Texas and Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. "Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences". Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  5. State of Texas and Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. "SAHS". Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  6. "TTUHSC :: School of Medicine : Admissions : FAQ". Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  7. Archived November 17, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  8. "Texan TUCSAN" (PDF). Ttuhsc.edu. Retrieved 5 January 2015.
  9. http://www.texastech.edu/board-of-regents/march-2015/strategic-plan-report.pdf
  10. "Microsoft Word - COVER.doc" (PDF). Ttuhsc.edu. Retrieved 5 January 2015.
  11. "Candidate profile: Dr. Donna Campbell". texasgrizzlette.com, August 2010. Retrieved January 2, 2013.
  12. "Biographical Data: Bernard A. Harris, Jr.". NASA. Retrieved 2008-08-13.

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