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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
July
Ambassador program to connect U.
of I. medical school with community
Molly McElroy, News Bureau
217-333-5802; mmcelroy@uiuc.edu
7/11/05
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Dr.
Hugo C. Avalos was named the College of Medicine's
first ambassador in a new program of public engagement. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Dr. Hugo C. Avalos, a small-town physician who has been retired
for nearly four years, is helping the University of Illinois College
of Medicine at Urbana-Champaign tackle a series of challenges facing
the medical profession.
The numbers of doctors willing to serve in rural counties and in many
vital specialties, including obstetrics, neurosurgery and emergency
care, are dropping. The medical profession is struggling to keep pace
with a growing population. Many aging doctors are retiring. And physicians
have been hit hard by rising insurance costs and the declining availability
of malpractice coverage.
Avalos, of Morris, Ill., was named in May as the College of Medicine’s
first ambassador in a new program of public engagement. An ambassador
is to be a bridge connecting the college’s faculty and students
with people in a community to talk about issues facing medicine and
the need to lure more young people into the field.
Although the ambassador program is in its infancy, Avalos plans to get
it up on its feet in the fall. His efforts will be a template for other
Illinois communities, said Diana Avalos Dummitt, associate director
of development for the Urbana campus of the university’s four-city
College of Medicine system. She is Avalos’ daughter.
The college gradually will appoint about 14 more ambassadors to rural
communities that show an interest and desire to learn more about the
medical field.
“The key is to identify an ambassador in the each community who
will be able to point to how the college could connect with the community,”
said Madeleine A. Jaehne, director of advancement. The college and its
ambassadors will tailor programs to the particular needs of each community,
she said.
“We have a special responsibility to offer our research and resources
to citizens across Illinois,” Jaehne said, referring to a mission
shared by all U. of I. campuses and set in place by the state and the
federal Land Grant Act of 1862.
“We wondered what we could do to make a difference in Illinois
communities. We talked to people from both the community and the College
of Medicine and decided that an ambassador program would be a good fit.”
In the fall, Avalos will host a community reception in Morris for Regional
Dean Bradford S. Schwartz. “It will be a chance for the dean to
tell Morris residents the vision of the college and to work with them
to investigate what they would like to see happen to promote health
careers in their community,” Dummitt said.
Through the ambassador program, the College of Medicine wants to encourage
students to pursue medical, biological and scientific careers. These
days, Jaehne said, “people really have to want to be a physician.”
It is hoped, Schwartz said, that Avalos and future ambassadors can deliver
a message that fits today’s medical climate and “acquaints
people with a realistic idea of what medicine can realistically achieve.”
“It’s important for people to understand how people learn
to become doctors, including the critical importance of a university
education before medical school,” he said. “Understanding
how the university combines research and education into overlapping
activities is essential.”
In addition, after completing their science courses, students go through
an apprenticeship period in which they work closely in a series of settings
with experienced doctors.
“This tends to slow down the mentors, because they take time to
teach,” Schwartz said. “However, Medicare and the insurance
companies push the physicians to see more patients per day, something
that is at odds with having time to teach.”
Meanwhile, universities and medical schools do not get sufficient funding
to allow them to pay experienced doctors to teach, Schwartz said, so
arranging for adequate clinical experience for doctors in training is
getting increasingly difficult.
“The college wants to attract people who want to be doctors for
the right reason,” Schwartz said. “These are people we would
want as our doctors. They are people with both scientific and humanistic
perspectives.”
A major challenge is filling medical positions in rural areas, even
though the desire by young people to enter the field is so strong that
admission to medical schools remains extremely competitive.
“Data show that doctors are likely to go into practice near where
they train, which often leaves rural communities without sufficient
health care,” Schwartz said.
In rural Illinois, about 40 positions for physicians remain unfilled,
according to a November 2004 newsletter from the American Association
of Medical Colleges. Nationally, the American Medical Association’s
Council on Graduate Medical Education projected in June, a shortage
of 90,000 doctors is likely by 2020.
The College of Medicine wants to address the problems through public
engagement at the local level throughout Illinois. “The ambassadors
will share information with their communities on a full-time basis,”
Schwartz said.
Such an approach is a perfect fit, Avalos said. “I like to be
with people, and I like to communicate.”
Avalos easily met the college’s need, Schwartz said, because he
can speak passionately with the public about societal trends and medical
breakthroughs, and how these trends and breakthroughs can benefit Illinois
residents.
In 1960, the Mexican-born Avalos, his wife Mary, and their young children
moved to Morris, located an hour southwest of Chicago along the Illinois
River. Prior to his move, Avalos received a degree in medicine in 1947
from the University of Mexico in Mexico City. He trained in surgery
at Little Company of Mary Hospital in Oak Lawn, Ill., and at Cook County
Hospital in Chicago in the 1950s.
“I love Morris!” Avalos said. “There are about 10,000
people who live here and a magnificent hospital.” (The official
2000 census was 11,298 residents.)
When Avalos moved to Morris, six doctors practiced at its hospital.
“With so few doctors, we all had to do everything,” he said.
“Even though my specialty was surgery, I found myself doing pediatrics.
I delivered about 2,000 babies in 25 years.”
Now the Morris Hospital & Health Care Centers employ multiple obstetricians,
along with specialists in other fields such as cardiology, oncology
and plastic surgery.
Avalos also served for 35 years as the team doctor for the Morris High
School football team, for which he won the Illinois State Medical Society
Team Physician of the Year Award in 1981. His retirement on Dec. 31,
2001, after a 42-year career, was recognized by a special House resolution
during the state’s 92nd General Assembly.
The college is asking alumni to help identify potential ambassadors.
U. of I. Extension, with offices across the state, also will help identify
candidates. Individuals also may nominate themselves or others.
“Ambassadors don’t need to be doctors,” Schwartz said.
“But they should understand medical training and appreciate that
truly good education needs an environment of curiosity and discovery.”
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