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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Dr. E. Eugene Marsh III has been named
dean of The University of Alabama’s College of Community
Health Sciences and associate dean of the UA School of Medicine.
Dr. Judy Bonner, UA provost and vice president for academic affairs,
and Dr. Robert R. Rich, senior vice president and dean of the UA
School of Medicine, announced the appointment. Marsh has served
as interim dean of CCHS since July 1, 2004, when the former dean,
Dr. William A. Curry, moved to the Birmingham campus of the School
of Medicine.
“We are very excited that Dr. Marsh will continue to serve
as dean,” Bonner said. “He has a strong track record
in medical teaching and practice, and we look forward to the contributions
he will make as he leads the College of Community Health Sciences
in serving our local community, as well as rural and other underserved
areas of the state.”
“Dr. Marsh has done an excellent job as interim dean, and
we feel strongly that he will carry on his great works to continue
to improve the school,” Rich said. “He is an outstanding
doctor, professor and administrator.”
CCHS provides the last two years of clinical education and training
for a portion of medical students enrolled at the UA School of
Medicine. Students can choose any field of specialization, but
CCHS encourages and trains medical students to practice in the
smaller, rural and often underserved communities of Alabama.
CCHS also provides a three-year family practice residency program
that is one of the oldest and most productive in the Southeast.
The College’s educational programs are designed to increase
the accessibility and availability of health care, particularly
in the state’s rural areas, and to improve the quality of
that care through teaching, clinical service, research and community
outreach.
CCHS operates a comprehensive, state-of-the-art medical clinic,
University Medical Center, where College faculty members conduct
their medical practices and where students and residents receive
clinical experience and training. In addition, the College’s
research component supports faculty and student research efforts,
including clinical trials, and has been a participant in federal
and state grants totaling more than $24 million.
Russell Student Health Center has been a part of CCHS for the
last three years. A new addition to University Medical Center will
be completed in January that will bring RSHC closer and will allow
more integration of services to better provide health care and
health care education to students at The University of Alabama.
Marsh has been associated with CCHS in several capacities since
moving to Tuscaloosa in 1990. He has been director of the neurology
clerkship since 1993 and associate dean for academic affairs from
2001 to 2004. He also serves as the medical director of the Alabama
Quality Assurance Foundation, a nonprofit physician organization
designated by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
as Alabama’s Medicare Quality Improvement Organization.
Marsh received his bachelor’s degree cum laude from UA in
1975 and his M.D. from the University of South Alabama in 1979.
After an internship in family medicine, he completed a neurology
residency at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington,
D.C. Upon completion of his military obligation, Marsh completed
two additional years of training at the University of Iowa Hospitals
and Clinics as a fellow associate in cerebrovascular disease, or
stroke.
He is the author of numerous publications and presentations, most
of which deal with cerebrovascular disease. Marsh has received
numerous awards for excellence in teaching, and he was awarded
the Leonard Tow 2003 Humanism in Medicine Award by the Arnold F.
Gold Foundation. He has served on several state and regional committees
and task forces related to stroke and health care quality. He is
active in the American Heart Association and currently serves on
the Board of Directors for the Southeast Affiliate. He recently
was elected to the Board of Directors for the American Health Quality
Association, representing a 13-state region.
“I am honored to serve CCHS as dean,” Marsh said. “Our
College has enjoyed remarkable success over the last 32 years.
I feel that we are now positioned to have an even greater impact
on health care in this community and in this state as we strive
to provide high-quality, patient-centered care to our patients,
and train our students and residents to do the same.”
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