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Home > Department of Otolaryngology > About Us > Reflection
Reflection

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Periodic reflection on the past is integral to gaining perspective on future direction. As we tabulated the Department’s recent progress in preparation for a strategic retreat, we saw that much has transpired during the past five years. I am pleased to share a few highlights with you.

Personnel, programs and patients are core to our Department. The heart and soul of any department are, of course, its faculty. To a solid nucleus of five faculty, 11 outstanding additions have been made since 2000, representing the subspecialties of Head and Neck Oncology, Rhinology, Maxillofacial, Neurotology, Allergy, Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, and Pediatric Otolaryngology. Four doctorate level professionals have also joined the faculty: one in voice and swallowing, one in audiology, one in tumor biology, and one in auditory neuroscience. It is not possible in this short space to say enough good things about these 15 new individuals. Among their many other accomplishments, they have successfully competed for NIH and other government supported funding, worked closely with the Governor’s office on strategies for head and neck cancer prevention in South Carolina, and received both the University’s “Teacher of the Year” and “Clinician of the Year” awards. In short, lofty expectations have been exceeded.

As expected, the expansion in faculty has dramatically increased patient visits (Table I). To accommodate the increased clinical demand for our specialists, two new satellite offices have opened, one in Mt. Pleasant and the other in North Charleston. Our total clinical space now exceeds 20,000 square feet.

A number of new programs and centers of excellence have been established by the faculty. With generous support from the Evelyn Trammell Foundation, the Evelyn Trammell Institute for Voice and Swallowing Disorders was opened in 2001 by Bonnie Martin-Harris, Ph.D. The medical director for the Institute is Lucinda Halstead, M.D. and it includes 15 speech language pathologists and a number of collaborators from GI Medicine. Additional programs include the Head and Neck Cancer Center, directed by Terry Day, M.D.; the Cochlear Implant Center, directed by Ted Meyer, M.D., Ph.D; the Vestibular – Balance Center, directed by Jack King, Ph.D.; the Nose and Sinus Center, directed by Rod Schlosser, M.D.; the Snoring and Disordered Breathing Center, directed by Boyd Gillespie, M.D.; the Airway and Aspiration Center for Children, directed by David White, M.D.; and the Aural Atresia and Microtia Center, directed by Paul Lambert, M.D. These Centers of Excellence offer superb multidisciplinary clinical care and provide structure for clinical and basic research and for teaching initiatives.

To accommodate the additional faculty, the Department was given new and expanded academic space, totaling more than 7,000 square feet. This consolidated area also includes a new library-conference room for administrative and educational meetings. In 2004, our state-of-the-art Dissection Laboratory opened. This facility was designed for multi-specialty use, including temporal bone, sinus and microvascular surgery. The laboratory has 11 stations, complete with Storz telescopes and hand instruments, Anspach drills, Zeiss microscopes, Gyrus soft tissue shavers/drills and BrainLab image guided equipment.

The Department’s growth has allowed our teaching mission to significantly expand, with a number of new CME courses for practitioners and subspecialty conferences for residents. To complement the department’s annual Spoleto Voice Symposium and the Putney Lectureship, the Charleston Magnolia Conference and Charleston Swallowing Conference have been developed. Additional annual CME activities include the Charleston Sinus Surgery and Temporal Bone courses.

During the past five years, the Department’s research activities have expanded and diversified. As shown in Table 2, funding has significantly increased. The Auditory Neuroscience division has a long and successful history of NIH funding, including a Program Project Grant now in its 18th year. The 11 doctorate level professionals and seven master’s level investigators involved in this work continue to develop new initiatives. To this base of research activity, new research funding now supports investigative efforts in swallowing physiology (Bonnie Martin-Harris, Ph.D.), in allergy/immunology/sinus disease (Rod Schlosser, M.D.), in cochlear implants (Ted Meyer, M.D., Ph.D., and Jack King, Ph.D.), and in head and neck cancer biology (Terry Day, M.D., Boyd Gillespie, M.D., and Rita Young, Ph.D.). Our NIH support places us 12th nationally for departments of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery.

Hopefully, the highlights noted above convey a sense of the excitement and momentum the department is enjoying. To a large extent, our growth and accomplishments reflect an institutional-wide phenomenon. In this same time period, for example, the MUSC faculty has grown approximately 10 percent; research funding has increased nearly 50 percent (ninth fastest growth in NIH dollars among academic medical cents); and a new hospital has been constructed. All of the above translates into more efficient and innovative patient care.

Table 1
Table 2

Table II Data
 
Fiscal             Total NIH 
Year                
Funding
1999            1,828,753
2000            2,065,899
2001            1,641,759
2002            2,447,940
2003            2,491,361
2004            2,563,982
2005            2,796,054
2006            2,603,181
2007            3,511,950

* Total NIH and other research support for 2007 totaled $3,511,950

Page last updated: 07/23/08
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