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January 10, 2001
Contact: Amy DiCresce, (313) 577-1429, adicresc@med.wayne.edu
Dr. Walz named assistant dean for research at medical
school
John Crissman, MD, dean of the Wayne State
University School of Medicine, has announced the appointment of Daniel Walz,
PhD, as assistant dean for research at the medical school.
Dr. Walz says his immediate goals are to
improve the research infrastructure and to build on established programs. “Dr.
Uhde and I have an active and global approach to positioning Wayne State’s
centers of excellence. We hope to improve our current programs and build them
into thriving enterprises.”
The reorganized research department is led
by Thomas Uhde, MD, associate dean of research and graduate programs, and two
assistant deans. Dr. Kenneth Palmer has been assistant dean for graduate
programs since 1999, and Dr. Walz will lead the research component of the
office, effective January, 2000.
Dr. Walz has been a physiology faculty
member since 1973, and most recently served as Wayne State University’s vice
president for research and dean of the graduate school. Prior to that, he was
associate vice president for research and associate dean of the graduate school.
He now returns to the medical school, where he will lend his expertise in
promoting and sustaining faculty research.
His objectives for the faculty are pointed.
First, he wants WSU’s research profiles to parallel or exceed the funding
expansion at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). “In other words, if NIH
doubles its funding in cardiovascular medicine, I want to double ours,” said
Dr. Walz. “We need to keep up with expansion and we need to be very
competitive in obtaining funding.”
Second, he wants all departments to rank in
the top half of their fields, according to the NIH. “I want WSU to appear in
at least the 50th percentile of NIH rankings,” said Dr. Walz. “We
need our basic science and clinical departments to have national recognition and
to prove that they can compete with other programs throughout the country.”
Finally, Dr. Walz wants to make sure the
medical school’s research programs are on target with the university’s
strategic plan and with the needs of the community. As WSU embarks on major
initiatives such as the Research and Technology Park and the Michigan Life
Sciences Corridor, certain areas will receive more emphasis—particularly
genomics, diabetes, neuroimaging, and neurotrauma, just to name a few.
Dr. Uhde believes Dr. Walz can help make
research operations more efficient. “In this changing world of academia, there
are more demands on researchers who have complex administrative
responsibilities. There are new government protocols and standards, new rules
for investigation, cost accounting systems, and complex cost-sharing issues. All
these things are very labor intensive. Dr. Walz understands the world that
researchers operate in, and he can help them succeed,” said Dr. Uhde.
“Moreover, under Dr. Walz’s leadership we have initiated an assertive grants
writing services program that has become a model for several other institutions.
The purpose of this program is to promote young investigators in obtaining first
awards and markedly increasing the number of program project, training and
center grants at the School of Medicine,” he said.
“His experience with students,
administrators, researchers, and faculty members gives him a wealth of valuable
insight and perspective,” said Dr. John Crissman. “He has been on every side
of the research operation and understands how it functions.”
Dr. Walz is an authority on blood
coagulation physiology and has trained 14 WSU graduate students. The recipient
of numerous grants from the National Institutes of Health, he has more than 130
research publications and citations to his credit. Dr. Walz received a bachelor
of science degree in biology and chemistry from St. John Fisher College in
Rochester, N.Y. He holds a master’s degree in biochemistry from St. Louis
University and a doctorate in physiology from Wayne State.
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