Posted
07/12/2007
Nationally recognized
researcher to lead
Health Services South Carolina
 Health Sciences South Carolina, a collaborative that links the
state's research universities and largest health systems to advance the
state's economy and improve public health through research, has selected
Dr. Jay Moskowitz to be its first president.
Moskowitz, an acknowledged leader of American biomedical research
with more than 35 years in academic medicine and research, was chosen
after a yearlong search for an individual with the experience necessary
to propel the statewide research collaborative, the only one of its kind
in the country, to national prominence. He officially begins his new
role Sept. 24.
Michael Riordan, HSSC chairman and CEO and president of the
Greenville Hospital System University Medical Center, said Moskowitz is
the perfect person to build upon the vision of HSSC and put in place the
strategies and infrastructure necessary for continued success.
"Since its inception in April 2004, Health Sciences South Carolina
has aspired to achieve great things on behalf of the people of South
Carolina," he said. "We have been fortunate to have the support of the
General Assembly, The Duke Endowment and many people within our own
organizations and communities. It is an honor to have an individual of
Dr. Moskowitz's experience, talent and national reputation join HSSC as
our first president. We have accomplished many great things in a short
time, and with Dr. Moskowitz's leadership and results-oriented attitude,
rest assured more great things will be accomplished."
Moskowitz brings an extensive and impressive resume to South
Carolina. He began his career at the National Institutes of Health
(NIH), rising to the position of principal deputy director and deputy
director for Science Policy and Technology Transfer, Office of the
Director.
In 1989, he was selected as the founding director of the National
Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders. In 1995, he was
recruited by Wake Forest University School of Medicine, where he served
as senior associate dean for Science and Technology, playing an
instrumental role in the enhancement of their research mission and the
development of Wake Forest's Downtown Research Park.
Currently, he is associate vice president for Health Sciences
Research, Pennsylvania State University (PSU); vice dean for Research
and Graduate Studies, Penn State College of Medicine; and chief
scientific officer, Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center.
University of South Carolina President Andrew Sorensen, HSSC vice
chair, said Moskowitz will be a tremendous resource for HSSC on many
levels.
"Throughout his career in academic research and at the National
Institutes of Health, Dr. Moskowitz has demonstrated a keen ability not
only to identify research with economic potential but also to bring
together stakeholders to support, participate in and help take those
results out of the labs into the real world," he said. "We look forward
to his leadership of Health Sciences South Carolina (HSSC) and to
working with him to bring HSSC's collaborative research to fruition so
it will have a lasting impact on the health and wellness of our
citizens."
Moskowitz will hold a tenured faculty appointment with the
university's Arnold School of Public Health. He also will have faculty
appointments with Clemson University and the Medical University of South
Carolina. His primary office will be in Columbia.
Moskowitz attributes the vision of HSSC's board, the high quality of
South Carolina's universities and health systems and the commitment of
the General Assembly as factors in his accepting the position with HSSC.
"I am thoroughly impressed with the leadership across these entities
and what HSSC has accomplished to date," he said. "This is a critical
moment in the state's history in the translation of health research to
healthcare and economic growth. Both talent and passion exists within
all of the stakeholders. Everything is aligned for success. I am looking
forward to being part of this creative health initiative."
National response to HSSC's appointment of Dr. Moskowitz has been
overwhelmingly positive. Dr. Darrell G. Kirch, president of the
Association of American Medical Colleges and a colleague of Moskowitz's
at NIH and Penn State, said, "Having worked with Dr. Moskowitz for more
than 20 years, I have seen him become one of the acknowledged leaders in
American biomedical research. His exceptional vision and limitless
energy is the perfect match for the innovative aspirations of Health
Sciences South Carolina. The state of South Carolina is creating a new
model of research collaboration, and Dr. Moskowitz is the perfect
individual to shape that model."
Dr. Bernadine Healy, health editor for US News & World Report, said,
"Dr. Moskowitz was the deputy director while I was director of the
National Institutes of Health. He is terrific at every level: a great
leader, a man of strategic vision and high integrity. With his
experience at the NIH and in academic medicine, he is the perfect person
to lead the effort in South Carolina."
About Health Sciences South Carolina
Established in April 2004, Health Sciences South Carolina (HSSC) is a
statewide public-private collaborative of universities and health
systems possessing the shared vision of using health-sciences research
to improve the health and economic wellbeing of South Carolina. HSSC
includes Clemson University, the Medical University of South Carolina,
the University of South Carolina, Greenville Hospital System University
Medical Center, Palmetto Health and Spartanburg Regional Healthcare
System.
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