Loyola University Medical Center Office of the Provost Records
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Archives & Special Collections UA1988.35 Loyola University Medical Center Office of the Provost records Dates: 1965-2000, Undated (Bulk 1965-1986) Creator: Office of the Provost, Loyola University Medical Center Extent: 10 linear feet Level of description: Folder Processor & date: Allison Page, February 2019 Administration Information Restrictions: Series 3 restricted. Copyright: Consult archivist for information. Citation: Loyola University Chicago. Archives & Special Collections. Loyola University Medical Center: Office of the Provost records, 1965-2000, Undated. Box #, Folder. Provenance: Records were transferred to the University Archives in 1988 by the Office of the Provost, Loyola University Medical Center. Separations: Position applications were removed and destroyed. See Also: Office of the Vice President and Dean of Faculties – Richard A. Matré, Ph.D., Records; Stritch School of Medicine collections; School of Dentistry collections. Administrative History Clinical teaching had proven to complicate partnerships between medical schools and major teaching hospitals when the hospitals were independent from the larger university. In Loyola’s case, the relationship between Loyola’s medical school and Mercy Hospital in the late-1950s. A medical center with a major hospital under Loyola’s direct authority would provide more academic and clinical stability for the medical school than an affiliation with a separate medical entity. Being outside of Loyola’s direct control or ownership, Mercy’s physicians retained control over hospital patient admissions and hesitated to hospitalize their patients in Loyola-affiliated hospitals. Without patients, the teaching hospital and medical school both suffered academically. The most direct solution to this instability was for Loyola University to establish its own teaching hospital. In June 1959, the partnership between Mercy Hospital and Loyola University was officially ended thus beginning the project of creating a new teaching hospital of their own. After obtaining approximately 61 acres of property near Maywood that had previously belonged to the Hines Veterans Administration Hospital in 1962, the Medical Center was finally becoming a reality. In addition to the process of building the physical facilities, Loyola’s trustees had also started to plan how the Medical Center’s Loyola University Medical Center: Office of the Provost records, 1965-2000 Page 1 Archives & Special Collections administration would be organized. In 1965, the trustees studied administrative arrangements in the medical centers of other universities before ultimately deciding to fold the Medical Center into Loyola’s established academic organization. The responsibilities of the University’s Vice President and Dean of Faculties, a position then held by Father Robert Mulligan, SJ, were expanded to allow oversight of all university faculty and academic matters including those of Loyola’s medical and dental programs. The deans of the medical and dental schools would report to two direct superiors; the Vice President for the Medical Center for all areas exclusive of faculty and academic affairs and the Vice President and Dean of Faculties for all academic and faculty related matters. In 1969, Mulligan went on sabbatical and then transferred to Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio. The position of Vice President and Dean of Faculties was then held by Richard A. Matré, PhD until 1979 when University President Father Raymond C. Baumhart, SJ, created the position of Provost and Chief Administrative Officer for the Medical Center. The Office of the Provost at Loyola University’s Medical Center was established to oversee all academic and faculty affairs pertaining to its medical and dental programs. The first individual to hold this position was Richard A. Matré, PhD, who had served as Loyola’s Vice President and Dean of Faculties 1969 until 1979 when he was appointed by University President Father Raymond C. Baumhart, SJ, to be the Medical Center’s first Provost and Chief Administrative Officer. Matré held the role of Provost for the Medical Center until 1989 when he was appointed to Loyola’s Board of Trustees and succeeded by Anthony Barbato, MD as Provost for the Medical Center. In 1994, the title of the position was changed from Provost for the Medical Center to Executive Vice President for the Medical Center. The position was renamed again in the following years to Senior Vice President for Health Sciences. In 2006, Barbato stepped down as Vice President for Health Sciences and the position was filled by Paul K. Whelton, MB, MD, MSc, who held the position until 2011. In 2011, Loyola’s medical campus was renamed the Health Sciences Campus following the consolidation of Loyola University Health System with Trinity Health. That same year, Richard L. Gamelli, MD, FACS, was appointed to the newly renamed position of Senior Vice President and Provost for the Health Sciences Division. Following Gamelli’s retirement in the fall of 2014, Linda Brubaker, MD, MS was appointed Interim Provost for the Health Sciences Division by Loyola’s President and CEO, Michael J. Garanzini, SJ. In 2015, Margaret Faut Callahan assumed the role of Provost for the Health Sciences Division and continues there to this day. The Health Sciences Division is the branch of Loyola University dedicated to education and research in health care and includes the Marcella Niehoff School of Nursing, the Stritch School of Medicine, and the biomedical programs of The Graduate School. Also incorporated in the Health Sciences Division are several research institutes such as the Burn and Shock Trauma Research Institute, Cardiovascular Research Institute, Infectious Disease and Immunology Research Institute, Oncology Research Institute, Institute for Transformative Interprofessional Education, and the Neiswanger Loyola University Medical Center: Office of the Provost records, 1965-2000 Page 2 Archives & Special Collections Institute for Bioethics. The Provost for the Health Sciences Division serves as the division’s representative answering directly to the University President on behalf of the Health Sciences Division. Scope and Content The Loyola University Medical Center: Office of the Provost records consist of 10 linear feet and spans the years 1965-2000. The collection consists of correspondence, meeting minutes, annual reports, contracts and agreements, progress reports, budgets, and procedural guidelines. Series are arranged alphabetically. Series Series 1: Loyola University Chicago, 1969-2000, Box 1 This series contains documents pertaining to Loyola University Chicago including contracts and agreements, correspondence, enrollment statistics, meeting minutes, internal audits, and reports. This series is arranged alphabetically. Series 2: Loyola University Medical Center, 1965-1986, Undated. Box 2-19 This series contains documents pertaining to Loyola University Medical Center including correspondence, financial records, reports, institutional reviews, projects, development, and administrative materials. This series is arranged alphabetically and contains sixteen subseries. 2.1: Accreditation, 1968-1986, Undated Contains correspondence, hospital master plans, meeting agenda materials, institutional reviews, newsletters, accreditation manual, committee ballots, and procedural guidelines pertaining to the accreditation of the hospital and professional education programs. Materials include Hospital Master Plans, Federal Registers (Department of Health, Education, and Welfare), IRB: A Review of Human Subjects Research journals, IRB meeting minutes, Accreditation Manual for Hospitals, Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals reviews, and institutional self-study and site visit records. 2.2: Administration, 1976-1984, Undated Contains correspondence, filing guides, newspaper articles, handwritten notes, and documents pertaining to computerized medical data systems, management services, and administrative organization. Materials include annual reports, software license agreement, and progress reports. Loyola University Medical Center: Office of the Provost records, 1965-2000 Page 3 Archives & Special Collections 2.3: Affiliations, 1966-1985, Undated Contains correspondence, proposals, newspaper articles, documents pertaining to event planning, meeting materials, memorandums, handwritten notes, and brochures pertaining to the professional affiliations and proposed affiliations of the Loyola University Medical Center. Materials include annual reports, progress reports, a Gourman Report, a Hastings Center Readings and Bibliography, and a proposed lawsuit. 2.4: Building Project, 1979-1986, Undated Contains correspondence, handwritten notes, articles, presentation supplements, reports, meeting minutes and agendas, financial records, budgets, newspaper (Loyola Phoenix), employee newsletters, and reports pertaining to the Loyola University Medical Center Expansion project. Materials include certificate of need application and review, project budgets, and groundbreaking ceremony materials. 2.5: Committees, 1977-1986, Undated Contains correspondence, meeting minutes, agendas, rosters, and reports. Materials include Space Remodeling Project: Space Allocation Summary and Functional Space Profiles (1980), Quality Assurance Reports, and Monthly Infection Reports. 2.6: Correspondence, 1971-1985, Undated Contains interdepartmental correspondence, administrative correspondence, general personnel correspondence, and handwritten notes. 2.7: Development, 1975-1983, Undated