(Redirected from Oregon Health and Science University)

The OHSU campus sits atop Marquam Hill.
'Oregon Health & Science University' ('OHSU') is a public
university in
Oregon with a main campus, including three
hospitals, in
Portland and a smaller campus in
Hillsboro. It was formed in 1974 as the 'University of Oregon Health Sciences Center', combining state
dentistry,
medicine, and
nursing programs into a single center. It was renamed 'Oregon Health Sciences University' in 1981 and took its current name in 2001, as part of a merger with the
Oregon Graduate Institute of Science and Technology (OGI) in Hillsboro. In addition, the university has several partnership programs including a joint
PharmD Pharmacy program with
Oregon State University.
The main campus, located on
Marquam Hill (commonly known as "Pill Hill") in the southwest neighborhood of
Homestead is home to the university's medical schools as well as two associated hospitals. The 'Oregon Health & Science University Hospital' is a
Level I trauma center and general hospital; 'Doernbecher Children's Hospital' is a
children's hospital which specializes in pediatric medicine and care of children with long-term illness.
A third hospital, the Portland Veterans Affairs Medical Center
is located next to the OHSU campus; this hospital is run by the
United States Department of Veterans Affairs and is outside the auspices of OHSU. A 1992 pedestrian
bridge connecting OHSU Hospital and the VA Medical Center is the longest suspended pedestrian
skybridge in North America, with a length of 660 feet (200 m).
The University also has a campus in Hillsboro, at the site of the former OGI. This campus specializes in graduate-level science and engineering education, and is located in the heart of Oregon's
Silicon Forest.
The university maintains a number of outpatient primary care facilities including the Physician's Pavilion at the Marquam Hill campus as well as throughout the
Portland metropolitan area. Since 1998, the university has controlled the
Oregon National Primate Research Center, located in
Washington County.
With the Marquam Hill campus running out of room for expansion, beginning in 2003 OHSU announced plans to expand into the
South Waterfront District, formerly known as the North Macadam District. The expansion area is along the
Willamette River in the
South Portland neighborhood to the east of Marquam Hill and south of
the city center. As existing surface streets were deemed insufficient to connect the two campuses, the new
Portland Aerial Tram was built as the primary link between them and opened
December 1,
2006. Controversy surrounded the costs of the tram
[1], which quadrupled from initial estimates and was funded largely by the city of Portland.
History
The university can trace its roots back to the 1860s when the predecessor
Willamette University School of Medicine was started in
Salem.
[2] Its primary campus was established in 1917 by the donation of 20 acres (80,000 m²) from the Oregon-Washington Railroad and Navigation Company and 88 acres (360,000 m²) from the family that owned the now-defunct ''
Oregon Journal''. The land had originally been bought sight-unseen for the purpose of building a
railroad yard. The area being on a hill, however, made this impossible.
Controversy over "sexual preference" research in sheep
Recently, the animal rights group
PETA has incited some controversy over OHSU research involving sheep.
[3] The research, which is being conducted in conjunction with
Oregon State University is designed to understand the biological mechanisms involved in sexual partner preference.
[4] These experiments are being funded through public grants through the year 2008.
References
1. Nice tram, who pays? Todd Murphy
2. OHSU: An historical chronology
3. Oregon gay sheep experiment challenged by tennis champ
4. Seattle Times: Born gay? How biology may drive orientation
External links
★
OHSU home page
★
OHSU Health System home page