a0 Page 10 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 4, 1986 - 'U'hospital gets off to a healthy start By ELLEN FIEDELHOLTZ In a time when competition for hospital patients is high, the Univer- sity's new 586 bed hospital is flourishing. After four years of planning, the University Hospital and the A. Alfred Taubman Health Care Center was of- ficially dedicated in June. The hospital cost $365 million to build and is the most expensive hospital in the state's history.. According to John Forsyth, the hospital's executive director, the hospital is operating at a level that of- ficials hadn't anticipated until the 1990s, including a 90 percent occupan- cy rate for hospital beds. "In this day and age, most hospitals are only 50 to 60 percent full," said associate hospital administrator Larry Warren, "A 90 percent oc- cupancy rate is virtually unheard of." Replaced Old Main The new hospital replaced the Old Main hospital which opened in 1925. That antiquated facility lacked such modern basics as air conditioning. "People no longer have to deal with an out-of-date antiquated facility," said Dave Fredo, the hospital's public relations coordinator. "The new hospital has a state of the art setting, fine facilities and a fine reputation. The new facility gives patients a number of unique opportunities." The new hospital was designed with meticulous attention to the needs of patients and visitors. Windows in patients' rooms, for example, have been carefully placed so that patients lying in bed can easily see out. The hospital's design also incor- porates open public spaces with high technology, such as a heliport. Because the hospital draws in patients from Michigan, Ohio, and northeastern Indiana, Warren views the hospital as more than a "state resource." "This high-tech institution provides services not available in your average community hospital," Warren said. Most hospital patients here are referred from other hospitals or physicians. Problems "As expected, though, the hospital's first few months have not been flawless. As with anything new there are a few problems," Warren said. The high occupancy rate makes it difficult to find bed-space for new patients, he said, particularly when other patients take longer to recover than expected. The staff is currently working to iron out these problems. The hospital has also faced a shor- tage in parking, which officials have partly alleviated by providing ad- ditional spaces of Fuller Field, and shuttle buses to transport staff to work. Administrators are optimistic Nonetheless, administrators are op- timistic, and the hospital plans to develop several "programs of ex- cellence" in the future, particularly in the fields of cancer geriatrics, and organ transplants. Optimism was enhanced this sum- mer when medical experts gave the University's medical center high rankings compared to other similar facilities nationwide. A survey conducted by Georgia pysician Herbert Dietrich, and published in his book "The Best of Medicine," ranked the University Hospital among 25 top hospitals that provide specialized treatment. r. A Q 1 .. ' "' 1 TAs may face English testing ,, .r Getting the bureaucratic runaround? Swamped? Behind the eight ball? -l" 0 Q We'llhelp you cut that red tape! r-/ Just dial 76-GRIPE Tired of not getting action? MSA is here for you! 76-GRIPE By MARY CHRIS JAKLEVIC The state's public universities would be required to test foreign-born teaching assistants for competency in English before allowing them to teach, under a bill expected to pass the State; Senate this fall. Sen. Joe Conroy (D-Flint) said his. bill is a response to students' com- plaints that many foreign teaching assistants do not speak English well' enough to teach classes. Conroy's bill would require all public universities in Michigan to en- sure that all classroom instructors, including professors, can effectively communicate with students. As proposed, it gives no specific stan- dard for language competency and leaves implementation of the testing completely up to each university. Conroy said foreign TAs often ham- per a student's ability to learn. "We have some indication of people who were 'A' students in high school who can't pass some of these elementary courses in college." University dependent on TAs The University has been heavily dependent on TAs since the 1960s when enrollment soared and the facultypstudent ratio suffered as a result. Last fall there were about graduate teachingassistants at the University, mostly concentrated in engineering, science, and math cour- ses. Just over one quarter of these are foreign-born. Only the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, and some engineering college departments require teaching assistants to be tested in oral communication skills by the University's English Language Institute. ELI has a four-part examination which requires potential TAs to demonstrate that they can deal with various types of classroom situations, including responding to questions from students. "We're further ahead than most universities in the country, in terms of testing," said ELI Director John Swales. University opposes bill When the bill was introduced in May, some University administrators raised objections to it. University Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost James Duderstadt speculated the bill could threaten the University's indepen- dence, provided in the state con- stitution, by- undermining the autonomy of the institution to deter- mine its own faculty." Duderstadt said the bill also neglec- ts the issue of education funding, sin- ce universities would not have to rely on foreign-TAs if they could afford to hire more professors. "It's questionable from a practical stan- dpoint . . . If (the state senators) want quality, they're going to have to pay for it," he said. Administrators also said the bill would not address what many con- sider the root of the problem - the cultural differences between foreign faculty and University un- dergraduates. College od Engineering Dean Charles Vest said most foreign teac- hing assistants are deemed qualified as instructors because they have ear- ned high scores on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), but they are sometimes not prepared to teach in American classrooms. "Many TAs get here and are sur- prised by the informality of our classes," Vest said. 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