Page 2-The Michigan Daily- Thursday, October 8, 1992 Study finds U-M success rate for transplants about average by Jeff Olson Daily Science Writer The U-M Medical Center's transplant success rate is slightly higher for heart transplants and slightly lower for liver transplants compared to the national average, a recent government study found. But Robert Merion, chief of the U-M division of transplantation, said the study results are flawed and do not accurately gauge differences be- tween the U-M and national averages. "Statistically, we have not done any worse or better than expected," Merion said. "Furthermore, the study only takes the grossest parameters - like age and numbers of past transplants - into consideration. This was a very crude study." The study, performed by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, compared 29,000 trans- plants done at 252 hospitals nation- wide between Oct. 1, 1987 and Dec. 31, 1989. The report defined transplant success as a survival length of more than 1 year after the surgery was performed. The survival rate for U-M-per- formed liver transplants was 72.2 percent compared to a 76.4 percent national average. Heart recipients, who live longer than liver recipients on the average, survived at an 82.4 percent rate at U-M compared to an 81.9 percent national rate. Merion pointed out that the U-M accepts a number of high risk pa- tients that are turned down at other centers. "We accept patients in the ex- tremes of life - newborns and the aged - with multiple disease states. We even have patients who receive a liver and kidney transplant at the same time," Merion said. Merion said improving the cen- ter's transplant success rate is an important issue, but added that it is prioritized lower than saving lives. "Sure, we could bump our sur- vival rates up by 10 percent simply by turning down certain high risk patients, like tiny babies," Merion said. "But we're not in this to improve our figures." Merion explained that two factors could help increase transplant survival rates everywhere: Increased public awareness of recipient needs to expand the donor pool, and; Additional research to develop better ways to fool the recipient's immune system into not rejecting the transplanted tissue. The U-M has been a leader in transplantation for the past 28 years, he said. This commitment has been demonstrated by a number of achievements within the field, in- cluding the first Michigan heart transplant and the fact that U-M is the oldest and largest kidney transplant center in the world. "Our superiority lies in our team approach to transplantation," Merion said. "We have at least one person in every department of the hospital - pediatrics, pathology, etc. - dedicated to the transplant patient." SCORES Continued from page 1 was also noticeably higher than the 20.6 national norm, which has remained unchanged for the last three years. The U-M scores also faired well against the other Big Ten schools, ranking second behind Northwestern University in the most recently available statistics for both tests. Michigan State University's scores ranked seventh in the Big Ten. The U-M's scores held up against peer institutions as well. The university's scores were higher than those at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the University of Texas at Austin. Test scores do make an impact on admissions deci- sions, but other factors are taken into consideration as well. "There is a combination of qualities we look for," said Ellie Hendershot, assistant director of undergrad- uate admissions. "We use the test scores in conjunc- tion with the high school record. You need grades in the right courses and a high test score." "We are being quite selective, at least the last two years," Hendershot said. ACT scores have been going down ever since the test was changed three years ago. The ACT was en- hanced, changing the natural science portion to science i Ten test scores Here is how the most recent available ACT and SAT composite scores for incoming first- year students compare at the Big Ten campuses. Purdue is not included because it " does not release test scores. School - Campus 1. Northwestern 2. Michigan - Ann Arbor 3. Illinois 4. Penn St. - Univ. Park 5. Wisconsin - Madison 6. Iowa 7. Michigan State 8. Indiana 9. Minnesota - Twin Cities 10. Ohio State ACT 30 27.2 27 * 25.3 24.5 23.7 24.2 23.5 22.5 SAT 1300 1174 1150 1115 1099 1051 ** 1003 1039 987 * The Penn St. U. system has 18 campuses. Univ. Park at State College is the largest. The system converts ACT scores into SAT scores. ** Michigan State recieves too few SAT scores to compute meaningful statistics. Source: Daily Staff Reports reasoning and the social science to reading comprehension. I OPEN 9AM TO MIDNIGHT EVERYDAYI - MAIL ORDER: 1-800-648-4844 (9AM-9PM E.S.T.) CODE Continued from page 1 adequately. "I think they've done a good job. Sending it to everyone at the begin- ning of the year was good," LSA se- nior Doug Finkbeiner said. "They obviously can't send every draft to every person and anyone who wants to have an impact on it has had the chance." But other students say they know nothing about the policy. "I might have gotten something in the mail but I receive so many things in the mail, it doesn't stick in my mind right now," said Michael Henderson, a first-year dental student. Other students admitted they were apathetic toward the policy and did not know 15 drafts of the docu- ment had been written. Most guessed there had been three policy revisions. "I don't think most students care because they don't know about it," Van Houweling said. "I think the two go hand in hand. If you know about it you tend to care because there are so many flaws in it and it will affect student lives so signifi- cantly that everyone should know about it." But most students said they do not believe the policy will aff, .. them. "On paper it governs all of the university but its impact on daily life is non-existent for us," said Bill Chung, a third-year graduate student. Jeff Keyes, a senior in the Art School, agreed. "I'm not really that concerned with it. It's doubtful that it would affect me. I live off campus and just come in to attend classes so the policy doesn't really have an ef- fect on me." "I don't think I would ever come in contact with it because I don't in- tend to do anything the policy addresses," Finkbeiner said. Some students said they would be interested in reading the final draft, but others said they do not care if they ever see the document. "I probably won't have to deal with it but I might read it, depending on how busy I was," said first-year grad student Brian Hammer. "If it was condensed I'd probably read it, but if it's 20 pages long or something, I probably wouldn't," Hartl said. For further publicity, the admin- istration plans to run advertisements this week in the Daily and the Record about a third open meeting Monday to discuss the new draft. The past two public forums have yielded an attendance of about 30 students, Mueller said. "We've gone to every length we can to get it in the hands of stu- dents," Mueller said. "We don't know how else to get to the students." But some students disagreed about the administration's effective- ness in distributing the code. "I wouldn't say it's been poor because they did send us something but I'd say it's been fair," Henderson said. "They could do better." 0 ASSAULT Continued from page 1 transfer the case to circuit court for Ford to stand trial. All assaults are alleged to have occurred between Feb. 26 and Oct. 10, 1991. Charges state that Ford knew the sexual assault survivors were helpless during the assaults. "Due to the consumption of alco- hol, all of the victims have said they were too overcome to defend them- selves," Martin told the Lansing State Journal. All four survivors plan to testify against Ford, said Capt. Richard Huntley of the East Lansing Police Department. The first two came forward to East Lansing police in August. A police investigation revealed two more, who had just returned to campus as classes resumed in September. Matt Cheney, DU president dur- ing the alleged sexual assaults, said, "We had a meeting and decided this was not a matter we wished to handle ourselves." Andre Modigliani, an associate professor of sociology at the U-M, said incidents such as this are rarely reported. "(Sexual assault survivors) do not want this type of information to come out," he said. "It is very common for the victim to be blamed for the incident ... The implication is homosexuality," he added. -Jeff Parrott, a reporter for the Michigan State News, and Daily Crime Reporter Erin Einhorn con- tributed to this article. I I ANN ARBOR South University Galleria 1214 South University Avenue, Upstairs (313)741-9600 BUSH Continued from page 1 adviser to the president's campaign. "Bush's style is temperate, it is careful and it is based on experience. Bill Clinton's style is flashy, it is slick and it is based on the kind of person he is," Lake said. "It's clearly an opportunity for us to kick out of the stall we've been stuck in and overtake him," Lake said. Bush's campaign will run tough ads at a furious pace throughout the debates and until the end of the race. They'll be poised to seize on any Clinton miscues in the debates and turn them into television spots, Lake said. Charlie Black, another senior ad- viser, said Bush's campaign has used only about 15 percent of its $30 mil- lion-plus advertising budget. "The most important thing is, people do not know a lot about Bill Clinton. Hopefully the debates and the cam- paigning and the advertising will cause people to focus on the differ- ences in their economic plans." Analysts say the debates are a long shot for Bush to recover. "There's nothing really left to happen except surprises in the de- bates to change things around," said George Washington University polit- ical scientist Christopher Deering. However, he said, "They'll probably change nothing because Clinton will be well prepared when all is said and done." If You Have ALL THE RIGHT STUFF And You're Looking For A Company That ENCOURAGES YOU TO EXCEL You've Found It!!! The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall/winter terms, starting in September via U.S. mail are $155. Fall term only is $85. Winter term (January through April) is $90. 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GRAPHICS STAFF: David Acton, Jonathan Berndt, Johnny Su E-SYST E Sl OPINION Yael Citro, Geoffrey Earle, Amitava Mazumdar, Editors Our recruiters will be on campus October 15 & October 16, 1992. Information Session: October 15, 6PM-8PM int the EE/CS Building, Room 1005. Interviews: October 16,1992. We're recruiting for the following disciplines: " Aeronautical Engineering " Mechanical Engineering " Civil Engineering At E-Systems, we're always in search of the well-rounded student - someone with ALL THE RIGHT STUFE If you would like to learn more about the E-Systems team, and what we have to offer in the way of a ( " - -. -1- -1 ----- --' -. . . .. _ _ .... ..,,..- - A - - 11,_+~ +L ^ ,-' n -m -A, M d L . STAFF:Enk Barrmac Jonathan Chait (Associate Editor), Rich Choi, David Leitner, Katherine Metres. Dave Rowe, David Shepardson (Editonial Assistant), Jordan Stancil, Brian Vikstrom. 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