RESEARCH MONEYLottery paying off for science in
S.C.With appointment at MUSC, program
has funded the hiring of 11 academic starsBy JAMES T. HAMMONDjhammond@thestate.com
The appointment of Dr. Richard Swaja to the Endowed Chair in
Regenerative Medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina
raises to 11 the number of scientists hired at the state’s three
research universities under a lottery-funded program to attract
academic stars.
Swaja’s research goal is to learn how to make human cells
reorganize themselves to create new organs. It is cutting-edge
research that might take years to achieve success but holds the
promise of both improving human life and creating a new source of
jobs in the state.
“The promise of Swaja’s work extends far beyond South Carolina.
It truly has international implications,” MUSC president Ray
Greenberg said.
So far, the S.C. Research Centers of Economic Excellence Review
Board has approved 31 proposals of $2 million to $6 million
apiece.
The board has approved projects totaling $125 million from
lottery funds. With the required match, that means $250 million of
new scientific research.
Since the program started, the General Assembly has earmarked $30
million per year for the program. The funds are used to create
endowments, the income from which will support the research
activities.
So far, the research chairs are in these fields:
• MUSC — neuroscience,
regenerative medicine, pharmacology, clinical effectiveness and
microscopy
• USC — nanotechnology
• Clemson — automotive
engineering, auto design and electronic systems integration
In creating the program, the General Assembly justified the
spending on the grounds that future high-paying jobs will be built
around scientific breakthroughs in fields such as health sciences,
transportation and alternative fuels.
Swaja’s appointment this year is under an endowed chair proposal
approved in 2002-03. Swaja also will serve as director of the S.C.
Bioengineering Alliance, a joint venture of MUSC, USC and
Clemson.
Swaja is working to attract other top scientific talent to South
Carolina. The group of scientists will work together to drive
research discoveries that have strong commercial potential.
The four-year gap between approval of the endowed chair and the
hiring of a researcher to fill it illustrates the state’s long-term
commitment to the highest-level research at the three campuses.
Harris Pastides, USC’s vice president for research, said he
expects that USC will announce additional appointments for its
endowed chair proposals soon. He said the timeline for Swaja’s
appointment “demonstrates the added complexity in getting
interuniversity centers rolling.”
“While the long-term payoff of developing statewide (research
centers) cannot be overestimated, it takes extra time, money and
effort to demonstrate to the chair candidates that the collaboration
is real and sustainable,” Pastides said.
“I believe that South Carolina’s climate is ripe for a statewide
bioengineering program,” Swaja said. “Fortunately, we are not
starting at zero. We have good facilities and good people in place,
and we have already seen substantial research advancements
here.”
Reach Hammond at (803)
771-8474. |