University of Kentucky

Eli Capilouto


Each day, thousands of faculty, staff and students work in ways, largely quiet and unnoticed, that profoundly honor the idea we call the Kentucky Promise – the notion that this institution for nearly 150 years has been the state’s beacon of hope through education, service and research.

Recently, there have been two remarkable stories that underscore and affirm the work we do here that not only changes a state, but impacts the larger world.

Sid Vahal

In December 2010, Sid Vahal, of Georgia, returned from his honeymoon in Mexico with his wife, Vani. Both fighting symptoms similar to a sore throat and bronchitis, each expected to recover with bed rest and over-the-counter medication. Vani did, Sid did not.

Between December and May 2011, Sid’s condition grew progressively worse until he experienced trouble breathing and was admitted to Emory University Hospital’s Intensive Care Unit in June. As his lungs entered a state of further disrepair, he was put into a drug-induced coma and a ventilator kept him alive.

When his body began shutting down, physicians at Emory had to act fast. They requested an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation device (ECMO) from Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Egleston. The machine would do the work of his lungs and heart, which would give his own organs an opportunity to rest and recover.

But they never would.

It was clear that the artificial lung device would buy Sid time, but his only chance to survive would be a double lung transplant.

His 15-person team of physicians began contacting hospitals around the country – Denver, St. Louis, Cleveland – after four weeks, Sid had been turned down by 10 hospitals. The doctor’s contacted the creator of the ECMO who recommended UK HealthCare physician and transplant expert, Dr. Charles Hoopes. After listening to Sid’s history from the medical team in Atlanta, he flew down to examine Sid personally.

A few days later, Sid was flown to Lexington and began a physical therapy regiment that would build his strength and prepare him for the grueling double lung transplant. Sid was placed at the top of the lung transplant list, and, in August 2011, he underwent a successful double lung transplant at UK HealthCare. He spent 55 days on the ECMO – among the longest continuous uses of the device.

Following the transplant surgery, Sid has since learned to breathe, sit up, walk, swallow, and feed himself once again. He is back at work. In October 2011, his life returned to relative normalcy, though he will be required to take anti-rejection medication the rest of his life – A small price to pay.

Zack Poe

Earlier this month, I joined Dr. Michael Karpf and surgeons at UK Chandler Hospital in introducing Zack Poe, a 20-year-old Maysville KY man who is the first recipient in Kentucky of an artificial heart with a portable driver.

The significance of such a development is that it allows Zack and others like him to achieve some level of mobility and some degree of normalcy, including returning home, while waiting for a transplant. This mechanical device could serve as a critical bridge for patients whose conditions deteriorate to the point that they can no longer wait for a transplant.

Significantly, UK is one of fewer than 30 medical centers in the country and the only one in Kentucky certified to perform this procedure with the SynCardia Total Artificial Heart. 

Zack had his heart removed and replaced with the artificial heart on February 10; and now he is going home. 

These innovations and groundbreaking developments are part of why we are here – they underscore our unending commitment to fulfilling our promise to Kentucky and uplifting the lives of others. It’s another reason I am proud stand with you as part of the UK family that continues to educate, innovate, and serve.

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Wishing "Swamy" the Best Login to comment

Tuesday, March 27 2012 12:04:43 PM

Colleagues,

Monday evening, Provost Kumble Subbaswamy was offered the position of Chancellor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. He has accepted this position, which is the leader of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts’ flagship, land-grant institution of higher learning.

It is not surprising that an exemplary university such as UMass Amherst would want someone of Swamy’s caliber to be at the helm. He is, quite simply, an outstanding scholar and administrator. We have been fortunate to have him as part of our community for so much of his career.

Swamy formally begins his work at UMass Amherst July 1. He is committed to a smooth transition between now and then. To that end, I will be conferring with the Deans and academic leaders across the campus about this transition period and how best to move forward.

As Provost since 2006, Swamy has been at the forefront of tackling many of UK’s most significant challenges and helping us to some of our most profound successes. Swamy spearheaded our War on Attrition, which helped us improve retention rates from 77 percent to nearly 82 percent in just a few years. He worked with our faculty to revise our undergraduate general studies program, which has resulted in a new core curriculum – UK Core: a progressive, interdisciplinary approach that puts UK at the forefront of undergraduate education in this country. And he has worked tirelessly and with great passion to ensure that we continue to grow as a campus that is inclusive, diverse and with an increasing international presence, all of which enriches the vibrancy and intellectual vitality of this institution.

As a faculty member, department chair and administrator, Swamy and his family have been associated with UK in one important way or another for some 30 years.

I know I can speak for him in saying that UK will always be a home for him.

I know, too, that we will always consider him one of ours as well.

I hope you will join me in wishing him all the best as he and his family turn the page on this next chapter in their lives. We know they will be successful as Swamy focuses his considerable talents and passions at another outstanding institution of higher learning.

In the next several weeks, once Swamy and I have had a chance to talk in more detail, we’ll announce an appropriate way for the university community to wish him well.

Thank you,

Eli

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Legislative Update Login to comment

Tuesday, March 27 2012 12:03:27 PM

Dear colleagues and students,

The state Senate late Thursday afternoon adopted its version of the two-year budget for the Commonwealth.

In terms of the impact on UK and all of higher education, the budgets adopted by both the House and the Senate are very similar:

  • $175 million in authorization to move forward with our ambitious plans to construct new residence halls throughout the campus;
  • Reduction to our operating budget of 6.4 percent for the coming year – or nearly $20 million – starting July 1; and
  • No authorization to borrow $200 million and repay with revenues we generate for new construction, focused on our campus core.

The Senate budget also stripped out a $25 million pool of funds, to be shared by the state’s universities, for maintenance and repair of infrastructure.

Because there are differences in the House and Senate versions on issues affecting other programs and services apart from postsecondary education, starting this morning a conference committee – composed of key House and Senate members – will likely be formed to reconcile the differences in the two budgets and craft a compromise that both chambers can support. It is hoped that a final budget will be crafted over the next several days.

The conference committee process provides still further opportunities for us to continue to press our case with policy-makers about the importance of operating dollars and authorization to spend money we generate on critical infrastructure projects that will enhance the living and learning environment of our campus. We are there every day making that case.

Of course, we understand the still fragile economic recovery that is impacting our Commonwealth and nation. But we also strongly believe that reductions in spending should be balanced with strategic investments in our future and allowing us the ability to move forward with capital projects we can finance on our own.

Nothing is more critical to that future, in my judgment, than this university – an institution educating Kentucky’s brightest students and undertaking research and service that can transform our state and world.

I will keep you updated as this process continues to unfold over the next several days. Thanks, as always, for your support and commitment to UK.

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This week, as I reached Sarah Fannin by phone, she was, as always, busy.

She was serving.

Sarah and her colleagues were setting up a temporary, makeshift office for UK’s Morgan County Extension Service -- in her home in West Liberty.

Days earlier, the Morgan County Extension office in West Liberty had been leveled. Last Friday’s horrific storms carved a path of destruction and despair throughout several communities in Kentucky. West Liberty was among the hardest hit.

More than 20 people have died in Kentucky. Homes and businesses have been destroyed. President Obama has declared Morgan County and several communities a Federal Disaster Area. Communities face the long and arduous task of literally starting over.

Sarah Fannin and the team of extension agents in Morgan and surrounding counties are helping lead the way back.

Trailers are hard – if not impossible -- to come by right now, Sarah told me, and there are literally no utility hookups. It is, she said, a bit of “organized chaos.”

“My house is a little bit of a staging area,” with people dropping off supplies, animal feed or whatever the needs are in the community, she said. “Whatever needs to happen … it doesn’t matter. We are a community. Extension is a community. There’s not much difference between opening up (an office in my home) and opening up an office (somewhere else).

That’s how we operate in extension.”

As we talked, Sarah was receiving the office’s first donation of hay that they will use to help families keep their livestock fed. She and her colleagues are working on a number of vital projects in the aftermath of the storm, from gathering feed and supply for livestock and other animals, to barbed wire for temporary fencing, supplies for schoolchildren as well as work they are involved with to re-build a school and fulfill a number of needs for families throughout the area.

We couldn’t talk long. The cell phone coverage was spotty.

And Sarah had work to do. There are people to serve. And a community must be rebuilt.

As one lawmaker from the area said this week in Frankfort, West Liberty is completely gone, the destruction almost incomprehensible.

But amid the rubble of ruin, embers of hope can be lit. Ultimately, they can shine a light that leads us forward.

Sarah Fannin and her co-workers in UK’s Morgan County Extension Office are a beacon of hope amid the darkened depths of despair that have engulfed so many of our fellow Kentuckians this past week.

Their work to help rebuild communities and lives in a town some two hours away from here in the foothills of Appalachia reminds me of what one of our Trustees, Dr. C.B. Akins, calls an action that is “profoundly simple, yet simply profound.”

I am deeply heartened by such work and service. But I am not surprised.

In a sense, I knew Sarah Fannin before I ever spoke with her.

Several months ago, I was moved by a national story in The New York Times that recounted the efforts of Sarah and her co-workers in UK’s Morgan County Extension Office. They are working with people throughout Eastern Kentucky, teaching them how create gardens of their own.

The idea is simple, but profound:  growing vegetables and food that, in many cases, can significantly lower family food costs and dramatically improve health.

One moment, reading a story over the breakfast table, crystallized a sense growing in me my first few months at UK as I traveled across the Commonwealth and met with so many of you on campus.

In cities and towns, among hardscrabble hills and hollers, in community health centers and high-tech operating rooms, in classrooms and on playing fields, we are UK.

We embody today’s manifestation of the Kentucky Promise – the covenant forged nearly 150 years ago in the dark aftermath of Civil War. It’s the idea that this institution through education, research and service will light the way forward for our state.

So many of you light that path every day – in ways that fill up newspapers and create national headlines, but also in small, quiet actions that, nevertheless, transform and save lives.

In the last few weeks alone, I’ve talked with transplant doctors who placed a life-saving mechanical heart in a 20-year-old from Maysville.

I saw more than 700 students raise nearly $850,000 to erase children’s cancer.

I read about a UK medical student, who started a suicide prevention program.

I visited with design professors, who are  working directly with industry in Southeast Kentucky to help save jobs in the state’s houseboat industry by building innovative, energy-efficient manufactured housing.

And I talked with Sarah Fannin.

“We’ll worry about our four walls a little later,” she said. “Right now, we just want to help folks.”

We didn’t talk long. After all, Sarah and her colleagues had to go back to work.

Thanks for all you do to honor the Kentucky Promise for a new generation looking for answers to light the way forward.

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Helping Kentucky's Storm Victims Login to comment

Wednesday, March 07 2012 02:24:09 PM

This past Friday, much of our Commonwealth was devastated by severe weather that passed through the region. While our Lexington campus was spared, are hearts go out our students, faculty, staff, alumni and friends who are impacted by the storm and to those in places that were not as fortunate. The Big Blue Nation reaches far beyond our 700 acres - from Covington to Harlan, from Pikeville to Paducah - and our campus community is working together to provide assistance to the tornado victims.

Click here to read about UK's efforts to help those impacted by the storms. Please check this link often; it will be updated as more events and efforts are planned. To add your storm relief effort to the list, please contact UK Public Relations at http://uknow.uky.edu/suggest.

This unified effort truly embodies UK's "see blue." spirit

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