Ray L. Watts
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Ray L. Watts | |
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7th President of the University of Alabama at Birmingham | |
Assumed office February 8, 2013 | |
Preceded by | Carol Garrison Richard Marchase (interim) |
Personal details | |
Born | Ray Lannom Watts December 18, 1953 Birmingham, Alabama |
Alma mater | University of Alabama Birmingham Washington University School of Medicine |
Scientific career | |
Fields | neurology |
Institutions | |
Ray Lannom Watts (born December 18, 1953)[1] is an American physician-researcher in neurology, educator and university administrator. Watts has served as the seventh president of the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) since February 2013 and is the longest-serving president in UAB history.
Education and early career, research and service
[edit]A Birmingham native and graduate of West End High School, Watts earned a bachelor's degree in biomedical and electrical engineering (with honors) from UAB in 1976. Four years later, he graduated from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis as valedictorian of his class.
Watts then completed a neurology residency, medical internship, and clinical fellowships at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, followed by a two-year medical staff fellowship at the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
In 1986, Watts joined the faculty of Emory University in Atlanta as director of a team that helped create an internationally renowned research and clinical center for Parkinson's disease and other movement disorders.[2]
In 2003, Watts returned to UAB as the John N. Whitaker Professor and Chairman of the Department of Neurology.[3] There he led the development of an interdisciplinary research program aimed at translating scientific breakthroughs into promising new therapies for neurodegenerative diseases and played a key role in the establishment of the UAB Comprehensive Neuroscience Center.[4] He also served as president of the University of Alabama Health Services Foundation from 2005 to 2010.[5] In 2010, Watts became Senior Vice President and Dean of the UAB Heersink School of Medicine, and later was named the James C. Lee Jr. Endowed Chair.[6]
In February 2013, Watts was named UAB's seventh president by unanimous vote of the University of Alabama System Board of Trustees.[7] He has also served as chair of the UAB Health System Board of Directors and chair of Southern Research Board of Directors since 2013.[8][9]
Watts has co-edited three editions of "Movement Disorders: Neurologic Principles and Practice."[10] He has authored or co-authored more than 130 peer-reviewed research articles published in journals including Annals of Neurology,[11] Cell Transplantation,[12] Experimental Neurology,[13] Human Molecular Genetics,[14] the Journal of the American Medical Association,[15] JAMA Archives of Neurology & Psychiatry,[16] Journal of Genomics,[17] Journal of Medicinal Chemistry,[18] Journal of Neuroscience,[19] Journal of Neurosurgery,[20] Movement Disorders,[21] the New England Journal of Medicine,[22] and Neurology.[23] Watts was the lead author of the paper "Randomized, blind, controlled trial of transdermal rotigotine in early Parkinson disease" published in January 2007 in the journal Neurology,[24] and the second author of the paper "Transdermal Rotigotine Double-blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial in Parkinson Disease" published in May 2007 in Archives of Neurology[25] (the first author, Jankovic, was the second author of the first published paper). The editor of Archives of Neurology, upon learning of the earlier publication, compared the two writings and deemed them to be "redundant publications...additional information [in the second publication] represents a minor contribution". The second paper cited the first paper in a late draft after questions about the methodology arose, but did not mention the similarity of the data .[26] In response, the authors of the papers stated that they strongly disagreed with the editor's conclusions, and believe the focus of the two papers are different. The authors also say that the primary author was not aware of the acceptance of the earlier paper during submission of the second paper. The authors state that the Neurology paper was accepted October 24, 2006, and the Archives paper was submitted in December 2006. The authors did admit "in retrospect, we should have notified the Archives about the complementary article in Neurology" .[27]
Watts is a member of American Neurological Association; American Academy of Neurology; Society for Neuroscience; Alpha Omega Alpha; Movement Disorders Society; International Brain Research Organization; Medical Association of State of Alabama; and the Alabama Academy of Neurology.[28]
Watts served as chair of the Birmingham Business Alliance (BBA) for an unprecedented two consecutive terms (2016 and 2017)[29] and remains a board member. He has also served and continues to serve on boards of other organizations aimed at improved education, economic development, and promotion of the arts and culture, including Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham, Prosper Birmingham, Innovation Depot, Southern Research, Alys Stephens Center for the Performing Arts (chair, corporate board), Alabama Symphony Orchestra (ASO) (2009-2017), and Doctors for the ASO Giving Society (now Physicians & Faculty for the ASO) (founding chair, 2009–2013).
UAB presidency (2013–present)
[edit]2013–2019
[edit]Upon taking office, Watts initiated the most comprehensive, campus-wide strategic planning process in UAB history. The plan comprised individual strategic plans from all of UAB's schools as well as the UAB Honors College and UAB Athletics, and advanced the UAB Campus Master Plan for facilities. Watts said of the ongoing strategic planning process in May 2014, "Established institutional priorities, as well as those of individual schools, departments and service lines, will allow us to confidently invest most heavily in the programs and people that will best advance our mission – where the most impactful achievements and benefits will be realized for the greater good."
In December 2014 UAB disbanded its football program and, as the rationale for the decision, Watts cited exorbitant operational costs and substantial investments that would be necessary to make UAB football financially sustainable. "While this will be a challenging transition for the UAB family, the financial picture made our decision very clear," Watts said. "We will not cut the current athletic budget, but in order to invest at least another $49 million to keep football over the next five years, we would have to redirect funds away from other critical areas of importance like education, research, patient care or student services." On January 15, 2015, a two-thirds majority of the UAB faculty senate voted no-confidence in the leadership of Ray Watts as president of the university.[30] The resolution stated that "decisions by President Ray Watts were exercised in a manner that demonstrates no respect for, or commitment to, shared governance" and that changes in academic operations, faculty benefits, and the disbanding of the UAB Football, Bowling, and Rifle teams were examples of this.[31] Additionally on March 23, 2015, UAB's National Alumni Society issued a statement of no confidence and demanded Watts' immediate resignation.[32] On June 1, 2015, Watts announced steps would be taken to reinstate UAB football, rifle and bowling after campus and community leaders, the City of Birmingham and private donors pledged significant funds to reestablish and sustain the three programs.[33] "The biggest single difference is we now have tangible commitments for additional support that we have never had before," Watts told reporters. "Without that additional support, we could not have maintained a balanced budget moving forward." An initiative called "Finish the Drive" began on August 18, 2015, to conduct further fundraising for UAB Athletics.[34] UAB Football returned to competition in the fall 2017 season.
As part of the UAB Campus Master Plan, UAB opened two new undergraduate-focused facilities in late 2015 and early 2016: a 714-bed freshman residence hall and the Hill Student Center. In his remarks at the grand opening celebration of the Hill Student Center in January 2016, Watts commented, "The new Hill Center is emblematic of the dramatic evolution of the UAB student experience over decades.... It will be, for years to come, a dynamic hub of educational, social and cultural activity, at the very heart of a student experience that is second to none." In late summer and fall 2017, groundbreaking ceremonies were held for a new Football Operations Complex Archived June 22, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, new School of Nursing building, and a new home for the Collat School of Business and Harbert Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship. At the groundbreaking ceremony for the latter, Watts remarked, "By housing these two entities under the same roof, this facility will be a new home for innovation on our campus, and will play a future role in the growth of UAB and the growth of innovation and technology in Birmingham."
In keeping with the institutional priorities Archived January 13, 2017, at the Wayback Machine established by the ongoing UAB Strategic Plan that Watts initiated in 2012, the university has made significant gains in education and research. In fall 2016, UAB achieved record overall enrollment of 19,535 students, with enrollment growth in every school and the Honors College. Later that fall, it was announced that UAB ranked 20th among public universities nationally in federal research funding with more than $516 in overall research expenditures, representing a $38 million increase in federally funded research from fiscal year 2013 to 2015. Internationally, UAB jumped 36 places to no. 162 overall in U.S. News & World Report's 2017 "Best Global Universities," ranking no. 68 for "citation impact".
UAB's research capacity and information technology infrastructure were greatly enhanced in fall 2016 by the installation of the most advanced supercomputer in Alabama. Soon after, UAB became the first university in the state to launch internet speeds of 100 gigabits per second, boosting available bandwidth by 10 times the previous capability and up to 10,000 times many standard home internet speeds. Watts said of these advances, "Our new capabilities will continue to attract and support top faculty, staff and students, make us more competitive to secure research funding, allow us to better care for our patients, and accelerate our world-changing discoveries."
These advanced capabilities along with the new facilities enabled UAB to further develop novel undergraduate academic programs. Watts noted in his 2016 State of the University Address (Oct. 25, 2016), "We have built capacity.... We continue to innovate around majors that we can uniquely provide because we have a world-class comprehensive university." New majors launched in 2016 and 2017 included the state's only B.A. in computer and information sciences, Genetics and Genomic Sciences and Immunology, which is the only program of its kind in the Southeast and one of a handful nationwide.
In March 2017, UAB in partnership with HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology (Huntsville, AL) launched the Alabama Genomic Health Initiative to better meet health needs across the state. The project, funded by a $2 million appropriation from the Alabama legislature to UAB, supports one of the nation's first statewide efforts to harness the power of genomic analysis to help identify those at high risk for a genetic disease, and provide a basis for continuing research into genetic contributors to health and disease. At a press conference announcing the partnership, Watts said, "This new initiative will help us begin to harness genomic capabilities by sequencing the genome of patients from every county in the state....[and it] will be truly transformative for the state of Alabama. It will also position us—UAB and HudsonAlpha—at the very vanguard of genomic science and personalized medicine not only in the United States but around the world."
UAB was ranked the top young university (50 years or younger) in the U.S. in both 2018 and 2019 (and 10th and 12th worldwide for those years respectively) by Times Higher Education. Watts attributed this further global recognition to the "dedication and hard work of our faculty, staff, students, alumni and community supporters" and further noted, "Together, we continue to make tremendous strides in education, research and every pillar of our mission.....I celebrate and share this tremendous honor with our UAB community, and I express our sincere thanks to all of those who came before us and formed the strong foundation we work tirelessly every day to honor and build upon."[35]
The Newcomen Society of Alabama (established 1937), which annually recognizes Alabama "organizations and institutions that demonstrate outstanding growth, service, innovation and achievement", named UAB its 2018 honoree. The Society had previously honored UAB in 1971, when the new university was led by its first president, Dr. Joseph Volker. On Nov. 7, 2018 at the annual Newcomen Banquet, Watts delivered the keynote address, "UAB Past, Present and Future: Fueling Innovation and Pushing Frontiers," saying in closing:
UAB and Birmingham have, over five decades, thrived on challenge. Even as resources were limited initially, there was an abundance of talent and will to fuel the tremendous progress that continues to this day. I want to thank and give credit to all of the dedicated people at UAB who carry on our complex mission daily with competence and compassion, including our exceptional leadership team who is leading us to the highest levels of achievement in our history, outpacing most of our peers. In partnership with our community, we have made remarkable strides recognized the world-over because we have made those strides together toward a shared vision.
Dr. Volker concluded his Newcomen Address as follows: 'The destinies of cities and their universities are inseparable. One cannot flourish unless the other prospers. Birmingham and UAB have made an impressive start toward these goals....God willing, we will move forward together to become a great city and a great university.'
Today in this Magic City, once a boomtown born of blast furnaces and steel, we are working another kind of "magic" with resources all the more essential in a knowledge economy: bright minds sparked by the entrepreneurial spirit and an unyielding resolve to succeed and excel.
On behalf of UAB, thank you very much for this honor.
The Newcomen event served as a prelude to UAB's 50th Anniversary year in 2019, marking fifty years since establishment as an autonomous campus of the University of Alabama System in 1969. The university hosted numerous celebratory events, activities and service projects on campus and in the community, and published a commemorative coffee table book entitled "Fifty Years of Dreams and Discoveries." Watts authored the book's introduction, "Fifty Years of Forging Ahead," in which he reflected, "I have been privileged to witness and play a role in this university's phenomenal growth from several perspectives—as a Birmingham native, a UAB undergraduate, proud alumnus, faculty member, senior administrator and now president." Alluding to Dr. Volker's oft-quoted line, "We would do Birmingham a great disservice if we dreamed too little dreams," Watts wrote, "The early and bold vision for our university and city has been realized on a scale that even Dr. Volker and his faculty could not have imagined. Today UAB dares to dream even bigger because striving for excellence in all that we do is our duty, and we will not let Birmingham, the state or our nation down."[36]
Also during the 50th Anniversary year, Watts announced a major project that had been selected, through a campuswide competitive process, as UAB's Grand Challenge, a key component of UAB's Forging the Future strategic plan. Watts announced that the goal of the community-based initiative, Live HealthSmart Alabama, was to raise the state of Alabama out of the bottom 10 nationally in key health metrics by the year 2030, and he noted, "There could be no grander or more worthy challenge than this, and we well know we are up to the task. It will require the fullest measure of dedication, innovation and collaboration with our community and state – those very strengths that have defined and propelled UAB from the start and now inspire us to push the frontiers even further in our 50th anniversary year and beyond. With our collective will and energies mobilized behind this monumental effort, we will together have an impact that will be felt for generations to come."[37]
2020–2023
[edit]On January 9, 2020, Watts joined Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin and other city officials at a press conference to announce UAB's partnership in the Birmingham Promise scholarship program. Watts said, "As we begin a new year and a new decade, UAB is pleased to join Mayor Woodfin and his entire team and the City of Birmingham in an initiative that speaks to the very heart of our mission and our longtime partnership with our community and state. UAB is honored to be the first academic partner to support the Birmingham Promise scholarship program by providing Birmingham City Schools graduates with an opportunity to attend our university with a one-to-one, full scholarship tuition match."
In March 2020, as COVID-19 began to impact the U.S., Watts and other senior administrators of UAB and UAB Health System established an Incident Command Committee holding daily virtual meetings to coordinate the institution's leadership role in combating the pandemic, which included immediately partnering with the University of Alabama System as well as local and state agencies to develop and implement a statewide response; transition on campus to a Limited Business Model and online instruction; development of a central website, UAB United, as a resource of COVID-related information for the campus and larger community; research and clinical trials of potential treatments and vaccines; development of an exposure notification app used state-wide; and ultimately the treatment of more than 7,000 COVID-positive patients, delivery of more than 272,000 vaccinations, and numerous interviews with UAB experts in national and international media. Watts commented in May 2020, "We have worked very hard to respond to the pandemic from every aspect of our organization. I'm proud of the people of UAB: frontline health care workers, researchers, support staff, faculty, and students as we adapt to a new reality. We are also hard at work planning for when this is over, so that UAB will be an even stronger and better organization to serve the people of Alabama."[38] UAB and the UA System offered in-person, hybrid and remote classes during academic year 2020–21 with masking, social distancing and other safety measures in place.
Despite the pandemic, UAB achieved in fall 2020 a fifth consecutive year of record overall enrollment (22,563) as well as record retention (86.4%). Watts commended the resiliency and adaptability of UAB students as well as faculty and staff. "Our talented, diverse and deserving students have remained resilient during a time of many unknowns and constant change....Our faculty and staff are effectively mentoring and inspiring our students, united behind collaboration, innovation, diversity and all of our shared values. We will continue to forge ahead in all areas of our mission."[39]
In December 2020, Watts officially signed the Okanagan Charter, making UAB the first internationally recognized Health Promoting University] (HPU) in the U.S.[40]
In May 2021, approximately one year after implementing the Limited Business Model, UAB began a two-phase return of employees to campus, and resumed offering only fully face-to-face or fully online classes in summer 2021. In a message entitled "Vigilance and Victory over COVID" in the spring/summer 2021 issue of UAB Magazine, Watts wrote "Together we have confronted the worst global pandemic of our lifetimes with the very best of our collective will and collaborative spirit. We have persevered through 13 months marked by hope, heartache and heroism, and we remain vigilant as the light at the end of the tunnel grows brighter by the day....When we first developed our strategic plan for 2018 through 2022, we intentionally designed a dynamic plan that would adapt to ever-changing circumstances. We could not have known just how adaptable the plan would have to be in the median year of 2020. Thanks to all of you, our ongoing planning and collaboration is bringing success in all pillars of our mission, as together we finish this fight and continue forging the future."[41]
In his 2021 State of the University Address on October 17, Watts highlighted a number of historic strides UAB had made over the past year despite the pandemic, including the fall 2021 freshman class that was the university's largest (2,415) and most diverse ever at 65 percent female, 45 percent underrepresented, and 28 percent first-generation; rankings by Forbes as the number one Best Large Employer in America (ahead of such organizations as the Mayo Clinic, NASA and Google); Continued development of novel, interdisciplinary academic programs and the Blazer Core Curriculum, and 16 graduate programs among the nation's top 25 in U.S. News & World Report, including the number one Master's in Health Administration; UAB's most successful fundraising year ever, including a transformative $95 million gift from Dr. Marnix and Mary Heersink to name the Heersink School of Medicine, the single largest philanthropic commitment in UAB history; and the opening of Protective Stadium, the new home of Blazer Football and what Watts called a "monumental shared achievement" and "one of the greatest examples of public-private partnership" he had ever seen.[42] Watts concluded, "We will not stop. We are never satisfied. We will continue to strive for excellence in everything that we do, and not even a global pandemic can deter our innovation and our drive to serve—and that's important, to serve—and to succeed. We've emerged all the stronger, one of the strongest universities in America....and it's all thanks to you, and your leadership, your willingness to go above and beyond the call of duty no matter how difficult it was, working seven days a week, 365....But we've come through this pandemic and we hope we're at the tail of this recent [omicron] surge....So I just want to say thank you to all of you and tell you how very proud I am to be in the UAB community alongside you all."[43]
Fiscal year 2021 continued what Watts called "the most successful era of research funding in UAB history," with a record $648 million in research awards (an increase of 46% since FY2016), putting UAB 17th (top 4%) among public universities in federal R&D expenditures and 11th (top 4%) in funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH).[44] Additionally, UAB Hospital had grown to become the 8th largest hospital in the U.S. (1,207 beds), passing Mount Sinai (1,139 beds) and Johns Hopkins (1,162 beds).[45]
Birmingham Business Journal named Watts 2021 CEO of the Year.[46] Watts said of the award, "I am grateful for the acknowledgment of the work we have done as an institution, and I am privileged to be supported by the outstanding leadership and teamwork that made it possible for me to be considered for this award..... UAB is successful because we have great people – leaders, faculty, staff, students, alumni, fans, donors, and civic and business leaders – who share a commitment to our mission and values."[47] When asked to name to "interesting fact about" himself that "most people don't know," Watts replied, "While people know I am a medical doctor in neurology, many are surprised to hear that I still practice medicine and see patients every week. Helping people, treating and curing them, and improving lives are something that, as a doctor, I have always found very rewarding. It is humbling to have the honor and trust of patients and make their lives better – and to guide them and show compassion in difficult times. When I became president at UAB, I hoped very much that I would be able to fulfill my duties in that role and continue to see patients. It makes me very happy to say that it has worked out well, and I have been able to do both."[46]
A December 17, 2021 column on AL.com read, "Watts delivered the goods this year for UAB athletics [with Protective Stadium], and that's great for people who like sports, but his leadership on the east side of campus has been far more valuable to the city, state, region, country and world."[48]
On January 22, 2022, UAB announced that Heersink School of Medicine researchers and surgeons had successfully tested the world's first human preclinical model for transplanting genetically modified pig kidneys into humans. Watts called this major breakthrough in xenotransplantation "a milestone in medicine...that could provide a robust, sustainable supply of lifesaving organs to patients worldwide."[49]
At the annual UAB Institutional Presentation to the University of Alabama System Board of Trustees (February 4, 2022), Watts discussed among other highlights how UAB, through its Campus Master Plan, "continues building one of the most vibrant, state-of-the-art and sustainable urban campuses in the nation". He detailed how, over the previous five years, UAB had invested with the Board's support more than $375 million in total construction, with 16 major new construction projects adding roughly 600,000 GSF of new space (about 250,000 GSF of that being new residential student space), including most recently opened McMahon Hall (May 26, 2021) and Technology Innovation Center (Sept. 15, 2021). Watts also described strategic planning with partner Southern Research and planning for a "new, world-class facility, the Center for Pandemic Resilience" that would "help Southern Research and UAB emerge as the biotech commercialization leaders in the Southeast." He also showcased the ongoing success of UAB's Harbert Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, which in FY2021 generated more than $5 million in revenue, 19 U.S. patents, and 120 Intellectual Property disclosures (and increase of 50 percent over the previous year).
On April 11, 2022, Watts and other senior UAB leadership joined Alabama Governor Kay Ivey, University of Alabama System Chancellor Finis St. John IV and System trustees, Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin and other state and elected officials, and donors Lee Styslinger III and Dr. Marnix Heersink at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Altec/Styslinger Genomic Medicine and Data Sciences Building. In his remarks, Watts noted, "This state-of-the-art facility we break ground for today will be iconic in its architecture and profound in its impact—locally, statewide, and globally—for generations to come. It is monumental in many respects. It represents leadership in the future of patient care and precision medicine—developing the most advanced, personalized care (based on unique genetic make-up) to vastly improve health throughout our state and well beyond....[It] also represents increased national and global competitiveness of both UAB and the state of Alabama—in research, innovation, commercialization, and economic development....And, finally, this facility represents the power of our public/private partnership—among UAB and the UA System, individual and corporate donors, our business community, and our city, county, and state leadership—to drive better health and prosperity for the people of Alabama, whom we proudly serve."
UAB and the city of Birmingham hosted the 2022 World Games from July 7 through July 17. UAB played a central role as a World Games Foundation Partner[50] and official medical provider, and UAB campus was home to the Athlete's Village housing athletes and coaches. On July 6, Watts sent a newsletter to the UAB community thanking them for their support and involvement. "Anticipation builds as we approach tomorrow's opening of the World Games 2022. Our residence halls have transformed into the Athletes' Village....and our Campus Recreation Center, Track & Field facilities, and PNC Field will soon be filled with athletes and fans from across the globe....I want to thank all of you across our academic and clinical enterprises who are playing a role in this historic event. Your dedication, enthusiasm, and commitment to excellence...is contributing to the success of the World Games and helping showcase UAB, Birmingham, and the State of Alabama on a global stage. We can look forward to an exciting ten days of competition and camaraderie with our guests from around the world." The Games attracted a total of 3,459 athletes from 99 nations, 375,000 spectators, and 3,000 volunteers,[51] and a local reporter described how the Games had turned Birmingham into a "melting pot". By July 12, UAB Medicine had treated more than 400 patients, including 89 athletes and 312 spectators and visitors. UAB faculty and students were involved in production of both the opening and closing ceremonies held at Protective Stadium, with UAB University Professor of Music Henry Panion III serving as the World Games artistic director.[52] Following the Games, Watts sent a second newsletter applauding "UAB's Gold Medal Performance". "The World Games was a two-week whirlwind more than two years in the making. As a native of Birmingham and president of UAB, I could not be more proud that visitors and viewers from around the world experienced the strength and beauty of our city and our great institution..... The competition was truly world-class. Equally impressive were the dedication, excellence, teamwork, sacrifice and strong sense of service from you that made it all possible....This was a big moment for our campus, our city and our state, and you delivered. On behalf of a grateful community and world – thank you."
Watts delivered his tenth State of the University Address on Thursday, Nov. 10, 2022 at the Hill Student Center Alumni Theater. “Let me just start by saying how proud I am to be able to serve alongside you at this great institution that is so mission-focused in everything we do. Our 26,000 employees and 22,000 students are committed to making the world a better place each and every day.” He went on to announce that UAB had achieved another consecutive year of record research funding, topping $700 million to reach $715 million, and continuing the most successful era of research funding in UAB's history, with 50 percent growth over five years.[53] “All of our schools are excelling” in research and scholarship, Watts said, also noting the “global competitiveness in research and innovation,” with the recently published U.S. News & World Report “Best Global Universities” ranking UAB among the top 8 percent globally and top 20 percent nationally, based on “critical criteria such as publications and citations.” Among other accomplishments in what he called “a remarkable year,” Watts highlighted:
- Fall 2022 total enrollment (21,639) that marked the university's fifth straight year of surpassing 21,500 students.[54] “You might say, ‘why is that important?’” Watts commented. “Well, if you read any of the headlines, you see that two-year and four-year college enrollments are down across the country. So our team has worked hard to make sure that we’re still providing a great education to our young people, our citizens, so they can be the leaders of tomorrow.”
- A freshman class in fall 2022 that was again UAB's most diverse ever (66 percent female; 55 percent underrepresented; 35 percent first-generation) and a record number of international students (1,476) representing 84 countries.[54] “And that is intentional,” Watts pointed out. “Because, as you know, diversity is one of our core values and to bring international diversity for our in-state students, many of whom have not left the United States, gives them an opportunity to learn from one another. Learning in the classroom is important but [so is] learning outside the classroom and learning about other people and really learning that, while we might seem different, we’re all much more alike, and learning to understand one another’s culture.”
- After discussing UAB's new Blazer Core Curriculum (scheduled for rollout in fall 2023) and recognizing UAB's 16 graduate programs ranked in the top 25 nationally by U.S. News & World Report, Watts noted, “Our people are continuing to earn national and global recognition” as well, including three new members of the National Academy of Medicine, making for seven UAB faculty currently in the academy and 17 members total in UAB history.
- Partner Southern Research “is retooling through a new strategic plan in concert with UAB to build a new modern campus,” Watts explained. Local and state leaders including Alabama Governor Kay Ivy participated in the May 16 groundbreaking for what Watts described as a “beautiful new building…[that] will be a beacon of hope as it shines at night. It’s going to double their lab space, expand their capacity, grow their talent, and have a doubling of their economic impact….. [W]e’re working with the City, the Housing Authority, Southern Research, and Corporate Realty to put together a master plan to build affordable housing, market rate housing, retail, dining, but also an urban biotech research park that will drive the economy of Birmingham and Alabama.”
- Watts described how UAB's Grand Challenge, Live HealthSmart Alabama, “continues to expand in its scope and impact….We’re making tremendous progress in striving to improve the health of all our citizens…We have gone in [to our four demonstration neighborhoods] and improved their physical environment, built environment, parks, streets, lighting, recreational activity, community gardens, and we are doing health assessments to determine what diseases they have. And we find them every day as we do these, new patients with unrecognized hypertension, diabetes and many other conditions. And now that we work with the Health System…to help run Copper Green, we bring them access to a primary care doctor. Some of these citizens in some of these neighborhoods—eighty, ninety percent—didn’t have a primary care doctor and it’s hard to take care of these diseases and they show up in our emergency room with a catastrophe. Well, we’re going to change that. This is about providing access to healthcare for all of our citizens….We’re preparing to take HealthSmart to other cities and communities across the state. The next step, we’re going to go down to Montgomery and Selma and Demopolis and take this playbook, this methodology, we’ve developed and bring it to them and challenge their hospitals, universities, city, county, corporate leadership to partner like we have.”
- UAB's efforts in 2022 were supported by record philanthropic gifts ($111 million) and the university's endowment surpassed $550 million in book value and $700 million in market value,[55] which Watts deemed “pretty remarkable for a young university that’s about fifty years old.”
- Watts concluded the address by saying, “We’re excited about what we’ve accomplished over the past year and, as you know, we’re going to set the bar even higher in the coming year.”
On November 18, 2022, Watts sent a campuswide email with accompanying video expressing Thanksgiving greetings and gratitude to the UAB community. The message read in part, "In this season of Thanksgiving, I enjoy pausing to reflect on the challenges we have overcome and give thanks for the blessings we enjoy. Across our great university and Health System that together are UAB, 2022 has been a year filled with tremendous accomplishments as we continued to make a positive difference in countless people’s lives in Birmingham, across Alabama and around the world. I am grateful for your hard work and excellence that make it possible to teach and learn, research, care for patients, and meet the varied and complex needs of our campus, as well as our local and global communities."
The year 2023 marked a decade since Watts assumed office in February 2013, making him the longest-serving president in UAB history. UAB Magazine published a special spring edition in March 2023 entitled “A Decade of Growth: President Ray L. Watts Celebrates 10 Years of UAB Achievements.” Various local and state media outlets heralded the milestone with feature stories as well, including AL.com and Birmingham Business Journal. Watts sent a mass email to all faculty, staff and students with the subject line “Gratitude for a Decade of Achievement” and held a picnic on the Campus Green to thank the campus community. Highlights from the UAB Magazine special edition included:
- Overall enrollment growth of 17 percent since 2013 (18,568 to 21,639 in fall 2022), including 196 percent growth in the UAB Honors College (888 to 2,631) and a 34 percent increase in first-generation students (who made up 34 percent of freshmen in fall 2022).
- 89 percent increase in research funding over ten years, from $379 million (FY13) to $715M (FY23), with a total $5.3 billion in awards.
- 35 percent increase in patient visits over ten years (1.29 million to 1.97 million) and UAB Hospital's ranking as the eight largest in the nation.[56]
- UAB's statewide annual economic impact of $12.1 billion, up from $4.6 billion in 2008 (163 percent increase)
Watts also celebrated the decade of shared accomplishments with community partners at off-campus events, including an April 5 keynote speech at Birmingham Rotary Club, where he thanked community, civic and business leaders for their key role in UAB's success. “We have the best relationship we’ve ever had with our city and our county and our state leaders, our leaders in Washington…We work together through public-private partnership for the greater good of the people we serve…..We continue to strive for excellence in all that we do and we have a very exciting next phase of our Strategic Plan and our Campus Master Plan. We couldn’t do it without the great support of our people and our community—you—and our leaders across the city, the state, and the country.”
On August 17, 2023, UAB held the ribbon-cutting for the first phase of a new Science and Engineering Complex. The South and East Science halls house more than 138,000 square feet of classrooms, instructional space and laboratories and state-of-the-art equipment for research in areas such as advanced photonics, advanced computation, and advanced materials, such as synthetic diamonds for high-tech applications. Watts announced, “UAB is excited to open this first phase of our Science and Engineering Complex, which will advance strategic aims in all pillars of our mission….Here students, faculty and staff — from the departments of Biology, Physics and Chemistry, and others campuswide — will collaborate more effectively than ever and accelerate innovation, economic development and the training of a 21st century workforce for the state of Alabama.”
Watts presented the annual UAB State of the University Address on November 8, 2023, highlighting such institutional accomplishments as the fall 2023 launch of the nationally distinctive Blazer Core undergraduate curriculum; the statewide expansion of Live HealthSmart Alabama from its initial “demonstration communities” around Birmingham; the finalizing of UAB’s updated strategic plan, Forging Ahead (2024-2028), which had been developed with campus-and community-wide participation; and development of the new Research Strategic Initiative: Growth with Purpose, which aims to “increase exponentially [UAB’s] impact on lives locally and globally” by reaching $1 billion in research expenditures.”
In December 2023, Dr. Marnix Heersink committed an additional $5 million to his $95 million gift that named the UAB Heersink School of Medicine in 2021, bringing the total naming gift to $100 million. Watts commented, “The initial Heersink gift has been transformational in expanding our ability to improve and save lives at home and around the world, and this generous additional investment will build on our unprecedented momentum in profound ways. The new gift will target a variety of programs for immediate investment, including strategic recruitment efforts, and it will bolster our Research Strategic Initiative – Growth with Purpose, which is establishing a road map to multiply the positive impact our research enterprise has on people and help us reach $1 billion in research expenditures.”
2024 – Present
[edit]Watts delivered the annual UAB Institutional Presentation at the UA System Board of Trustees meeting on February 2, 2024, where the Board approved UAB’s new strategic plan, Forging Ahead, with unanimous support. Upon the launch of Forging Ahead, Watts commented, “At UAB, we are prepared to meet new opportunities and challenges because we plan ahead and sustain strategic growth that has a positive impact on people’s lives. We experienced unprecedented success in recent years guided by previous strategic plans, and this plan will help us build on our momentum.”
On February 26, 2024, Watts spoke at the opening of UAB Dentistry’s first satellite clinic, UAB Dentistry Dothan, joined by UAB leadership, Dothan resident Dr. Marnix Heersink, Dothan Mayor Mark Saliba, and local and state elected officials. Watts said in his remarks, “We’re really excited that this is our first dental clinic outside of Birmingham. We want to take care of people across the state for their dental needs as well as their medical needs…..There are 40-some odd counties that don’t have enough dental care, and we are concerned about that and want to help improve that….We see about 65,000 patients annually in our dental clinics at UAB and this is going to be a great extension of that. And I believe it will be a model for other regions of the state.”
As UAB continued developing and engaging partners for Growth with Purpose, Watts led a campuswide townhall meeting on March 20, 2024 to discuss progress and next steps for the initiative. Over the course of his remarks, Watts noted, “We have charted a really progressive course and we've had tremendous input from across campus and we want that to continue….If you look across campus, you see we're fortunate to be building new buildings and renovating old buildings and that will add research space that will allow us to grow and continue to grow. Our faculty are as competitive as any faculty as far as number of dollars per investigator and everyone is working hard….We’ve got to add around the areas where we have strength….We have a lot of strength across many disciplines and really all of the institutes in the NIH…”
UAB announced on June 25, 2024, that the University of Alabama System Board of Trustees had approved an agreement with Ascension for UAB Health System Authority to assume ownership of Ascension St. Vincent’s Health System in central Alabama. Watts, who also serves as chair of the UAB Health System Board, spoke at a press conference along with Dawn Bulgarella, CEO of both UAB Health System and UAB/Ascension St. Vincent’s Alliance. Watts said, “UAB Health System is recognized among the nation’s best for innovative, world-class, people-first care, as well as among the best places to work in healthcare. As an Alabama-operated health system we love, understand and meet the needs of our local communities, and we deeply respect Ascension St. Vincent’s caregivers’ and associates’ similar community- and mission-focused commitment.”
On June 28, 2024, Watts joined former Alabama Senator Richard Shelby, Interim Chancellor of the University of Alabama System Sid Trant, and others in speaking at the groundbreaking for UAB’s Biomedical Research and Psychology Building. Construction of the $190 million, eight-story, 228,735-square-foot facility is supported by $152 million in federal funding. Watts said in his remarks, “We are deeply grateful to Sen. Richard Shelby for his legacy of leadership and advocacy for federal research funding that fuels life-changing discoveries at UAB, our sister campuses in the University of Alabama System and other research institutions nationally. “The addition of this state-of-the-art facility will help us build on our $780 million in annual research expenditures and continue the most successful era of research in UAB history. Most importantly, it will allow us to expand our research portfolio to save and improve more lives.”
Personal life
[edit]During his neurology residency at Massachusetts General Hospital, Watts met his wife Nancy Watts (née Angelo), a nurse who had also earned a competitive slot there. The couple worked together as doctor and nurse at Massachusetts General and later at Emory University and UAB, treating patients and educating families and donors about Parkinson's disease.[57][58]
The Wattses have five grown children and ten grandchildren.
Awards
[edit]- Birmingham Business Journal Power 60 Most Influential Executives, 2020-present
- Birmingham Business Journal, CEO of the Year Award, 2021[46]
- America's Top Doctors, Castle and Connolly, 2000–present[59]
- Best Doctors in America, Woodward and White, 1994–present
- Birmingham's Best Doctors, Birmingham Magazine, 2003–present
- University of Alabama Medical Alumni Association Distinguished Service Award, 2014
- UAB Distinguished Alumni Award 2007[60]
- Who's Who in Health Care, Birmingham Business Journal, 2007
- Raymond D. Adams Lecture, Harvard/Massachusetts General Hospital, March 11, 2004
- Atlanta's Best Doctors, Atlanta Magazine, 2001-2003
References
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- ^ Oliveira, SA; Scott, WK; Martin, ER; Nance, MA; Watts, RL; et al. (May 2003). "Parkin mutations and susceptibility alleles in late-onset Parkinson's disease". Ann Neurol. 53 (5): 624–9. doi:10.1002/ana.10524. PMID 12730996. S2CID 42052568.
- ^ Watts, RL; Mandir, AS; Bakay, RAE (1995). "Intrastriatal cografts of autologous adrenal medulla and sural nerve in MPTP-induced Parkinsonian macaques: Behavioral and anatomical assessment". Cell Transplantation. 4 (1): 27–38. doi:10.1016/0963-6897(95)92155-r. PMID 7728330.
- ^ Watts, RL; Subramanian, T; Freeman, A; Goetz, CG; Penn, RD; Stebbins, GT; Kordower, JH; Bakay, RAE (1997). "Effect of stereotaxic intrastriatal cografts of autologous adrenal medulla and peripheral nerve in Parkinson's disease: 2 year follow-up study". Experimental Neurology. 147 (2): 510–517. doi:10.1006/exnr.1997.6626. PMID 9344575. S2CID 29039843.
- ^ Li, YJ; Oliveira, SA; Xu, P; Martin, ER; Stenger, JE; Scherzer, CR; Hauser, MA; Scott, WK; Small, GW; Nance, MA; Watts, RL; et al. (December 2003). "Glutathione S-transferase omega-1 modifies age-at-onset of Alzheimer disease and Parkinson disease". Hum Mol Genet. 12 (24): 3259–67. doi:10.1093/hmg/ddg357. PMID 14570706. Erratum in: Hum Mol Genet. 2004 Mar 1;13(5):573
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- ^ Shoffner, JM; Brown, MD; Torroni, A; Lott, MT; Cabell, MF; Mirra, SS; Beal, MF; Yang, C-C; Gearing, M; Salvo, R; Watts, RL; Juncos, JL; Hansen, LA; Crain, BJ; Fayad, M; Reckord, CL; Wallace, DC (1993). "Mitochondrial DNA variants observed in Alzheimer disease and Parkinson disease patients". Genomics. 17 (1): 171–184. doi:10.1006/geno.1993.1299. PMID 8104867.
- ^ Xing, D; Chen, P; Keil, R; Kilts, CD; Shi, B; Camp, VM Malveaux G; Ely, T; Owens, MJ; Votaw, J; Davis, MR; Hoffman, JM; Subramanian, T; Bakay, RAE; Watts, RL; Goodman, MM (2000). "Synthesis, biodistribution and primate imaging of fluorine-18 labeled 2b-carbo-1'-fluoro-2-propoxy-3b-(4-chlorophenyl) tropanes: Ligands for the imaging of dopamine transporters by Positron Emission Tomography". Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 43 (4): 639–648. doi:10.1021/jm9902234. PMID 10691690.
- ^ Coa, X; Yasuda, T; Uthayathas, S; Watts, RL; Mouradian, MM; Mochizuki, H; Papa, SM (May 2010). "Striatal overexpression of ΔFosB reproduces involuntary movements developed after chronic levodopa treatment". J Neurosci. 30 (21): 7335–43. doi:10.1523/jneurosci.0252-10.2010. PMC 2888489. PMID 20505100.
- ^ Sung, VW; Watts, RL; Schrandt, CJ; Guthrie, S; Wang, D; Amara, AW; Guthrie, BL; Walker, HC (December 2013). "The relationship between clinical phenotype and early early staged bilateral deep brain stimulation in Parkinson's disease". Journal of Neurosurgery. 119 (6): 1530–6. doi:10.3171/2013.8.jns122025. PMC 3992872. PMID 24074493.
- ^ Langston JW, H Widner, D Brooks, S Fahn, T Freeman, C Goetz, RL Watts. "Core Assessment Program for Intracerebral Transplantations (CAPIT). Movement Disorders J 7 (No. 1):2-13, 1992
- ^ Parkinson Group, The; et al. (2004). "Levodopa and the rate of progression of Parkinson disease, the ELLDOPA study". New England Journal of Medicine. 351 (24): 2498–508. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa033447. PMID 15590952.
- ^ Pullman, S; Watts, RL; Juncos, JL; Chase, TM; Sanes, JN (1988). "Dopaminergic effects on simple and choice reaction time performance in Parkinson's disease". Neurology. 38 (2): 249–254. doi:10.1212/wnl.38.2.249. PMID 3340288. S2CID 16535241.
- ^ Watts, R. L.; Jankovic, J.; Waters, C.; Rajput, A.; Boroojerdi, B.; Rao, J. (January 2007). "Randomized, blind, controlled trial of transdermal rotigotine in early Parkinson disease". Neurology. 68 (4): 272–276. doi:10.1212/01.wnl.0000252355.79284.22. PMID 17202432. S2CID 22813933.
- ^ Jankovic, J.; Watts, R. L.; Martin, W.; Boroojerdi, B. (May 2007). "Transdermal Rotigotine: Double-blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial in Parkinson Disease". Archives of Neurology. 64 (5): 676–682. doi:10.1001/archneur.64.5.676. PMID 17502466.
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{{cite book}}
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