University and Milton Keynes Hospital launch new £8.5m Academic Centre

20 February 2018

The opening of the new Medical SchoolHRH The Duke of Kent officially has officially opened a £8.5m Milton Keynes University Hospital Academic Centre which cements a partnership between the University and the hospital.

The University was honoured to have His Highness Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Bin Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, a Crown Prince of the United Arab Emirates, attending the ceremony. His mother, Her Highness Sheikha Sheikha bint Saif Al Nahyan, was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University for the work she had done in relation to thalassaemia, a disorder prominent in the Gulf. She is president of the Emirates Thalassaemia Society and Chair of the World Health Organization regional collaborating office for thalassaemia in Abu Dhabi.

The new academic centre is providing an outstanding resource for medical education and training for students, doctors, nurses and health professionals. Facilities in the pioneering building include a simulated operating theatre and video link showing live procedures taking place in the hospital’s operating theatres, working replicas of clinical wards and a 200-seat lecture with capacity to stream lectures throughout the building. There is also a “hanging auditorium” – a lecture theatre that juts out on all sides halfway up the building with glass walls.

The University of Buckingham Medical School Academic Centre takes its cues from the advanced technology-based learning provision in US medical training schools and is purpose-built within the hospital grounds where, unusually for medical school courses, students will work with real patients from day one of their course.

As well as being able to simulate operations there is streaming capability for live transmission in the building or anywhere in the world, which will enable students’ clinical practice and demonstrations from teaching clinicians to be watched live within the building or shared further afield. Students can practice advanced procedures on life-like medical mannequins, which will allow them to see real human responses without any risk to human wellbeing. Construction of the building began in 2016 and finished in winter 2017.

The building includes a £2m grant from SEMLEP, South East Midlands Local Enterprise Partnership as part of the Local Growth Fund initiative.

HRH, The Duke of Kent, said: “I want to congratulate all those that had the vision to make this happen. This is a remarkable achievement and a fantastic collaboration between the University, the hospital and Milton Keynes.”

Milton Keynes Hospital Trust CEO Joe Harrison said: “This is a brilliant building in which we can train the next generations of clinicians. The NHS is under immense pressure to deal with ever-increasing demand from a growing population. In many ways we are victims of our own success, helping people to live longer and more fulfilling lives with complex conditions. The chance to train and retain more clinicians, and recruit more using the pull of this academic centre, will help us to better meet the needs of local people and continue to provide excellent care in years to come.”

Hilary Chipping, SEMLEP’s Acting CEO said: “SEMLEP was pleased to provide £2m of Local Growth Fund to support this project. This innovative hospital teaching facility will be a great resource for Milton Keynes and the South East Midlands attracting doctors to the city to meet the needs of the growing population at the centre of the Oxford to Cambridge Corridor. We will continue to work with The University of Buckingham to monitor the full impact of this exciting new facility.”

John Clapham, Pro Vice-Chancellor Health Sciences, University of Buckingham, added: “As the intake grows a new riverside site has been prepared for a new medical school building at Buckingham. This will allow the numbers of students to expand without diluting the quality of the learning experience. Plans are in place to also develop a dental school and a school of podiatry, sharing many of the resources that have already been developed. Much more is planned to put both the Hospital and the University at the forefront of medical research for the benefit of patients.”

Guests at the official opening included CEO, MKUH Professor Joe Harrison, University of Buckingham Vice-Chancellor Sir Anthony Seldon, MP Milton Keynes North, Mark Lancaster MP Milton Keynes South Ian Stewart, Lord Lieutenant Buckinghamshire Sir Henry Aubrey-Fletcher, High Sheriff, Buckinghamshire Peter Kara, CEO MK Council Carole Mills, SEMLEP Employer and Skills Manager Paul Thompson, Mayor Milton Keynes David Hopkins, Buckingham Mayor Jon Harvey and businessman Brian Kingham.

Traditionally the training of doctors in the UK has been supported by public sector partnerships between state-funded universities and NHS hospitals. However, this is a private and public sector partnership that draws on the experience, resources and established clinical models of the NHS at Milton Keynes Hospital to provide practical training and clinical tuition for The University of Buckingham’s medical students. Medical courses at Buckingham are completed in a 4.5 year MB ChB programme due to reduced holiday time. The University of Buckingham was the first independent medical school in the country when it opened its doors in 2015.