ignature S S
College of Health and Human Services
The Ohio Board of Regents approves
Health and Wellness Center of Excellence
forming a center of “ Byexcellence, the University recognizes the ‘strength, depth, breadth and
tremendous impact of health and wellness across the lifespan programs at
”
BGSU.’
—Linda Petrosino, Dean
B O W L I N G
The Ohio Board of Regents on Feb. 19 formally accepted Bowling Green State University as a center of excellence in “Health and Wellness Across the Lifespan.” Gov. Ted Strickland and OBOR Chancellor Eric Fingerhut made the announcement during a meeting in Cleveland that Dr. Linda Petrosino, dean of BGSU’s College of Health and Human Services, attended. “Health and Wellness Across the Lifespan” becomes BGSU’s second center of excellence following “Sustainability and the Environment,” which was designated last October. Under the University System of Ohio and according to the governor’s 10-year Strategic Plan for Higher Education, centers of excellence should be multidisciplinary, of high enough quality to attract students and faculty, and contribute to the economic development of the state. BGSU’s health and wellness programs comprise a “networked center of excellence without walls,” according to
G R E E N
S T A T E
Petrosino. Under the umbrella of health and wellness, the University currently has more than 100 faculty members and nearly 5,000 students in 78 academic programs, research units and student activity groups; $10.7 million in research grant awards and $900,000 in student support grants, plus 300 partnerships with health organizations and agencies in the community. By forming a center of excellence, the University recognizes the “strength, depth, breadth and tremendous impact of health and wellness across the lifespan programs at BGSU,” Petrosino said. And rather than a trendy development, she added, community partnerships “have been the very fabric of our health and wellness programs here for many years.” Bowling Green’s distinctive approach centers not on the medical aspect of curing disease, like the University of Toledo and its medical college, but on the promotion of wellness and improved quality of life–which in turn can help produce lower costs for health care and less lost time at work for Ohio’s citizens. {continued on page 3)
Inside this Issue | Fall 2010 v v v v v v
A message from the dean Accomplished Graduates Centennial Alumni Awards Ned E. Baker Lecture Student Success Classes at Levis Commons
BGSU is an AA/EEO institution.
U N I V E R S I T Y