Cook appointed new executive vice president for health affairs at UofL
The University of Louisville Board of Trustees approved the appointment of Larry N. Cook, M.D., as executive vice president for health affairs effective April 14.
Cook, who has served in the post on an acting basis since August 2004, assumes the leadership of UofL's Health Sciences Center in downtown Louisville. The Schools of Medicine, Nursing, Dentistry and Public Health all fall under the oversight of the executive vice president for health affairs, who also serves as a key member of UofL president James Ramsey's leadership team.
"During our transition period, Dr. Cook has earned the respect of his fellow administrators, faculty, staff, students and key community partners," Ramsey said. "After a national search, it was clear that his leadership, administrative skills and long experience with UofL are a winning combination. His ability to bring people together and his passion for the health sciences will keep UofL on the cutting edge."
Cook joined the UofL faculty in 1974 after completing his pediatric residency at the University of Colorado Medical Center and his neonatology fellowship at UofL.
He was named chair of the pediatrics department and chief of staff at Kosair Children's Hospital in 1994. He also is president and chairman of the School of Medicine's practice plan board and the Medical School Practice Association.
Cook has served as president of and been instrumental in the development of University Health Care Inc., a Medicaid managed-care HMO known as Passport, since its inception, Ramsey said.
"I am honored to be offered this exciting and challenging opportunity," Cook said. "I am deeply committed to this university and the opportunities we have for excellence in research, clinical programs and all forms of health sciences education."
Since Cook's August appointment as acting vice president, the university broke ground for the Cardiovascular Innovation Institute, a partnership with Jewish Hospital. In December, the James Graham Brown Cancer Center received a $15 million gift, the second largest in UofL history. The Health Sciences campus also received approval for a $65 million state-of-the-art research facility, slated to house cancer scientists.
The UofL pediatrics research program has thrived under Cook's leadership.
According to published reports from the National Institutes of Health, the department rose from 70th to 43rd in the national rankings of pediatrics departments for NIH-funded research between 1996 and 2003. The department's annual NIH research support grew from $570,611 in 1996 to $3.7 million in 2003.


