Virtually out of space and with hope dwindling that a third building will be added anytime soon, El Paso’s budding medical school has begun pushing its administrative and back-office operations out of its core campus to make room for more lab space. Besides the fact that some of the school’s researchers are already sharing benches in the school’s labs, which makes it difficult to recruit, more lab space also means more money for the school, according to Dr. Charles Miller, the medical school’s associate dean of research.
Thank you for signing up to receive Synapse once a month into your email inbox. It's free.
Partner of Synapse: ![]()
Comments (0)