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Georgetown University School of Medicine

Coordinates: 38°54′42″N 77°04′30″W / 38.9118°N 77.0751°W / 38.9118; -77.0751
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Georgetown University School of Medicine
A vertical oval-shaped black and white design with a bald eagle whose wings are spread and who is grasping a globe and a cross with its claws. Around the seal are leaves and the numbers 17 and 89 appear on either side.
Seal of Georgetown University
TypePrivate
Established1851; 173 years ago (1851)
Parent institution
Georgetown University
AffiliationRoman Catholic (Jesuit)
DeanLee Jones, M.D.
Academic staff
1,638
Students756
Location,
USA
CampusUrban
Websitesom.georgetown.edu

Georgetown University School of Medicine, a medical school opened in 1851, is one of Georgetown University's five graduate schools, and is the most applied-to medical school in the nation with a matriculation rate of 1.40%. It is located on Reservoir Road in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, DC, adjacent to the university's main campus. The School of Medicine works in association with the 609-bed MedStar Georgetown University Hospital, MedStar Washington Hospital Center, and nine other affiliated federal and community hospitals in the Washington metropolitan area. Georgetown is the oldest Catholic medical school in the United States.

The School is part of the Georgetown University Medical Center, which comprises roughly 80% of the research initiatives occurring at Georgetown University as a whole. It is the closest academic medical center in proximity to the National Institutes of Health. Georgetown and the NIH offer a combined GU-NIH PhD program in biomedical research to foster direct collaboration between the neighboring institutions.[1]

Technology leading to the introduction of the HPV vaccine, was developed at Georgetown Medical Center by Richard Schlegel.[2]

History

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Medical & Dental School Building (south side)

In 1849, four Catholic doctors frustrated with what they felt were discriminatory practices at neighboring Columbian College, limiting Catholic doctors' access to the clinical facilities of the Washington Infirmary, petitioned Georgetown President James A. Ryder to found a medical program.[3] Classes commenced in May 1851 and were only held at night until 1895. In 1852, the school awarded its first medical doctorates.[4]

In 1898 the Georgetown University Hospital was established. A dental department was created in 1901, which became independent of the School of Medicine in 1951 as the School of Dentistry.[5] In 1930, classes moved to the main campus. In July 2000, Georgetown University and MedStar Health, a not-for-profit organization of seven Baltimore and Washington hospitals, entered into a clinical partnership to provide management of clinical care and clinical education at Georgetown University Hospital.[6] In 2004, the School of Medicine opened the Integrated Learning Center (ILC), which supports the School of Medicine's emphasis on a patient-centered, competence-based curriculum and provides the latest methods of clinical teaching and evaluation.

Curriculum

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Georgetown University Hospital

The Georgetown University School of Medicine Faculty includes 1,638 faculty members from 8 basic science and 16 clinical departments, an NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center, and two Interdisciplinary Training Program Grants funded by the NIH – one in Neuroscience, and one in Tumor Biology.

The School of Medicine offers an MD with a Research Track where MD students spend time in the laboratory and develop a research thesis in their specialty. This is different from the MD/PhD program, which is longer and requires a PhD thesis.

The School of Medicine and the Graduate School of Arts & Sciences cooperate to offer a combined-degree program that leads to an MD and a PhD in a chosen concentration. A spot is reserved in this program each year for one student interested in pursuing a Philosophy & Bioethics PhD;[7] all other spots are undifferentiated but must be directed toward a scientific specialty. Research at Georgetown is especially strong in the areas of cancer and the neurosciences. Other combined degree programs include BA/MD (early selection route for Georgetown University undergraduates), MD/MBA, and MD/MS.

Programs

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Campus

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Sunset over the Medical & Dental School Building

Georgetown University Medical Center comprises the School of Medicine, School of Nursing & Health Studies (founded in 1903), Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center and Biomedical Graduate Education. In 2008, GUMC brought in $132 million in sponsored research funds, most of which was federally funded. Clinical care is provided at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital and other locations through a partnership with MedStar Health.

List of deans

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Deans
No. Name Years Ref.
1 Johnson Elliot 1851–1876 [8]
2 Robert Reyburn 1876–1877 [8]
3 Francis Asbury Ashford 1877–1883 [8]
4 James William Lovejoy 1883–1888 [8]
5 C. Lloyd Magruder 1888–1901 [8]
6 George M. Kober 1901–1928 [9]
7 John A. Foote 1929–1931 [9]
8 William Gerry Morgan 1931–1935 [9]
9 David V. McCauley SJ 1935–1946 [9]
10 Paul A. McNally SJ 1946–1953 [9]
11 Francis M. Forster 1953–1958 [9]
12 Hugh H. Hussey 1958–1963 [9]
13 John C. Rose 1963–1974 [9]
14 John P. Utz 1974–1979 [10]
15 John Bernard Henry 1979–1984 [10]
16 Milton Corn 1984–1989 [10]
17 William Maxted 1989–1998 [10]
18 Carolyn Rabinowitz 1998–2002 [10]
19 Stephen Ray Mitchell 2002–2020 [11]
20 Leon Jones 2021–2024 [12]
21 Norman J. Beauchamp Jr. 2021–present [13]

Notable alumni

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Name Degree and year received Accomplishments
John Barrasso C 1974, M 1978 United States Senator from Wyoming, 2007–present
Mark R. Dybul C 1985, M 1992 United States Global AIDS Coordinator, U.S. Department of State, 2006–2008
David John Doukas M 1983 Tulane University; Director of the Program in Medical Ethics and Human Values, James A. Knight Chair in Medical Humanities and Ethics
Marguerite M. Engler Ph.D. – 1988 Nurse scientist and physiologist, acting scientific director of the National Institute of Nursing Research's division of intramural research, 2012
Marie R. Griffin M 1976 Vaccine researcher; Professor of Medicine and Endowed Director of Public Health Research and Education at Vanderbilt University Medical Center
David A. Hidalgo C 1974, M 1978 Reconstructive and aesthetic plastic surgeon, author, and visual artist; Clinical Professor of Surgery at Weill Cornell Medical College
Susan Hockfield Med Ph.D. – 1979 Neuroscientist; President, MIT, 2004–2012; Provost, Yale University, 2003–04; Dean, Yale Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, 1998–2000;
Thea L. James M 1991 Associate Professor, Associate Chief Medical Officer, and Vice President of the Mission at the Boston Medical Center
Kevin C. Kiley M 1976 Lt. Gen. Kiley is the 41st Surgeon General of the Army and Commander, U.S. Army Medical Command, 2004–2007
Antonia Novello Hospital Fellow 1975 Surgeon General of the United States, 1990–93
Esam Omeish C 1989, M 1993 former President of the Muslim American Society
Thomas Parran Jr. M 1915 Surgeon General of the United States, 1936–48
Sean P. Pinney C 1990, M 1994 Cardiologist
Robert R. Redfield C 1973, M 1977 Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2018–2021
John J. Ring C 1949, M 1953 former President, American Medical Association
Jordan Shlain M 1994 Primary care physician; chairman and founder of Private Medical, a family office for health and medicine; founder of HealthLoop, a cloud-based clinical engagement platform
Lana Skirboll Ph.D – 1977 former Director, National Institutes of Health Office of Science Policy
William Kennedy Smith M 1991 Founder, Center for International Rehabilitation and Physicians Against Land Mines; member of the Kennedy family
Solomon Snyder C 1959, M 1962 Neuroscientist
Robert Stein M 1866 German-American translator, interpreter of Eskimo–Aleut languages, and amateur Arctic explorer
Andrew von Eschenbach M 1967 Director, Food and Drug Administration, 2006–2009; Director, National Cancer Institute, 2002–05; Director, BioTime, a biotechnology company, 2011–present
William B. Walsh M 1943 Founder of Project HOPE; humanitarian aid activist; first U.S. physician on the ground in Hiroshima after the atomic bomb was dropped; recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ "GU-NIH Graduate Partnership Programs in Biomedical Sciences". Peterson's. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
  2. ^ SooHoo, Cheryl (Winter 2011–12). "Alum Dick Schlegel Gives Cancer Prevention His Best Shot". Ward Rounds. Northwestern University. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
  3. ^ O'Neill, Paul R.; Williams, Paul K. (2003). Georgetown University. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0738515094.
  4. ^ Shea, John Gilmary (1891). "Chapter XXIII: Father Charles H. Stonestreet, S.J.". Memorial of the First Century of Georgetown College, D.C.: Comprising a History of Georgetown University. Vol. 3. New York: P. F. Collier. p. 176. OCLC 612832863. Archived from the original on January 12, 2019. Retrieved January 12, 2019 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ "Dental Alumni History: 1930–1960". alumni.georgetown.edu. Archived from the original on September 10, 2015. Retrieved September 12, 2015.
  6. ^ Goldstein, Avram (18 February 2000). "MedStar, GU Strike Hospital Deal". The Washington Post. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
  7. ^ "M.D./Ph.D. Program". Georgetown University School of Medicine. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
  8. ^ a b c d e Curran 2010a, p. 367, Appendix D: Presidents, Prefects, and Deans in Georgetown's First Century
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h Curran 2010b, p. 400, Appendix E: Deans of the Medical School, 1889–1974
  10. ^ a b c d e Curran 2010c, p. 293, Appendix E: Deans of the Medical School, 1963–2010
  11. ^ Chervu, Nikhil; Saxon, David (June 22, 2020). "Hoya Saxa: An Interview with Dean Stephen Ray Mitchell". Georgetown Medical Review. 4 (1). doi:10.52504/001c.13145. S2CID 225753771. Archived from the original on August 6, 2021.
  12. ^ "Meet Leon 'Lee' Jones, Georgetown's New Dean for Medical Education". Georgetown University Medical Center. March 30, 2021. Archived from the original on January 25, 2022. Retrieved October 5, 2022.
  13. ^ "The Deans". School of Medicine. Retrieved 2024-11-21.

Sources

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38°54′42″N 77°04′30″W / 38.9118°N 77.0751°W / 38.9118; -77.0751