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Updated: May 2008
- Since its inception in 1969, the Michigan State University
College of Osteopathic Medicine has been dedicated to meeting the health
care needs of the people of Michigan.
- For eight years straight, the college has ranked in the top 5% of all medical
schools (M.D. and D.O.) for primary care education, according to U.S.News
and World Report.
- The college, pending accreditation, will be enrolling 50 additional
students at each of two new expansion sites in southeast Michigan – Macomb
University Center and Detroit Medical Center.
- Two-thirds of our 3,819 living alumni practice in Michigan, and more than
90 percent of the students in the entering classes are Michigan residents.
- More than half of all MSUCOM alumni practice primary
care medicine – family
practice, general internal medicine or general pediatrics.
- They are active in 77 of Michigan’s 83 counties,
serving people in metropolitan, suburban and rural areas.
- MSUCOM alumni practice in the full range of specialty care, such as anesthesiology,
neurology, orthopedic surgery, genomics, pediatrics and gerontology.
- Our primary mission is education, and with projected
expansion of our entering class size to 300 – 200 in East Lansing and 100 in southeast Michigan – we
are working to address the anticipated physician shortage in the state and
the nation.
- To provide high-quality pre- and postdoctoral osteopathic
medical education, MSUCOM collaborates with 27 Michigan community hospitals
through its Statewide Campus System. This year 1,288 physicians-in-training
are enrolled in SCS programs.
- More than 2,000 Michigan physicians hold clinical faculty appointments,
volunteering to teach third- and fourth-year students in their communities
and local hospitals, and allowing us to provide quality education at a lower
cost per student than most other state medical schools.
- MSUCOM provides continuing medical education classes
and credit for Michigan’s
osteopathic physicians and other health care providers. During 2006-07
MSUCOM offered 68 CME programs providing nearly 700 hours of CME credits. A
total of 1,024 health providers attended these courses.
- In 2008, two new graduates completed MSUCOM’s DO-PhD Program. There
are now 28 graduates from this program that began in 1979. The current
class has an enrollment of 18 students, the largest since the program was
established.
- The Department of Pediatrics is the largest single provider
of pediatric care to poor children in the Lansing area.
- MSUCOM faculty provide services at the Ingham County Health department
and at clinics serving the homeless, persons with substance abuse problems
and the indigent.
- The college provides medical services for the Michigan Special Olympics,
has one of eight designated muscular dystrophy/ ALS clinics in the nation,
facilitates an immigration clinic, and conducts numerous health screenings
and immunization clinics each year.
- Among our alumni are medical schools deans, nationally recognized researchers,
top-ranking military leaders, persons recognized for their work with the
poor and medically underserved, sports physicians for collegiate and professional
teams, and consultants involved in high-profile medical care.
- Faculty, students, staff and alumni provide outreach to their communities
through health education, health screenings, free clinics, support for other
non-profit organizations, voluntarism, and more.
- MSUCOM has a highly distinguished cadre of researchers
among its faculty—including
three professors who hold endowed chairs, and five MSU University Distinguished
Professors.
- MSUCOM receives more funding from the National Institutes
of Health than any other osteopathic college. Two of the college’s
senior investigators, J. Justin McCormick and Veronica Maher, rank among
the top 5% of investigators funded by the NIH over the past quarter century.
- MSUCOM actively invests in promising research projects. Michigan
State University’s largest NIH Program Project Grant ever (valued at
$9 million) grew out of a modest seed grant first funded by the MSUCOM research
office.
- MSUCOM recently secured the generous donation of an
MRI scanner from the General Electric Corporation to further college research
on pediatric malaria in sub-Saharan Africa. A new facility built by the college will house
the first MRI instrument in Malawi. The scanner will be used to both
further Dr. Terrie Taylor’s research and improve patient care.
- MSUCOM initiated the first dual-degree DO-PhD Program
in the United States in 1979. Many of the program’s graduates have gone on to have
distinguished research careers, and two graduates of the program — Andrea
Amalfitano, D.O., Ph.D., and John Goudreau, D.O., Ph.D. — are now on
the MSUCOM faculty.
- MSUCOM has recruited Jacek Cholewicki, Ph.D., from the Yale University
College of Medicine to develop college research in orthopedics as a Walter
F. Patenge professor.
MSUCOM is involved with a wide variety of international
health programs, including
- The Institute of International Health
- Malaria research and clinical care in Malawi
- Neurology and epilepsy care and research in Zambia
- The development of clinical clerkships abroad by the
International Health Project, a student organization.
- Medical missions abroad conducted by a significant number
of individual faculty, students and staff.
Questions? Please contact us!
Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine
A306
East Fee Hall, East Lansing, MI 48824-1316
Voice: (517) 353-0616
Fax: (517) 353-9862
Email: pub-rel@com.msu.edu
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