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University of Oklahoma College of Medicine

Medical school in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, US


Medical school in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, US

FieldValue
nameOU College of Medicine
typePublic
established1900
deanIan Dunn
cityOklahoma City
stateOklahoma
countryU.S.
postgrad898
faculty1344 (988 Full-Time)
campusUrban
endowment$450 million
website

The University of Oklahoma College of Medicine is the medical school of the University of Oklahoma, located in Oklahoma City. The College of Medicine is part of the university's Health Sciences Center. It is one of 150 medical schools in the United States that are fully accredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education and the only one located in the state of Oklahoma.

History

The University of Oklahoma College of Medicine was founded in 1900 as a medical department of the University of Oklahoma at its main campus in Norman. Lawrence N. Upjohn, M.D. is regarded as the "founding dean" and served from 1900-1904. In 1910, the school merged with the Epworth College of Medicine in Oklahoma City. By 1928, all basic science and clinical facilities had been consolidated as what would become the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center in Oklahoma City, where there was a growing urban population and larger hospital facilities could be supported. By the 1960s, the College and its affiliated hospitals had grown into a large, traditional academic medical center. In 1974, a geographically separate, community-based clinical campus was established in Tulsa, approximately 100 miles northeast of the main campus. Referred to as the OU College of Medicine, the college is the only medical school in Oklahoma that grants the Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) degree.

Admissions

Applications are processed through AMCAS and must be submitted by October 15. The minimum scores to apply are a 3.0 GPA and a 21 on the MCAT, however the average scores of students accepted are much higher and fluctuate from year to year.

Academics

OU College of Medicine has 17 clinical departments and 4 basic science departments at the Oklahoma City campus.

Facilities

Seed Sower at Night at OU Health Sciences Center

The College sponsors residency and fellowship training in 74 specialities and subspecialties of medicine and has approximately 755 residents/fellows in training. The major teaching hospitals affiliated with the College in Oklahoma City are the OU Medical Center, The Children's Hospital, and the VA Medical Center. The faculty practice is known as OU Physicians and includes virtually every medical and surgical specialty and subspecialty. In 2008, the new umbrella brand "OU Medicine" was released to reflect the entire enterprise that encompasses the OU College of Medicine, OU Medical Center, The Children's Hospital, OU Physicians and the University Hospitals Authority & Trust.

At the Tulsa campus, known as the Schusterman Center, programs are affiliated with three hospitals: Hillcrest Medical Center, Saint Francis Hospital, and St. John Medical Center. In 2008, the University announced that the Tulsa campus of the College of Medicine would become the OU School of Community Medicine within the College of Medicine. A separate educational track was developed and implemented with a special focus on Community Medicine. On December 1, 2009, OU and the University of Tulsa announced that the two universities would collaborate to create a four-year medical school in Tulsa. In 2019 the OU Tulsa School of Community Medicine graduated its first class of 30 students who had spent the entire 4-years of medical training at the Tulsa branch campus.

References

References

  1. "Accredited U.S. Programs". Liaison Committee on Medical Education.
  2. "404".
  3. Kim Archer, [http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?subjectid=17&articleid=20091202_17_A1_Univer322000 "TU, OU team up for med school"], ''[[Tulsa World]]'', December 2, 2009.
  4. World, Mike Averill Tulsa. "First class of the OU-TU School of Medicine graduates, 11 of 30 set to stay in Tulsa".
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