One of the largest medical schools in the United States, McGovern Medical School was founded by the University of Texas Systems Council in 1969 to help sustain projected circumstances and physicians shortage nationally. The school has graduated 7,179 doctors. The school is divided into 24 departments and various specialized research centers. The main school education hospitals are Memorial Hermann - Texas Medical Center, Children's Hermann Memorial Hospital and Harris Lyndon B. Johnson Health Hospital. The dean of medical school is Barbara Stoll, MD. On November 23, 2015, UTHealth announced that UTHealth Medical School was renamed John P. and Kathrine G. McGovern Medical School to honor the $ 75 million prize from John P McGovern Foundation, the greatest prize in the university's history.
MD Anderson UTHealth Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences
In 1962 there was a movement, led by MD Anderson Hospital President R. Lee Clark, M.D., to establish the University of Texas Biomedical Graduate School in Houston. At that time there were 13 predoctoral students studying with scientists at MD Anderson who enrolled through The University of Texas at Austin. Six MD Anderson scientists are special members, and four students are special colleagues, at the Graduate School Faculty in Austin. The Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences was established on June 11, 1963, and was activated by the University of Texas Bupati Board on September 28, 1963.
After two years of national search to recruit an outstanding scientist as the new school dean, Paul A. Weiss, Ph.D., was chosen. At the time of his appointment, he was 66 years old and recently retired from the Rockefeller Institute. The Rockefeller graduate program, where the curriculum is interdisciplinary, is a prototype for Dr. Weiss for the curriculum. This tradition has become an integral part of the GSBS mission. Currently, the school deans are Michael Blackburn, Ph.D., and Michelle Barton, Ph.D. In 2017, the school was renamed the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center UTHealth Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. This name celebrates the enduring and powerful partnership of both our institutions and our shared commitment to gifted, innovative and passionate students and faculty.
Dentistry School
Since its founding in 1905, the School of Dentistry has graduated around 11,000 dentists, dental hygienists and post-graduate specialists. Currently, the school offers 10 accredited programs: D.D.S., dental hygiene, two primary primary care residency programs and six specialized programs in dentistry, endodontics, oral and maxillary, prosthodontic, periodontic and orthodontic surgery. The dean of the dental school is John A. Valenza, D.D.S..
Students gain clinical skills at on-site clinics, in affiliated hospitals and through community outreach projects. The school has affiliations with Houston area hospitals, school districts and clinics, community organizations and long-term health care centers. As the only dental school in southeastern Texas, the School of Dentistry is the primary source of quality oral hygiene for low-income, traditionally under-served families, and for patients with special needs and/or medical comorbidities. Among the affiliated hospitals are:
Cizik School of Nursing
Established in 1972, the School of Nursing is ranked the top five nursing graduate programs in the country and is the highest ranking in Texas. The School of Nursing offers programs that produce a Bachelor of Science in Nursing, a Master of Science in Nursing, a Doctor of Philosophy in Nursing or a Doctor of Nursing Practice Degree. The school also provides a variety of settings in which students and faculty can study, conduct research and participate in clinical practice. The School is proud of the quality and range of experience offered to our graduate and undergraduate students. With more than 1,200 currently enrolled students, the Nursing Faculty graduates an average of 185 new nurses and 130 nurses with a bachelor degree each year. Since 1972, 10,167 nurses have graduated from school. The deans are Lorraine Frazier, Ph.D., R.N., F.A.A.N. The Nursing School and Student Community Center, which opened in 2004, is the first UT System building certified with LEEDÃ,î Gold rating for sustainability . The 195,000-sq.-ft. the facility has received several prestigious local, state and national architectural design awards to date. In November 2017, Jane and Robert Cizik made an important prize of $ 25 million for the UTHealth Nursing School, giving the school the resources and capacity to shape the future of nursing education and health care delivery. In recognition of Cizik's family, the school was renamed Jane and Robert Cizik School of Nursing at UTHealth.
School of Public Health
After authorization in 1947, the first Texas State Legislature was allocated funds for the School of Public Health in 1967. The first class was accepted in the fall of 1969, occupying rent and borrow space. The school's main campus is located in Houston at Texas Medical Center. Responding to the need for public health education graduates in other geographic areas of the country, the School of Public Health established regional campuses in San Antonio (1979), El Paso (1992), Dallas (1998), Brownsville (2000) and Austin (2007). Each campus is established to meet the public health education and research needs of its community. The local campuses have their own resident faculty and offer on-site courses. The interactive video course comes from and connects the six school campuses. The school has four academic divisions: Biostatistics; Epidemiology, Human Genetics and Environmental Science; Health Promotion and Behavioral Science; and Management, Policy, and Public Health; and 14 research centers. The Faculty of Public Health has a prestigious doctoral program in the field of Health Promotion/Health Education.
The school offers graduate education that leads to proficiency in the skills needed for a community health career. The main campus in Houston offers four degree programs: M.P.H., Dr.PH, M.S. and Ph.D. Regional colleges provide master and doctorate education to individuals in areas that are geographically different from Houston. This allows faculty and students to target public health issues that have particular relevance to the communities in which they are located. Since 1972, there are 7,297 graduate schools. The school is accredited by the Council on Education for Public Health (CEPH) and the university is accredited by the Association of Colleges and Schools of the South (SACS). The dean is Eric Boerwinkle, Ph.D.
School of Biomedical Informatics
The School of Biomedical Informatics (SBMI), formerly known as the School of Health Information Science, was founded in 1972 as the Allied Health Sciences School and is the latest of six UTHealth schools. In 1992, UTHealth decided to focus on postgraduate education in health sciences. At that time, schools began to shift from traditional combined health baccalaalaure programs towards the development of graduate programs to join other professional and postgraduate schools at the university. In 1997, the school created the Department of Health Informatics and began offering Master of Science in health informatics. In 2001, the school name was changed to the School of Health Information Sciences, which also included all lecturers and students in the department. The School offers Master of Science in health informatics, Doctor of Philosophy in health informatics and certificate programs in Health Informatics for students seeking degrees. In 2010, the school underwent another name change and became a Biomedical Informatics School. Currently offering certificate programs in health informatics, Master of Science in Health Informatics with two tracks: traditional research pathways and applied health informatics pathways, Doctor of Philosophy in Health Informatics and double degree programs with the Faculty of Public Health. The Dean is Jiajie Zhang, Ph.D.
History
In 1992, UTHealth decided to focus on postgraduate education in health sciences. At that time, schools began to shift from traditional combined health baccalaalaure programs towards the development of graduate programs to join other professional and postgraduate schools at the university. In 1997, UTHealth created the Department of Health Informatics and began offering Master of Science in Health Informatics. In 2001, the school name was changed to the School of Health Information Sciences (SHIS), which also included all faculty and students in the department. In 2010, the school underwent another name change and became the School of Biomedical Informatics (SBMI).
SBMI currently offers certificate programs in health informatics, Master of Science in Health Informatics with two pathways: traditional research pathways and applied health informatics pathways, Doctor of Philosophy in Health Informatics and double degree programs with the Faculty of Public Health.
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Faculty
James H." Red "Duke, Jr., MD
James H. "Red" Duke, Jr., MD, (November 16, 1928 - August 25, 2015) is a Texas icon, renowned trauma surgeon and professor at the University of Texas Medical Sciences Center in Houston (UTHealth) and the Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center, where he has worked on the scene since 1972.
As one of UTHealth's first faculty members in medical school, Duke set up a trauma service at a major education hospital now called the Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center. In 1976, he was instrumental in developing Life Flightî, the country's first rescue air ambulance service. For nearly four decades, he served as medical director of Life Flight, the signature program of the Memorial Hermann Texas Trauma Institute.
A founding member of the American Trauma Society, Duke spent most of his medical career developing infrastructure to provide better care for injured patients while also focusing on programs to prevent injuries. He played an important role in the development of EMS and trauma systems in the state of Texas. His relentless pursuit also resulted in serious consideration for the position of the US General Surgeon in 1989.
As a result of the national syndicated television news program, Texas Health Reports, which educates millions of topics ranging from kidney stones to injury prevention to the right nutrition, it becomes one of the best known personalities in the field.
The mustache of his distinctive brushes, wire-rimmed military spectacles, Texas thorns and colorful tales with cowboy hat accents and simple humor made Duke the hero of the people with the personality of an ancient state physician and the extraordinary talent of modern surgeons.
When the father of four is not with his family, in the operating room, beside his patient's bed or starring in a television program, he is a diligent conservationist serving as former President of the Sheep Liar Foundation, Boone and Crocket Club and founder of the Texas Bighorn Society has successfully reintroduced the bighorn sheep to West Texas.
Duke is primarily dedicated to his ongoing work with the US military to improve medical technology in the battlefield and surgical techniques that support the medical needs of our military personnel. As one of the founders of Texas Medical Center, Hiring Red, White & amp; You! initiative, he is equally dedicated to seeking employment opportunities for military veterans who want to transition into civilian labor.
other famous faculty
While at the university, Ferid Murad was awarded the 1998 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his research on nitric oxide as a signaling molecule in the cardiovascular system. Two faculty have been the recipients of the Mahidol Prince Award for Medicine: the late Palmer Beasley, M.D. (in 1999) and the late Stanley Schultz, M.D. (2006). Lex Frieden, a disabled rights activist and chairman of the National Council for Disability, is also a professor at the University of Texas Medical Sciences Center. There are a number of other honorable faculty at school, including:
7 members of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
5 anggota Institute of Medicine
3 members of the American Academy of Arts and Science
13 members of the American Nursing Academy
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Housing University
The university has three student residential properties, one at 7900 Cambridge (Stage I) and two in 1885 El Paseo (Phase II and III). Student Housing in Cambridge, a two-story complex, was built in 1982 and includes the Child Development Center. Phase II housing in El Paseo, a four-story complex, was built in 2005, and the Phase III complex at the same site was built in 2014.
The small population that relies on these two complexes is categorized into the Houston Independent School District. Residents from both complexes are categorized into Whidby Elementary School, Cullen Middle School, and Lamar High School.
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Research and Institution Centers
UTHealth includes six schools and several centers and institutes whose work is aligned with the university's mission of education, research, and clinical care.
McGovern Medical School
- Brown Foundation Institute of Molecular Medicine for the Prevention of Human Illness
- Center for Cardiovascular Biology and Research on Atherosclerosis
- Clinical & amp; Evidence Based Medicine
- Human Development Research Center
- Membrane Biology Center
- Neurobehavioral Research Center on Addiction
- Injury Research Center
- Center of Excellence on Mood Disorders
- Children's Learning Institution
- John P. McGovern, MD, Center for Humanity and Ethics
- John Ritter Research Program in Aorta and Vascular Diseases
- Keck Center for Learning and Memory Neurobiology
- Neuroscience Research Center
- Structural Biology Imaging Center
- Center for Surgical and Clinical Skills
- PET Weatherhead Imaging Center
School of Biomedical Informatics
- Center for Biosecurity and Public Health Research
- National Center for Cognitive Information and Decision Making in Health Care
School of Dentistry
- Houston Center for Biomaterials and Biomimetics
Nursing School
- Nursing Research Center
- Center for Substance Abuse Research and Research
- Center for Aging
School of Public Health
- Health Promotion Center & amp; Prevention Research
- Health Service Research Center
- Infectious Disease Center
- Generation Innovation Center
- Clinical Trial Coordination Center
- George McMillan Fleming Health Management Center
- Hispanic Health Disparity Research Center
- Hispanic Health Research Center
- Center for Human Genetics
- The Institute of Health Policy
- Michael & amp; Susan Dell Center for Healthy Living
- Southwest Center for Occupational & amp; Environmental Health
- Texas Public Health Training Center
- The University of Texas Prevention Research Center
Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences
- Graduate students and faculty participate and collaborate with Centers and Institutes from five other Schools as well as many at the MD Anderson University of Texas Cancer Center.
University
- Clinical and Translational Center
- Center for Veterinary & amp; Care
- Consortium on Aging
Research Center and Collaborative Institution
- Advanced Biomedical Imaging Center
- Biomedical Engineering Center
- The Gulf of Mexico Consortia
- Mischer's Neuroscience Institute
- Texas Medical Center's Digestive Center Disease Center
- Texas Trauma Institute
src: sph.uth.edu
See also
- Texas University System
- Texas Medical Center
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References
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External links
Source of the article : Wikipedia