Touro University California

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Motto: To Serve, To Lead, To Teach.
Established: 1997
Type: Private
President: Bernard Lander
Provost: Harvey Kaye
Students: 600
Location: Vallejo, CA, USA
Website: www.tu.edu

Touro University is a Jewish-sponsored independent institution of higher and professional education, located on Mare Island in Vallejo, a city in the northern San Francisco Bay Area. Touro College, located in New York City, is the parent institution. Touro University is jointly administered with Touro University Nevada, located near Las Vegas, NV. The Touro Campus consists of 40 acres of the former Mare Island naval base.

A physician demonstrates an OMM technique to Touro medical students.
A physician demonstrates an OMM technique to Touro medical students.

The colleges of Touro include the College of Osteopathic Medicine which offers the degree of Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.), the College of Pharmacy (offering a degree of Doctor of Pharmacy), the College of Health Studies which offers a Physician Assistant degree(MSPAS) as well as the Master of Public Health (MPH) degree, and the College of Education, which offers a Master of Arts in Education.

While sponsored by a Jewish organization, Touro University, Mare Island has students and faculty from many religious backgrounds.[1] The Judaic values of commitment to social justice, intellectual pursuit, and service to humanity are expressed and encouraged, regardless of faith.

[edit] Geography

The Pacific Northwest
The Pacific Northwest

In the area known as the Pacific Northwest, there are only five medical schools north of San Francisco and south of Canada, a distance of nearly 900 mi (1,400km). They lie in the three western states of California, Oregon and Washington. There are no medical schools in the northwestern states of Idaho, Montana, Wyoming or Alaska. These five medical schools are:

The third and forth years of medical school are usually spent in clinical rotations and sub-internships. Touro uses a system of preceptors and rotation sites distributed throughout the Pacific Northwest (link), as well sites in southern California, Michigan, New York City and the San Francisco Bay Area. [2][3]

Touro med students review physical examination of the foot.
Touro med students review physical examination of the foot.

For a state of its size and population, California has a relatively limited medical education and training system. Only 15.9 medical students per 100,000 were trained in California during the years from 1985 to 2005, in contrast to a U.S. average of 28.5 medical students per 100,000 population. When adjusted for population growth, California medical school enrollment per capita experienced a 5% decrease during this time.[4]


[edit] Research

Touro's Mare Island campus includes several historic buildings.
Touro's Mare Island campus includes several historic buildings.

In July 2007, Touro University announced, in a press release, plans to begin construction on a Particle therapy cancer treatment center. The center would be the first such facility to offer the treatment in the United States. The center is part of Touro's 1.2 billion dollar plan for Mare Island.[5][1] The cancer center plans were unanimously approved by the Vallejo Planning Commission in June 2008, with a budget of $333 million.[6]

In October 2007, Touro University received a four-year National Institute of Health (NIH) research grant of $1.4 million to study the impact of diet on non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, a condition that now affects about one third of Americans.[7]


[edit] GLBT controversy

Touro student demonstration. 11 Sept 2006
Touro student demonstration. 11 Sept 2006

In September of 2006, Touro University was criticized for revoking the charter of the schools LGBT student group, the Touro University Gay-Straight Alliance.[8][9][10] Under pressure from the San Francisco Board of Supervisors[11], the Vallejo City Council, the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association[12], and the American Medical Student Association[13] the school quickly reversed its decision and restored the group's funding.[14] In May 2008, Michael Harter, PhD, senior provost and CEO for Touro University said the executive team at the university never took any action to rescind funding for the gay-straight alliance and was not in agreement with the comments made by the university administrator at the student government meeting.

It’s clear to me that the administration had not taken a position on the matter and, when they were eventually confronted with the issue, they did not take any action against the student group.[15]
See also: Touro University Gay-Straight Alliance

[edit] See also


Lander Hall contains the school's laboratories and some classrooms.  On a sunny day, the steps of Lander are a popular place to eat lunch.
Lander Hall contains the school's laboratories and some classrooms. On a sunny day, the steps of Lander are a popular place to eat lunch.

[edit] External links

  • Northwest Osteopathic Medical Foundation (link)



[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Amy Hollyfield. Culture and Medicine learned at Touro. KGO-TV/DT. 15 April 2008.
  2. ^ 3rd Year Rotations Sites at Touro University. (accessed 1 Sept 2007).
  3. ^ Ma Michelle. Med students to spend year shadowing local doctors. The Daily Triplicate. 10 June 2008. (accessed 10 Jun 2008).
  4. ^ Fulfilling Critical Missions in an increasingly challenging environment. Clinical Services Development, University of California. [1]
  5. ^ Press Release. Touro University.[2]
  6. ^ York J. Commission OKs state-of-the-art cancer center. Vallejo-Times Herald. 4 June 2008. (accessed 10 Jun 2008).
  7. ^ Touro receives grant to study liver disease. Vallejo Times-Herald. 4 Oct 2007.
  8. ^ Johnson, Brooke (May 2008). "Out but not loud. Even as acceptance grows, gay DOs, students remain wary". The DO magazine: 36-41. American Osteopathic Association. 
  9. ^ Buchanan, Wyatt. Gay rights group's charter is revoked. San Francisco Chronicle. 12 Sept 2007. [3]
  10. ^ Denina, Chris. "Gay Club Loses Touro OK." Vallejo Times-Herald 9 Sept. 2006: A1 [4]
  11. ^ San Francisco City Ordinance 061278 [5]
  12. ^ GLMA Decries Decision by Touro University College of Osteopathic Medicine to Ban Gay Straight Alliance Student Group. Press release. [6]
  13. ^ Medical Students at Touro University to protest abolition of School's Gay-Straight Alliance Group. Press Release, American Medical Student Association. [7]
  14. ^ Buchanan, Wyatt. "Gay rights group not banned, school says." San Francisco Chronicle. 13 Sept 2006: B4 [8]
  15. ^ Johnson, Brooke (May 2008). "Out but not loud. Even as acceptance grows, gay DOs, students remain wary". The DO magazine: 36-41. American Osteopathic Association. 
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