Feinberg School of Medicine

Northwestern University
Feinberg School of Medicine
Established 1859
Type Private
Endowment US$1.16 Billion[1]
Dean Eric G. Neilson[2]
Academic staff 3,804
Students 3,000+ Total[3]
719 MD
1,250 Residents and Fellows
363 Post-Doctoral Fellows
353 PhD Students
296 Master's Students
400 Graduate Professional Program Students
Location Chicago, Illinois, USA
Campus Urban

Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, located in the Streeterville neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois and situated near Lake Michigan and the Magnificent Mile, is one of Northwestern University's 11 schools and colleges. The medical school offers a full-time Doctor of Medicine degree program, multiple joint degree programs, graduate medical education, and continuing medical education.

The mission of the school, a $1.16 billion enterprise,[4] is to educate the next generation of physicians. It is a research-intensive institution, ranked 19th among American medical schools for research by U.S. News & World Report in 2011.[5] It also is committed to patient care and community service.[6] The school employs nearly 4,000 faculty members.[7] With its affiliates, it provides patient care to thousands of individuals every year.

Contents

History

Originally founded as the medical department of Lind University on October 11, 1859[8] and renamed the Chicago Medical College in 1863, the school affiliated with Northwestern University in 1870. In 1891, the name was changed to Northwestern University Medical School. It had occupied buildings on the near south side of Chicago from 1863[9] until the Montgomery Ward Memorial was constructed in Streeterville in 1926[10] .

Northwestern University Medical School was renamed the Feinberg School of Medicine in 2002, reflecting a $75 million donation from the Joseph and Bessie Feinberg Foundation. Reuben Feinberg started to donate to the university after being hospitalized at Northwestern Memorial Hospital for a heart attack. The first donation, in 1988, was for $17 million to establish the Feinberg Cardiovascular Research Institute. A $10 million donation was subsequently sent in 1996 to establish the Frances Evelyn Feinberg Clinical Neurosciences Institute.

Northwestern was also affiliated with a medical school for women. Established as the Woman's Hospital Medical College in 1870, it later changed its name to the Woman's Medical College of Chicago and became affiliated with Northwestern University in 1892 as Northwestern University Woman's Medical School.[11]

Education

The Feinberg School of Medicine is part of the McGaw Medical Center of Northwestern University, one of the nation's leading academic medical centers focused on research, education and clinical services. Other McGaw members include Children's Memorial Hospital, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago and Jesse Brown VA Medical Center (formerly VA Chicago Health Care System). Medical students and residents receive their clinical training at these hospitals, where nearly all the attending staff members have faculty appointments at the Feinberg School of Medicine. Residents may also train at affiliates such as John H. Stroger Jr Hospital of Cook County, Norwegian American Hospital and the Erie Family Health Center, MacNeal Hospital and Methodist Hospital, Gary, Indiana.

The medical school's primary teaching hospital is Northwestern Memorial Hospital, a 2,200,000-square-foot (200,000 m2) modern hospital that was completed in 1999. The Feinberg Pavilion, the inpatient tower, partially reflects a $10 million donation from Feinberg. Prior to this $600 million addition to the Chicago skyline, the teaching hospitals were built in 1865. Films such as While You Were Sleeping were shot in the old Northwestern hospitals; the old, pictureless ID badges of Northwestern Memorial are clearly visible in the film.

The Feinberg School of Medicine is home to more than 700 medical students. The class of students graduating in 2011 were the 152nd graduating class.

Curriculum and Degrees

Feinberg embarked on a curriculum renewal process for the Doctor of Medicine degree in the fall of 2009. The target date for implementation is the fall of 2012. The goal of the renewal process is to build a more learner-centered educational program that (1) fully integrates scientific principles in a clinical context; (2) stimulates inquiry and investigation; (3) has an assessment system that comprehensively evaluates student achievement in each of the core competencies; (4) reinforces a culture of learning, teamwork, and excellence; (5) is flexible and able to meet the unique needs of individual students as they learn and differentiate.[12]

For medical students, the school offers four-year dual degree programs, which combine the Doctor of Medicine (MD) degree with a Master of Public Health (MPH), a Master of Arts in Medical Humanities and Bioethics, or a Master of Science in Healthcare Quality and Patient Safety (MS). Students electing to pursue the additional degrees enroll in evening classes and graduate with both degrees. Two MD/PhD programs are offered, one in combination with Northwestern University's Graduate School and one with the University's Institute for Neuroscience, and an MD/MM (Master of Management) program is offered with Northwestern University Kellogg School of Management.

The school also offers graduate degree programs, some in combination with other Northwestern University professional schools:

Additionally, the school offers a BS/MD degree through the Honors Program in Medical Education (HPME), a seven-year combined undergraduate and medical school program.

Research

According to public financial data for Feinberg, support for competitive research grants from all external sources totaled $324 million in academic year 2009-2010.[13] In 2010, Feinberg ranked in the top quartile for NIH funding among American medical schools, and six departments ranked in the top 10 for NIH funding: Preventive Medicine (3), Physical Therapy (3), Urology (4), Dermatology (7), Ob/Gyn (7), and Physiology (8).[14] The medical school houses 26 Core Facilities, including a Bioinformatics Consulting Core, Genomics Core and Human Embryonic and Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell Core.[15]

Faculty in the Research program at Feinberg study and mentor in a range of areas, including cancer biology, cell biology, chemical biology, drug discovery, developmental biology, evolutionary biology, genetics, genomics, medical biology, immunology, microbial pathogenesis, neurobiology, pharmacology, structural biology, biochemistry, epidemiology, behavioral sciences, preventive medicine, epidemiology, health outcomes, quality improvement, and translational sciences.

Robert Furchgott, a graduate of the class of 1940, received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1998 for his discovery of nitric oxide.[16]

Rankings

In 2011, Feinberg was ranked 19th among American medical research schools by U.S.News & World Report.[17] In addition, the school is nationally ranked 13th among residency directors and 12th in student selectivity, reflecting an admissions acceptance rate of 6.5 percent of applicants.

Recent growth

Research space has grown 88 percent and education space 67 percent since 2000. The number of full-time faculty has also grown to over 1500, reflecting a 20 percent increase since 2000. The medical school's endowment topped $1 billion in 2005.[18]

Notable alumni

References

  1. ^ "Revenues and Expenditures: Market Value of Endowments by Type Comparison Group: All Schools, All Regions; Year 2010". Revenues and Expenditures, from the LCME Part I-A Overview Survey. AAMC. https://services.aamc.org/mspsreports/index.cfm?fuseaction=CustomizeReports.rankTABLE&ReportID=2&SubReportID=4. Retrieved 6 December 2011. 
  2. ^ http://www.feinberg.northwestern.edu/dean/
  3. ^ http://www.feinberg.northwestern.edu/about/students/student-body-profile.html
  4. ^ "Revenues and Expenditures: Market Value of Endowments by Type Comparison Group: All Schools, All Regions; Year 2010". Revenues and Expenditures, from the LCME Part I-A Overview Survey. AAMC. https://services.aamc.org/mspsreports/index.cfm?fuseaction=CustomizeReports.rankTABLE&ReportID=2&SubReportID=4. Retrieved 6 December 2011. 
  5. ^ http://grad-schools.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-medical-schools/northwestern-university-feinberg-04029
  6. ^ "Then & Now". 2008 Annual Report. Northwestern University. http://www.feinberg.northwestern.edu/annualreport/2008/community_service.html. Retrieved 1 December 2011. 
  7. ^ "About Feinberg". Feinberg web site. Northwestern University. http://www.feinberg.northwestern.edu/about/faculty/index.html. Retrieved 1 December 2011. 
  8. ^ Jones, Samuel J. (1896). History of Northwestern University Medical School (Chicago Medical College). In: Medical and dental colleges of the West. Chicago: Oxford Pub. Co. pp. 162. 
  9. ^ Arey, Leslie B. (1979). Northwestern University Medical School 1859-1979. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University. pp. 53. http://www.galter.northwestern.edu/Digitized-Projects/arey. 
  10. ^ Arey, Leslie B. (1979). Northwestern University Medical School, 1859-1979. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University. pp. 223. http://www.galter.northwestern.edu/Digital-Projects/arey/chapter9.pdf. 
  11. ^ Smith, Avis; Marie J. Mergler ... [et al.] (1896). Eliza H. Root, H. G. Cutler. ed. Woman's Medical School, Northwestern University: (Woman's Medical College of Chicago): the institution and its founders: class histories, 1870-1896. Chicago: H.G. Cutler. http://pds.lib.harvard.edu/pds/view/3337669?n=1&jp2Res=0.25&imagesize=1200&rotation=0. 
  12. ^ Thomas, John X., Jr.; Green, Marianne; Sanguino, Sandra; Curry, Raymond H. (September 2010). "Northwestern University The Feinberg School of Medicine". Academic Medicine 85 (9): S211-S214. doi:10.1097/ACM.0b013e3181e8da5d. http://journals.lww.com/academicmedicine/Fulltext/2010/09001/Northwestern_University_The_Feinberg_School_of.40.aspx#. Retrieved 7 December 2011. 
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  14. ^ "Aggregate Data 2010". NIH Research Portfolio Online Reporting Tools. National Institutes of Health. http://report.nih.gov/award/trends/AggregateData.cfm. Retrieved 29 November 2011. 
  15. ^ "Feinberg School of Medicine Cores Program". Northwestern University. http://www.feinberg.northwestern.edu/research/cores/index.html. Retrieved 29 November 2011. 
  16. ^ Rabelink, AJ (26). "[Nobel prize in Medicine and Physiology 1998 for the discovery of the role of nitric oxide as a signalling molecule."]. Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd 142 (52): 2828-30. PMID 10065255. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10065255. Retrieved 12 December 2011. 
  17. ^ http://grad-schools.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-medical-schools/feinberg-school-of-medicine-04029
  18. ^ "Revenues and Expenditures: Market Value of Endowments by Type Comparison Group: All Schools, All Regions; Year 2010". Revenues and Expenditures, from the LCME Part I-A Overview Survey. AAMC. https://services.aamc.org/mspsreports/index.cfm?fuseaction=CustomizeReports.rankTABLE&ReportID=2&SubReportID=4. Retrieved 6 December 2011. 
  19. ^ Waite, Lucy (1904). Mary Harris Thompson, MD. Chicago: Beers & Co. pp. 57-62. 
  20. ^ Hill, Henry W. (1923). Municipality of Buffalo, New York: a History 1720-1923, v. IV. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Co.. http://library.buffalo.edu/exhibits/panam/hsl/rpbiog.html#ref. 
  21. ^ http://www.facs.org/archives/martinhighlight.html
  22. ^ Wiedeman, H.R. (1993). "The Pioneers of Pediatric Medicine: Isaac Arthur Abt". European Journal of Pediatrics 152 (3): 177. doi:10.1007/BF01956138. 
  23. ^ "Howard T. Ricketts". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online Academic Edition. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/502939/Howard-T-Ricketts. Retrieved 28 November 2011. 
  24. ^ Phemister, Dallas (August 1938). "Allen B. Kanavel 1874–1938". Annals of Surgery 108 (2): 161–162. 
  25. ^ Limb, Peter. "Xuma, Alfred Bitini (1893–1962), politician and physician in South Africa". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/94129. Retrieved 28 November 2011. 

External links