Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Michigan State University College of Human Medicine

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Motto
  
Serving the People

Established
  
1964

Total enrollment
  
692 (2011)

Founded
  
1964

Type
  
Public

Students
  
800

Phone
  
+1 517-353-1730

Dean
  
Norman J. Beauchamp Jr.

Michigan State University College of Human Medicine

Academic staff
  
600 full-time, 3300 adjunct

Location
  
East Lansing, Michigan, USA

Address
  
Michigan State University, 965 Fee Rd A110, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA

Similar
  
Michigan State University, Michigan State University, Wayne State University, University of Michigan Health Sy, Nova Southeastern University

Profiles

Midland regional campus michigan state university college of human medicine


The Michigan State University College of Human Medicine (MSUCHM) is an academic division of Michigan State University (MSU), and grants the Doctor of Medicine (MD) degree. CHM was founded in 1964 as the first community-integrated medical school, and has a program that emphasizes patient-centered care and a biopsychosocial approach to caring for patients. Required courses at the college reinforce the importance of ethics and professionalism in medicine. In 2013, U.S. News & World Report ranked the college 51st for primary care. The college was also ranked for family medicine and rural medicine. More than 4,000 M.D.s have graduated from the College. Pre-clinical campuses are located on MSU's main campus in East Lansing, Michigan and in downtown Grand Rapids, Michigan, while the clinical rotations are at seven community campuses located throughout Michigan (see below).

Contents

Michigan state university college of human medicine


History

Michigan State University appointed Andrew D. Hunt, MD as the first dean of the College of Human Medicine in 1964. The college began training pre-clinical medical students in the fall of 1966, though these students needed to finish the final two years of their medical school education at other schools. The entering class of 1968 completed all four years of education at MSU, and graduated in the spring of 1972. In October 2007, the MSU Board of Trustees voted to approve a $90 million project to build a new educational facility in downtown Grand Rapids. The construction was supported entirely with private funds, including $55 million from Spectrum Health and $5 million from Richard DeVos. MSU alumnus and philanthropist Peter F. Secchia is the namesake for the facility, following his $10 million donation to the university. In September 2010, the college's headquarters moved from Fee Hall in East Lansing to the newly built Secchia Center in Grand Rapids. To view the construction time-lapse video for The Secchia Center project visit https://oxblue.com/healthcare.php. The college's administration maintain offices at both the East Lansing and Grand Rapids campuses.

Clinical training

Clinical practice (undergraduate medical education during the third and fourth years of medical school), graduate medical education, and research takes place across seven campuses located throughout Michigan Flint, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Midland, Marquette, Southeast Michigan and Traverse City. The college previously had a Saginaw campus, but that was transitioned to the Central Michigan University College of Medicine in 2011. The campus in Kalamazoo, was transitioned to Western Michigan University in 2014. Students are assigned to one of the campuses for their third and fourth years, rather than a specific hospital. The campus administration then places students at hospitals within the campus. After submitting a request, clinical students are also able to take a clerkship at a campus other than their assigned campus. Students may fulfill clerkship electives outside of the MSU system only in their fourth year.

Grand Rapids

The Grand Rapids campus serves as both a pre-clinical and clinical campus.

  • Spectrum Butterworth Hospital
  • Saint Mary's Health Care
  • Spectrum Blodgett Hospital
  • Flint

    The Flint campus utilizes three area hospitals.

  • Genesys Regional Medical Center
  • Hurley Medical Center
  • McLaren Regional Medical Center
  • Lansing

    Adjacent to the pre-clinical campus in East Lansing, the Lansing campus provides clerkship training at area hospitals. Pre-clinical students also have educational experiences at Sparrow Hospital.

  • McLaren–Greater Lansing Hospital
  • Sparrow Hospital
  • Marquette

    The Upper Peninsula campus, based in Marquette, provides an environment for training physicians in rural medicine. The campus is operated in collaboration with the Upper Peninsula Health Education Corporation.

  • Marquette General Hospital
  • Midland Regional Campus

    The Midland Regional Campus is based in Midland, but students at this campus also have clerkships in hospitals in Saginaw, Alma, Clare, and Gladwin. This campus was formerly known as the Saginaw campus, but the headquarters moved to Midland as of July 2011.

  • MidMichigan Medical Center-Midland
  • MidMichigan Medical Center-Gladwin
  • MidMichigan Medical Center-Clare
  • Gratiot Medical Center
  • Covenant Medical Center
  • St. Mary's of Michigan Medical Center
  • Traverse City

  • Munson Medical Center
  • Residencies

    The College of Human Medicine sponsors or is affiliated with 59 graduate medical education programs and 872 residents, including the following programs. In the Lansing area, MSU collaborates with area hospitals through Graduate Medical Education, Inc. In the Grand Rapids area, MSU programs are affiliated with the Grand Rapids Medical Education Partners. MSU/Flint Area Medical Education partners with MSU CHM in the Flint area.

    Fellowships

    Affiliated fellowship programs include:

  • Cardiology
  • Child and adolescent psychiatry
  • Endocrinology
  • Geriatrics
  • Hematology/oncology
  • Infectious disease
  • Interventional cardiology
  • Neonatology
  • Surgical Critical Care
  • Notable alumni

  • Nicholas Perricone - dermatologist
  • Anthony Youn - plastic surgeon, author of In Stitches
  • John A. McDougall - nutrition expert
  • Mona Hanna-Attisha - pediatrician, public health advocate and Flint Water Crisis whistleblower
  • References

    Michigan State University College of Human Medicine Wikipedia