From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harvard Medical School (
HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. It is a prestigious American medical school located in the Longwood Medical Area of the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts.As of Fall 2006, HMS is home to 616 students in the M.D. program, 435 in the Ph.D. program, and 155 in the M.D.-Ph.D program.
HMS M.D.-Ph.D program allows a student to receive an M.D. from HMS and a Ph.D from either Harvard or the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (
see Medical Scientist Training Program).The school has a large and distinguished faculty to support its missions of education, research, and clinical care. These faculty hold appointments in the basic science departments on the HMS Quadrangle, and in the clinical departments located in multiple Harvard-affiliated hospitals and institutions in Boston. There are approximately 2,900 full- and part-time voting faculty members consisting of assistant, associate, and full professors, and over 5,000 full or part-time non-voting instructors. Prospective students apply to one of two tracks to the M.D. degree.
New Pathway, the larger of the two programs, emphasizes problem-based learning.
HST, operated by the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, emphasizes medical research. The current dean of the medical school is Dr. Jeffrey S. Flier, a diabetes specialist and the former Chief Academic Officer of the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.
History
The school is the third oldest medical school in the US and was founded by Dr. John Warren in 1782 with a faculty of three: John Warren, Benjamin Waterhouse, and Aaron Dexter. The first lectures were given in the basement of Harvard Hall and then in Holden Chapel. The first class, comprised of 2 students, graduated in 1788.It was moved from Cambridge to 49 Marlborough Street in Boston in 1810. From 1816 to 1846, the school, known as Massachusetts Medical College of Harvard University, was located on Mason Street. In 1847, the school relocated to North Grove Street, and then to Copley Square in 1883. The medical school moved to its current location on Longwood Avenue in 1906, where the "Great White Quadrangle" with its 5 white marble buildings was established.
Major teaching affiliates
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Massachusetts General HospitalThese three institutions are often referred to as the "Harvard Trinity" by students and faculty. This is because their affiliations have been in place for the greatest period of time and every department is directly affiliated with the medical school.
Teaching affiliates
Children's Hospital Boston
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Mount Auburn Hospital
Joslin Diabetes Center
Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary
McLean Hospital
Cambridge Hospital
Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital
The Forsyth Institute
VA Boston Healthcare System Student life
Second Year Show
Every winter second year students at HMS write, direct and perform a full length musical parody, lampooning Harvard, their professors, and themselves. 2007 was the Centennial performance as the Class of 2009 presented "Joseph Martin and the Amazing Technicolor White Coat"
to sellout crowds at Roxbury Community College on February 22, 23 and 24.
Societies
Harvard Medical School is divided into five societies named after famous HMS alums, with the exception of HST. Upon matriculation, medical and dental students are assigned to a society. Each has a society master along with several associate society masters who serve as academic advisors to students. In the New Pathway program, students work in small group tutorials and lab sessions within their societies. Every year, the five societies compete in "Society Olympics" for the famed Pink Flamingo in a series of events (e.g. dance-off, dodgeball) that test the talents of the students in each society. HST currently possesses the Pink Flamingo.
Francis Weld Peabody
William Bosworth Castle
Walter Bradford Cannon
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Health Sciences and Technology (HST) In fiction
In Samuel Shem's book,
The House of God, the medical school and its students are referred to as
BMS (Best Medical School/Students). The novel is set in the famed Beth Israel Deaconess hospital in Boston where the author spent his internship year.
Notable alumni
John R. Adler - academic
Robert B. Aird - academic
Tenley Albright - figure skater
William French Anderson - geneticist
Christian B. Anfinsen - chemist
Jerry Avorn - academic
Herbert Benson - cardiologist
Roscoe Brady - biochemist
Henry Bryant - physician
Rafael Campo - poet
Ethan Canin - author
Walter Bradford Cannon - physiologist
William B. Castle - hematologist
George C. S. Choate - physician
Aram Chobanian - President of Boston University (2003-present)
Stanley Cobb - neurologist
Ernest Codman - physician
Michael Crichton - author
Harvey Cushing - neurosurgeon
Yellapragada Subbarao Biochemist
Fe del Mundo - pediatrician, first Filipino and possibly first woman admitted to HMS (1936)
Allan S. Detsky - physician
James Madison DeWolf - soldier; physician
Peter Diamandis - entrepreneur
Daniel DiLorenzo - entrepreneur; neurosurgeon; inventor
Bruce Donoff - HSDM/HMS oral & maxillofacial Surgery
Thomas Dwight - anatomist
Edward Evarts - neuroscientist
Sidney Farber - pathologist
Paul Farmer - infectious disease physician; global health
Harvey V. Fineberg - academic administrator
John "Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald - Mayor of Boston (1906-08; 1910-14)
Thomas Fitzpatrick - dermatologist
Judah Folkman - scientist
Bill Frist - U.S. Senator (1995-2007)
Atul Gawande - surgeon, author
George Lincoln Goodale - botanist
Ernest Gruening - Governor of the Alaska Territory (1939-53); U.S. Senator (1959-69)
I. Kathleen Hagen - academic
Dean Hamer - geneticist
Alice Hamilton - first female faculty member at Harvard Medical School.
Michael R. Harrison - pediatrician
Bernadine Healy - Director of the National Institutes of Health (1991-93); CEO of the American Red Cross (1999-2001)
Ronald A. Heifetz - academic
Lawrence Joseph Henderson - biochemist
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. - physician; poet
Yang Huanming - academic
William James - philosopher
Mildred Fay Jefferson activist; first African American woman to graduate from Harvard Medical School.
Elliott P. Joslin - diabetololgist
Nathan Cooley Keep - dentist
Jim Kim - physician
Charles Krauthammer - columnist
Bruce Rusty Lang - U.S. Army Special Forces, international physician
Aristides Leão - biologist
Philip Leder - geneticist
Simon LeVay - neuroscientist
Joseph Lovell - Surgeon General of the U.S. Army (1818-36)
Karl Menninger - psychiatrist
Randell Mills - scientist
Joseph Betcher - Biochemist
Joseph Murray - surgeon
Amos Nourse - U.S. Senator (1857)
David Page - biologist
Hiram Polk - academic
Geoffrey Potts - academic
Morton Prince - neurologist
Alexander Rich - biophysicist
Oswald Hope Robertson - medical scientist
Wilfredo Santa-Gómez - author
Alfred Sommer (ophthalmologist) - academic
Felicia Stewart - physician
Lubert Stryer - academic
James B. Sumner - chemist
Helen B. Taussig - cardiologist
John Templeton, Jr - president of the John Templeton Foundation
E. Donnall Thomas - physician
Lewis Thomas - essayist
Abby Howe Turner - academic
Richard Urman - academic
George Eman Vaillant - psychiatrist
Milton Viederman - psychiatrist
Mark Vonnegut - author
Joseph Warren - soldier
Andrew Weil - proponent of alternative medicine
Paul Dudley White - cardiologist
Robert O. Wilson - surgeon, humanitarian
Charles F. Winslow-early atomic theorist
Leonard Wood - Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army (1910-14); Governor-General of the Philippines (1921-27)
David Wu - Member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1999-present)
Jeffries Wyman - anatomist
Fictional alumni
Abbey Bartlet - First Lady of the United States on The West Wing
Thurston Howell, III - character on Gilligans Island''.
Major Charles Emerson Winchester III - character on MASH
John Becker - character on the sitcom Becker
Paris Geller - character on Gilmore Girls, commits to attending the school at the end of the series after her term as an undergraduate from Yale
Lexie Grey - character on Greys Anatomy'', who begins her internship at Seattle Grace Hospital after graduating.
Wilbur Larch - an obstetrician at The St. Cloud's orphanage in John Irving's classic novel The Cider House Rules. Adapted into film.
Dr. Elliot Nussbaum from Drake & Josh graduated at age 13 and was published in The New England Journal of Medicine at the age of 15.
Dr. Frasier Crane, a character on Cheers, and its successful spin-off, Frasier.
Next Page
This article is based on an article from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia and is available under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License.
In the Wikipedia there is a list with all authors of this article available.