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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Yale School of Medicine
TypePrivate medical school
Established1810; 215 years ago (1810)
Parent institution
Yale University
DeanNancy J. Brown
Academic staff
5,166[1]
Students1,977[1]
Location, ,
United States
Websitemedicine.yale.edu

The Yale School of Medicine is the medical school of Yale University, a private research university in New Haven, Connecticut. It was founded in 1810 as the Medical Institution of Yale College and formally opened in 1813. It is the sixth-oldest medical school in the United States.[2]

The school’s faculty clinical practice is Yale Medicine. Yale School of Medicine has a strong affiliation with its primary teaching hospital, Yale New Haven Hospital and the Yale New Haven Health System. The school is home to the Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library, which is one of the country’s largest modern medical libraries and is known for its historical collections.

The faculty includes 31 National Academy of Sciences members,[3] 50 National Academy of Medicine members,[4] and nine Howard Hughes Medical Institute(HHMI) investigators/professors.[5] Yale School of Medicine faculty have also received various international awards for their scientific discoveries, impactful research, and professional achievements. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine has been awarded to seven current or former faculty members, and the Nobel Prize in Chemistry to two faculty members.[6]

For the class of 2028, the school received 5,669 applications to fill 104 seats. The median GPA for the class was 3.94, and the median MCAT was 521.[1]

Education

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Sterling Hall of Medicine (2024)

Yale School of Medicine educates future leaders in medicine and biomedical science. Since 1839, medical students have written a thesis based on original research, reflecting that the scientific process of investigation, observation, interpretation of data, and critical evaluation of literature are fundamental to the practice of medicine.[1]

Many medical students take a tuition-free fifth year to pursue additional study, conducting in-depth research or exploring clinical electives and sub-internships.[7] A significant number are awarded fifth-year research fellowships and earn the Master of Health Science degree.[8]

Each year, approximately 20 students enroll in the school’s MD-PhD Program, one of the original Medical Scientist Training Programs established and funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).[1] Graduate students in the combined program in the Biomedical and Biological Sciences earn a PhD degree through the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. YSM residents, fellows, and faculty, as well as individuals from other institutions, can earn a two-year Master of Health Science degree. The Yale School of Medicine also offers joint degree programs with other professional schools, including Public Health, Law, Management, Engineering, and Divinity.[9]

YSM’s campus-based Physician Associate (PA) Program, one of the oldest PA programs in the country, trains students to become compassionate, high-quality, patient-centered PAs.[10]

Yale System

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Yale's medical campus and The Hill neighborhood from the south

The school employs the "Yale System" established by YSM Dean Milton Winternitz in the 1920s,[11] wherein first- and second-year students are not graded or ranked among their classmates. In addition, course examinations are anonymous and are intended only for students' self-evaluation. Student performance is thus based on seminar participation, qualifying examinations (if a student fails, it is his/her responsibility to meet with a professor and arrange for an alternative assessment—passing grades are not released), clinical clerkship evaluations, and the United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE). Prior to graduation, students are required to submit a thesis based on original research.[11]

Rankings

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In 2024, U.S. News & World Report ranked Yale School of Medicine in its top tier of Best Medical Schools.[12] The school ranked fourth for NIH research funding in 2023 as reported by the Blue Ridge Institute for Medical Research.[13]

History

[edit]
Original building of Yale School of Medicine, formerly a hotel built by James Hillhouse at the corner of Grove and Prospect Streets. Originally leased by Yale, the building was later purchased with funds from the Connecticut State Legislature.

In 18th-century United States, credentials were not needed to practice medicine. Prior to the founding of the medical school, Yale graduates would train through an apprenticeship to become physicians. Yale President Ezra Stiles conceived the idea of training physicians at Yale and ultimately, his successor Timothy Dwight IV helped found the medical school.[14] The school was chartered in 1810 and opened in New Haven in 1813. Nathan Smith (medicine and surgery) and Benjamin Silliman (pharmacology) were the first faculty members. Silliman was a professor of chemistry and taught at both Yale College and the medical school. The other two founding faculty were Jonathan Knight, anatomy, physiology and surgery, and Eli Ives, pediatrics.[15]

One of Yale's earliest medical graduates was Dr. Asaph Leavitt Bissell of Hanover, New Hampshire, who graduated in 1815, a member of the school's second graduating class. Following his graduation, Dr. Bissell moved to Suffield, Connecticut, a tobacco-farming community where his parents had lived and where he practiced as a country physician for the rest of his life. The saddlebags that Dr. Bissell carried in his practice, packed with paper packets and glass bottles, are today in the school's Medical Historical Library.[16]

In 1916, a little more than a century after its founding, Yale School of Medicine admitted its first female students. At the time, this stood in marked contrast to the ethos of other institutions such as Harvard, which considered it “unladylike” for women to attend medical school at the time. The three women admitted to the Class of 1916 were exceptional—unlike their male counterparts, who needed only two years of college education, they were required to hold a college degree, and a quota further restricted the number of women who were admitted.[17]

Throughout its history, Yale School of Medicine faculty have been credited with seminal scientific discoveries. Pediatrician Martha May Eliot, MD, who was recruited to Yale by Edwards A. Park, MD, chair of the medical school’s first Department of Pediatrics, are together credited with developing a cure for rickets in 1925.[18]

Early in 1942, Louis S. Goodman, MD, and Alfred Gilman, PhD, assistant professors in Yale’s new Department of Pharmacology, began to study nitrogen mustard, an agent that was derived from a lethal gas used in the trenches of World War I. Building on research that had languished for years, the two young scientists found in a derivative of mustard gas the first effective chemotherapy for cancer.[19]

In 1998, Charles Janeway, MD, Yale Cancer Center immunologist, established and proved his theory of innate immunity.[20]

In the 1960s, Louis Gluck, MD, a member of the Department of Pediatrics faculty, created the first neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). In the late 1970s, William Tamborlane, MD, and the late Robert Sherwin, MD, transformed the treatment of type 1 diabetes by developing the insulin pump.[21]

Research led by Yale School of Medicine endocrinologist Kevan Herold, MD, resulted in the Food and Drug Administration's approval in 2022 of teplizumab (Tzield®), a medication that can delay the onset of type 1 diabetes—marking the first treatment to change the course of this autoimmune disease since the discovery of insulin in 1922.[22]

In the field of psychiatry, following pioneering research led by Yale School of Medicine psychiatrist John Krystal, MD]], and his colleagues Dennis Charney, MD, and [[ Ronald Duman|Ronald Duman, PhD]], the Food and Drug Administration approved in 2019 a nasal spray called esketamine, derived from ketamine—an anesthetic with rapid-acting effect for treatment-resistant depression.[23]

Yale School of Medicine moved to its current campus, neighboring the hospital, In 1925. This campus includes the Sterling Hall of Medicine (erected in 1925),[24] Boyer Center for Molecular Medicine (1991, designed by Cesar Pelli),[25][26] Anlyan Center (2003, designed by Payette and Venturi Scott Brown),[27] and the Amistad Building (2007, designed by Herbert Newman).[28]

Clinical Affiliations

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An affiliation agreement between the medical school and Grace-New Haven Community Hospital in 1965 created Yale New Haven Hospital (YNHH), which expanded in 1993 with the opening of the Children’s Hospital, and again in 2000 with the acquisition of the Psychiatric Hospital.[29]

In 1999, an affiliation agreement was established between the medical school and Yale New Haven Health System. The two institutions collaborate to provide clinical care, undergraduate and graduate medical education, and to facilitate clinical research.[1]

In 2009, the 14-story Smilow Cancer Hospital opened, and in 2012 YNHH acquired the Hospital of Saint Raphael, adding 533 beds and making it one of the largest hospitals in the United States.[1]

The medical center has grown over the years to include the institutions listed below.

The affiliated VA Connecticut Healthcare System, located in West Haven, maintains clinical, research, and education programs in conjunction with many medical school departments. The Department of Psychiatry collaborates with the Connecticut Mental Health Center to provide recovery-oriented mental health services for thousands of people in the Greater New Haven area each year.[30]

Deans

[edit]

Before 1845, there was no dean. Nathan Smith, followed by Jonathan Knight, provided leadership in the early years. Thereafter, physicians of various specialities have served as dean of the medical school:[31]

Notable faculty

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Current

  • Amy Arnsten, PhD, Albert E. Kent Professor of Neuroscience and professor of psychology (National Academy of Medicine, 2017)
  • Pietro De Camilli, MD, John Klingenstein Professor of Neuroscience and professor of cell biology (E.B. Wilson Medal 2021; Julius Axelrod Prize, 2015; American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2012; Institute of Medicine, 2005; American Academy of Arts & Sciences, 2001; National Academy of Sciences, 2001; HHMI Investigator, 1992)
  • Vincent DeVita Jr., MD, Amy and Joseph Perella Professor of Medicine (Medical Oncology) and professor of epidemiology (Lasker Award, 1972)
  • Erol Fikrig, MD, Waldemar Von Zedtwitz Professor of Medicine (Infectious Diseases), professor of epidemiology (microbial diseases) and of microbial pathogenesis, and section chief for infectious disease in YSM’s Department of Internal Medicine (National Academy of Medicine, 2024)[49]
  • Richard Flavell, PhD, Sterling Professor of Immunobiology (William B. Coley Award, 2012; Vilcek Prize in Biomedical Science, 2013)
  • Jorge Galàn, PhD, DVM, Lucille P. Markey Professor of Microbial Pathogenesis and professor of cell biology (National Academy of Sciences, 2015; NIH MERIT Award, 2000 and 2015; National Academy of Sciences, 2013)
  • Valentina Greco, PhD, Carolyn Slayman Professor of Geneitcs (HHMI Investigator, 2024; International Society for Stem Cell Research Momentum Award, 2021; NIH Director’s Pioneer Award, 2019)
  • Tamas Horvath, DVM, PhD, Jean and David W. Wallace Professor of Comparative Medicine and professor of neuroscience and of obstetrics, gynecology & reproductive sciences (Széchenyi Prize, 2023; Outstanding Scientific Achievement Award, 2016)
  • Arthur L Horwich, MD, professor emeritus of genetics (Lasker Award, 2011; American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2021; Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences, 2020; Paul Ehrlich and Ludwig Darmstaedter Prize, 2019; Dr. Paul Janssen Award for Biomedical Research 2019; E.B. Wilson Medal, 2017; Institute of Medicine, 2008; National Academy of Sciences, 2003)
  • Akiko Iwasaki, PhD, Sterling Professor of Immunobiology and professor of dermatology and of molecular, cellular & developmental biology, and of epidemiology (Nakaaki Tsukahara Memorial Award, 2024; president of American Association of Immunologists, 2024; Else Kröner Fresenius Prize for Medical Research, 2023; National Academy of Medicine, 2019; National Academy of Sciences, 2018; HHMI Investigator, 2014)
  • John Krystal, MD, Robert L. McNeil Jr. Professor of Translational Research, chair and professor of psychiatry, and professor of neuroscience and of psychology (Colvin Prize for Outstanding Achievement in Mood Disorders Research, 2019; National Academy of Medicine, 2010)[50]
  • Haifan Lin, PhD, Eugene Higgins Professor of Cell Biology and professor of genetics, of obstetrics, gynecology & reproductive sciences, and of dermatology, director of Yale Stem Cell Center (Francis Amory Prize, 2024; National Academy of Medicine, 2024; National Academy of Sciences, 2018; American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2018; American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2010)
  • Ruslan Medzhitov, PhD, Sterling Professor of Immunobiology (Jessie Stevenson Kovalenko Medal, 2024; Dickson Prize in Medicine, 2019; William B. Coley Award, 2013; Else Kröner Fresenius Prize for Medical Research, 2013; National Academy of Sciences, 2010; HHMI Investigator, 2000)
  • Marcella Nunez-Smith, MD, MHS, CNH Long Professor of Internal Medicine (General Medicine) and professor of epidemiology (chronic disease) and of public health, associate dean for health equity research (National Academy of Medicine, 2021)
  • Lucila Ohno-Machado, MD, MBA, PhD, Waldemar von Zedtwitz Professor of Medicine and of Biomedical Informatics & Data Science, deputy dean for biomedical informatics, chair of biomedical informatics & data science (inaugural Helen M. Ranney Award, 2024; American College of Medical Informatics Distinguished Fellow, 2023; National Academy of Medicine, 2018)
  • Marina Picciotto, PhD, Charles B.G. Murphy Professor of psychiatry and professor in the Yale Child Study Center, of neuroscience, and of pharmacology (President of the Society for Neuroscience, 2023-24; American Academy of Arts & Sciences, 2024; Carnegie Prize in Mind & Brain Sciences, 2020; Langley Award, 2020)
  • Pasko Rakic, MD, PhD, Dorys McConnell Duberg Professor of Neuroscience and professor of neurology (Connecticut Medal of Science, 2019; Kavli Prize in neuroscience, 2008; Bristol Myers Squibb Neuroscience Award, 2003)
  • James Rothman, PhD, Sterling Professor of Cell Biology and professor of chemistry (Lasker Award, 2002; Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 2013)
  • David G. Schatz, PhD, Waldemar Von Zedtwitz Professor of Immunobiology and Professor of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, chair, Immunobiology (Pail Ehrlich and Ludwig Darmstaedter Prize, 2022; National Academy of Medicine, 2019; National Academy of Sciences, 2018; American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2016; American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2014)
  • Joseph Schlessinger, PhD, Willian H. Prusoff Professor of Pharmacology (BBVA Frontiers of Knowledge Award, 2015; Institute of Medicine, 2005; American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2001)
  • Nenad Sestan, MD, PhD, Harvey and Kate Cushing Professor of Neuroscience and professor of comparative medicine, of genetics, and of psychiatry (Kavli Instituteof Medicine Innovative Research Award, 2022; National Academy of Medicine, 2019)
  • Joan A. Steitz, PhD, Sterling Professor of Molecular Biophysics & Biochemistry (Wolf Prize, 2021; Lasker-Koshland Award, 2018; E.B. Wilson Medal, 2005; National Medal of Science, 1986; National Academy of Sciences, 1983; American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1983)
  • Stephen Strittmatter, MD, PhD, Vincent Coates Professor of Neurology and professor of neuroscience (King Faisal Prize for Medicine, 2021; Association of American Physicians, 2024)
  • Mary Tinetti, MD; Gladys Philips Crofoot Professor of Medicine (Geriatrics) (MacArthur Foundation Fellow, 2009; National Academy of Medicine, 2007)
  • Emily Wang, MD, professor of medicine and of public health (National Academy of Medicine, 2023; MacArthur Foundation Fellow, 2022; American Society of Clinical Investigation, 2021)

Past

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g "YSM History, Mission, Facts & Figures". Yale School of Medicine. Retrieved 2 January 2025.
  2. ^ "About Yale School of Medicine". Yale School of Medicine. Yale University. Retrieved 25 March 2020.
  3. ^ "Member Directory". National Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 2 January 2025.
  4. ^ "General Directory". National Academy of Medicine. Retrieved 2 January 2025.
  5. ^ "People". Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI).
  6. ^ "National and International Award Recipients". Yale School of Medicine. Retrieved 2 January 2025.
  7. ^ "Clinical Electives at Yale". Yale School of Medicine.
  8. ^ "MD-Master of Health Science Degree (MD-MHS)". Yale School of Medicine.
  9. ^ "Joint MD Programs". Yale School of Medicine.
  10. ^ "Physician Associate Program". Yale School of Medicine.
  11. ^ a b Calott Wang, Dora (August 2020). "The Yale System at 100 Years". Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine. 93 (3): 441–451. PMC 7448392. PMID 32874151.
  12. ^ "2024 Best Medical Schools: Research". U.S. News & World Report.
  13. ^ "BRIMR Rankings of NIH Funding in 2023". Blue Ridge Institute for Medical Research.
  14. ^ Falvey, Kerry L (November 2, 2010). Medicine at Yale : the first 200 years. New Haven, Conn. : Yale University in association with Yale University Press, c2010. ISBN 9780300167306.
  15. ^ Burrow, Gerard N. (October 24, 2007). A history of Yale's School of Medicine passing torches to others. New Haven : Yale University Press, c2002. ISBN 0300092075.
  16. ^ "When house calls were horse calls". Yale School of Medicine.
  17. ^ "A century of women in medicine at Yale". Yale School of Medicine.
  18. ^ Parry, Manon S.; Tedeschi, Sara K. (Aug 2004). "Martha May Eliot: "Spinster in Steel Specs, Adviser on Maternity"". American Journal of Public Health. 94 (8): 1322. PMID 1448446.
  19. ^ "From the field of battle, an early strike at cancer". Yale School of Medicine.
  20. ^ "YCC Timeline of Accomplishments". Yale School of Medicine.
  21. ^ "Insulin Pump Changes Diabetes Treatment". Yale School of Medicine.
  22. ^ "Type 1 Diabetes Drug, Teplizumab, Has Additional Benefits, New Study Shows". Yale Medicine.
  23. ^ "How Ketamine Drug Helps with Depression". Yale Medicine.
  24. ^ Collins, William F. (1991-09-01). "The Sterling Hall of Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine". Journal of Neurosurgery. 75 (3): 489–490. doi:10.3171/jns.1991.75.3.0489. PMID 1869956.
  25. ^ "Cesar Pelli, 19262019". yalealumnimagazine.org. Retrieved 2024-07-08.
  26. ^ "The People Behind the Plaques". medicine.yale.edu. Retrieved 2024-07-08.
  27. ^ "A new space for science". medicine.yale.edu. Retrieved 2024-07-08.
  28. ^ "New building on Amistad Street: a place "where great science is done"". medicine.yale.edu. Retrieved 2024-07-08.
  29. ^ "History and Heritage". Yale New Haven Health.
  30. ^ "Connecticut Mental Health Center". Yale School of Medicine.
  31. ^ a b c Archives, Manuscripts and. "Yale University Library Research Guides: Yale Officers: Medicine". guides.library.yale.edu. Retrieved 2024-06-21.
  32. ^ "DR. GEORGE BLUMER, EX-DEAN AT YALE, 91". The New York Times. 1962-05-17. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-06-11.
  33. ^ "The legacy of Milton Winternitz". medicine.yale.edu. Retrieved 2024-06-11.
  34. ^ "Stanhope Bayne-Jones, M.D." American Association of Immunologists. Retrieved 11 June 2024.
  35. ^ "The American Association of Immunologists - Francis G. Blake". www.aai.org. Retrieved 2024-06-21.
  36. ^ Smith, O.L.K.; Hardy, J.D. (1975). "Cyril Norman Hugh Long" (PDF). National Academy of Sciences. 46: 265–309. PMID 11615672.
  37. ^ Saxon, Wolfgang (1984-12-24). "V.W. LIPPARD, EX-YALE DEAN". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-06-11.
  38. ^ Lavietes, Stuart (2004-01-17). "Dr. Frederick C. Redlich, 93, Biographer of Hitler". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-06-11.
  39. ^ Poppick, Susie (2004-01-21). "Former Med. School Dean Redlich, 93, passes away". Yale Daily News. Retrieved 2024-06-11.
  40. ^ "Yale Dean to Quit Med School Post After Year's Stay | News | The Harvard Crimson". www.thecrimson.com. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
  41. ^ O'Connor, Anahad (2002-02-12). "Robert Berliner, 86, Renal Expert And Former Yale Medical Dean". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
  42. ^ Smith, Harrison (29 July 2022). "Leon Rosenberg, trailblazing human geneticist, dies at 89". The Washington Post. Retrieved 29 May 2024.
  43. ^ "Dr. Robert Donaldson, former medical deputy dean, dies". archives.news.yale.edu. 25 July 2003. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
  44. ^ Zamichow, Nora (1992-04-16). "UCSD Medical Dean Heading Back to Yale : Education: Gerard Burrow, credited with recruiting nationally recognized scientists for the college, is rejoining his alma mater as head of its medical school". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2024-04-22.
  45. ^ a b By (2003-06-24). "YALE MEDICAL SCHOOL DEAN IS LEAVING". Hartford Courant. Retrieved 2024-04-22.
  46. ^ "Alpern reappointed to new term as dean of medical school". medicine.yale.edu. Retrieved 2024-04-16.
  47. ^ "Yale names first female dean of medical school". New Haven Register. Retrieved 2024-04-16.
  48. ^ "Nancy Brown Appointed to Serve as the Next Dean of Yale Medical School". Women In Academia Report. 2019-09-18. Retrieved 2024-04-16.
  49. ^ "Erol Fikrig". Yale School of Medicine.
  50. ^ "John Krystal". Yale School of Medicine.
  51. ^ Altman, Lawrence (January 21, 2001), "Dr. Dorothy Horstmann, 89; Made Strides in Polio Research", The New York Times, p. 36
  52. ^ Curtis, John (Fall 1999 – Winter 2000), "A lifetime making mischief with DNA", Yale Medicine
  53. ^ "200 Years of Internal Medicine at Yale". medicine.yale.edu. Retrieved 2024-08-28.
  54. ^ "Dartmouth Medical School - A Short History of DMS". 2007-03-13. Archived from the original on 2007-03-13. Retrieved 2024-08-28.
  55. ^ "In Memoriam: Ruth Whittemore, Yale Pediatrician Who Participated In First "Blue Baby" Operation". Yale School of Medicine.
  56. ^ "The legacy of Milton Winternitz". Yale School of Medicine.
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41°18′10″N 72°56′10″W / 41.3027°N 72.936°W / 41.3027; -72.936