State University of New York Upstate Medical University

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State University of New York Upstate Medical University
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Motto Latin: Crescat scientia vita excolatur
Motto in English
Let knowledge grow from more to more; and so be human life enriched
Established 1834
Type Public
Endowment US $40.2 million[1]
Interim President Gregory Eastwood, M.D.[2][3][4]
Academic staff
2504 (2010)[5]
Students 1542 (2010)[5]
Location Syracuse and Binghamton, NY, US
Campus Urban, 120 acres (2.4 km²)
Colors blue and white
Affiliations SUNY
Website www.upstate.edu

The State University of New York Upstate Medical University is a SUNY health sciences university located primarily in the University Hill district of Syracuse, New York. SUNY Upstate is an upper-division transfer and graduate college with degree programs within the College of Medicine, College of Nursing, College of Health Professions, and the College of Graduate Studies. Its Syracuse campus includes Upstate University Hospital.

In addition to affiliations with Binghamton Hospital and 22 other hospitals throughout central New York, where much of the core clinical teaching takes place, Upstate has numerous partnerships, including a joint Ph.D. Program in Biomedical Engineering with Syracuse University; science enrichment programs for local youth in tandem with the SC Hope Clinic; and SUNY-ESF.

It directly generates 8,195 jobs, making it Central New York's largest employer.[5]

History

Geneva Medical College

The present-day university's earliest predecessor was Geneva Medical College founded 1834 as part of Geneva College, today known as Hobart and William Smith Colleges. The new medical college was located in Geneva, New York, and became the first college to grant a full M.D. to a woman, Elizabeth Blackwell, in 1849. In 1871 the college was disbanded and its assets donated to the recently founded Syracuse University, which subsequently founded a medical college.

In 1950 Syracuse University sold the college to the State University of New York (SUNY), where it remains today. After carrying the names "SUNY Upstate Medical Center" (initially) and "SUNY Health Science Center at Syracuse" (1986), the institution was renamed to its present nomenclature in 1999.

A clinical campus in Binghamton, New York, was established in 1979.

A plaque in the lobby of Weiskotten Hall aptly describes one of the institution's driving philosophies: "Dedicated to all those of scientific mind and investigative spirit who purpose to serve humanity."

Campus

File:Weiskotten Hall.JPG
Weiskotten Hall, College of Medicine

The university's main campus is located in downtown Syracuse, New York flanking Interstate 81. It includes Upstate University Hospital, the Institute for Human Performance, Setnor Academic Building, Central New York Gamma Knife Center, Jacobsen Hall, Regional Oncology Center, Upstate Golisano Children's Hospital, Weiskotten Hall (which includes the Health Sciences Library), Silverman Hall and Clark Tower dormitory for 170 students.

A clinical campus in Binghamton, New York was established in 1979. Medical students spend their first two years of medical school in Syracuse, New York and then approximately a quarter of the class completes their training in Binghamton.

Upstate Golisano Children's Hospital

Organization

Units of Upstate Medical University include:

  • The College of Medicine is one of the oldest medical schools in New York. More physicians practicing in Central New York received their training here than at any other medical school. Upstate ranks eighth nationally for the number of graduates who are on the faculty at academic medical centers across the country.[citation needed]
  • The College of Nursing offers graduate programs in: nurse practitioner (family and psychiatric), and clinical nurse specialist.
  • The College of Health Professions is the gateway for students seeking to enter some of the most competitive and highly paid careers in health care today: Physician Assistant (MS), Physical Therapy (DPT), Cardiovascular Perfusion (BS), Medical Technology (BS and MS), Medical Biotechnology (BS), Radiation Therapy (BS and BPS), Respiratory Therapy (BS), Medical Imaging (BS and BPS), and Ultrasound (BS and BPS).
  • The School of Graduate Studies is known for its basic science education and research. Students have the opportunity to work side by side with neuroscientists and basic researchers.[citation needed]
Upstate University Hospital
  • The university operates the Southern Tier Center on Aging in conjunction with the SUNY Binghamton.[6]

David R. Smith, M.D., was president of Upstate Medical University from 2006-2013.[2][4][7]

Notable alumni and professors

  • Robert B. Barlow, Ph.D. - Professor of Ophthalmology, Director of Center for Vision Research
  • Elizabeth Blackwell, M.D. - First woman in the United States to be awarded the degree of Medical Doctor. Founder of The New York Infirmary, now Lower Manhattan Hospital.
  • Joe Dervay, M.D. - NASA Flight Surgeon
  • Maxwell Mozell, Ph.D. - Distinguished Service Professor of Clinical Olfactory Research Institute and Chemosensory
  • Patricia Numann, M.D. - Professor Emeritus of Surgery
  • Frederick Parker, M.D. - Professor of Cardiac Surgery, Chairman of the Department of Surgery
  • Robert Rohner, M.D. - Professor of Pathology, Philip Armstrong Award Winner
  • David P. Schenkein, M.D. - Senior Vice President Clinical Hematology/Oncology at Genentech Inc. (San Francisco, CA); Former Senior Vice President of Oncology Clinical Development at Millennium Pharmaceuticals Inc. and developer of cancer drug Velcade
  • Elinor Spring-Mills, Ph.D. - Distinguished Service Professor of Anatomy and Cell Biology; one of the first females to ever be awarded a doctorate degree from Harvard Medical School[8]
  • Thomas Szasz, M.D. - Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry
  • Sid Watkins, M.D. – Professor of Neurosurgery, 1962–1970; later became head of the Formula One on-track medical team
  • Irwin M. Weiner, M.D. - Professor of Renal Physiology, architect of the SUNY Graduate Research Initiative
  • William J. Williams, M.D. - Professor of Clinical Medicine, author of the Williams Manual of Hematology

References

Notes

  1. As of June 30, 2009. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Mulder, James T. (2013, November 7). "Upstate Medical president is resigning ' ... to avoid further distraction for the University'," The Post Standard. Accessed: November 9, 2013.
  3. Mulder, James T. (2013, November 5). "Upstate Medical University's president put on leave as SUNY reviews his compensation," The Post-Standard. Accessed: November 8, 2013.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Upstate Leadership: Executive Team," Upstate website. Accessed: November 9, 2013.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 "Upstate Medical University at a Glance," Upstate website. Accessed: November 9, 2013.
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. Mulder, James T. (2013, November 10). "The rise and fall of Dr. David R. Smith, former Upstate president accused of padding his pay," The Post Standard. Accessed: November 10, 2013.
  8. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Further reading

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External links

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