Governor Celebrates First Day of Classes at New MCG/UGA Medical Partnership
Monday, August 9, 2010 |
Contact: Office of Communications 404-651-7774
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“This was a pretty clear decision for me when you look at the per capita number of doctors in
The inaugural class of the four-year medical education program consists of 40 MCG students who will study basic science and clinical skills in a program that mirrors the curriculum of the
“It’s important to note that they did this in the midst of this economic downturn,”
MCG President Dr. Ricardo Azziz and UGA President Michael F. Adams both emphasized how the partnership leverages the strengths of the state’s only public medical school and its largest and most comprehensive research university.
“Only through collaboration will we succeed in addressing the growing health needs of our state, our nation, and our world,” Azziz said. “Only through collaboration will we generate the cutting edge discoveries that will transform the way we care for our people.”
“It has taken a lot of people coming together to make this possible,” Adams said. “The development of a health sciences campus and the admission of the first class of medical students have been among the most important developments, I believe, in my time here at the university.”
MCG/UGA Medical Partnership student Justin Brooten of
“One word which characterizes our shared pursuit,” he said, “is passion – a passion to learn, a passion to care, and a passion to contribute.”
He added that the partnership will increase opportunities for students to engage in interdisciplinary studies and that the smaller class sizes in
The partnership is part of an overall plan to increase the MCG School of Medicine's class size from 190 to 300 students by 2020 to help meet the need for physicians in a state that ranks in the top 10 both in population and population growth, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
“There are counties in
The students will be educated in the
“UGA will become a much stronger research university with the inclusion of medical education,” said UGA Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Jere Morehead, “and today’s dedication of the interim medical partnership building is precursor of greater things that will come in improving health care for the people of Georgia.”
The first graduates of the partnership will graduate in 2014 and can begin practicing, depending on the chosen specialty, in 2017 after completion of postgraduate education. By 2020, the partnership is expected to educate 60 students per year in
“We have been given the opportunity to influence the health of the state of
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Note to editors: High-resolution photos for download are available at the links below:
A small group learning class led by Terrence Steyer, M.D. and Eve Gallman, Ph.D. was one of the first classes of the Medical College of Georgia/University of Georgia Medical Partnership held Monday, August 9, 2010 at the Interim Medical Partnership Building in Athens, Ga. (Credit: University of Georgia/Dot Paul): http://www.photo.alumni.uga.edu/news/26926-122.jpg
MCG/UGA Medical Partnership student Julie Pinheiro participates in a small group learning class on the first day of class at the Interim Medical Partnership Building in Athens, Ga. (Credit: University of Georgia/Dot Paul): http://www.photo.alumni.uga.edu/news/26926-132.jpg
MCG/UGA Medical School Partnership student Rachel Taylor unloads books at her locker on the first day of class, August 9, 2010, at the Interim Medical Partnership Building in Athens, Ga. (Credit: University of Georgia/Dot Paul): http://www.photo.alumni.uga.edu/news/26926-018.jpg
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