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Rush Medical College

Rush Medical College is the medical school of Rush University, located in the Illinois Medical District, about 3 km (2 miles) west of the Loop in Chicago. Offering a full-time Doctor of Medicine program, the school was chartered in 1837, and today is affiliated primarily with Rush University Medical Center, and nearby John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County. In 2021, Rush Medical College was ranked 64th among research institutions in the U.S. by U.S. News & World Report.[2]

Type

1837 (1837)

$632 million (2018)[1]

Cynthia Brincat (interim)

2,600

525

,
Illinois
,
US

Students[edit]

For the 2016–2017 academic year, Rush Medical College was home to 515 medical students. For the entering class of 2016–2017, a total of 10,754 applications were received, with 138 students matriculating.For the class of 2022–23, 14,247 applications were received with 144 matriculating.[11]

Curriculum[edit]

The curriculum at Rush Medical College is academically challenging, rigorous and integrates all basic science and clinical components. In 2010, the Rush Medical College curriculum underwent an extensive transformation as it implemented a system-based curriculum. Each organ system is organized into an individual block that integrates material from anatomy, biochemistry, histology, physiology, microbiology, pathophysiology, immunology, and pharmacology. Preclinical years are graded as Pass/Fail, and clinical years are graded as Honors, High Pass, Pass, Fail.[12] There are currently no external or internal rankings for preclinical students.


Concurrently, students in the first two years are enrolled in the EXPLORE Program. This program introduces students to various aspects of medicine and provides hands-on physical examination training. Students obtain clinical experience starting in the first weeks of school as they are required to work alongside a mentoring physician in any field of choice. An evidence-based medicine (EBM) course is included during the first and second year. A USMLE Step 1 passing score is required for promotion into the clinical years. USMLE Step 2 CK and CS must be taken by November 1 of the fourth year, and passing both is required for graduation.

– Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1870[13]

J. M. Adams

– Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly

Charles Erwin Booth

– Founder of Chicago Dental Infirmary

Truman W. Brophy

– One of the founders of Alpha Phi Alpha[14]

Henry Arthur Callis

– Protocol chair for the HPTN 052 study which was regarded by the journal Science as the breakthrough of the year in 2011[15]

Myron S. Cohen

– physician who first identified the cause of hemolytic disease of the newborn[16]

Ruth Darrow

– Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly and of the Wisconsin State Senate

Daniel Downs

– Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly

Samuel Abbott Ferrin

– Editor of JAMA from 1924 to 1950. He was notable for exposing quacks and debunking dubious medical practices.

Morris Fishbein

– Thoracic surgeon best known for his research linking smoking to lung cancer[17]

Evarts Graham

– physician who first described sickle cell anemia, and a type of myocardial infarction.

James B. Herrick

– a national president of Sigma Delta Epsilon

Marie Agnes Hinrichs

– president of the American Medical Association (AMA), the American College of Physicians and the American Association for the Study and Control of Rheumatic Diseases.

Ernest E. Irons

— virologist and pioneer of diagnostic virology

Edwin Herman Lennette

– African-American pathologist known for his research on medicine and race[18]

Julian Herman Lewis

– Member of the Wisconsin State Senate from 1897 to 1901[19]

Andrew Caldwell Mailer

– Mayor of Green Bay, Wisconsin

Robert E. Minahan

End and tackle in the NFL, surgeon[20]

Clem Neacy

– Dean of Oregon Dental School

Dean Harold Noyes

– In 1847, became the first African American to receive a Doctor of Medicine degree from an American medical school[21]

David J. Peck

– Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1876 and of the Wisconsin State Senate from 1878 to 1879[22]

Benoni Reynolds

– Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly and of the Wisconsin State Senate[23]

James C. Reynolds

Governor of Idaho (1947–1951)

C. A. Robins

("Dr. Bob") – Co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous Bob Smith (doctor)

Robert Holbrook Smith

– neurologist and psychiatrist

Esther Somerfeld-Ziskind

– Physician and member of the University of Michigan 1901 National Championship football team.[24]

Benjamin H. Southworth

Mayo Clinic sports physician and orthopedic surgeon[25][26]

Michael Stuart

– lung, heart and transplant pathologist

Henry Tazelaar

- best known for founding the International College of Surgeons.

Max Thorek

– bacteriologist, medical researcher

Ruth May Tunnicliff

U.S. Army Medical Corps officer nominated for Nobel Prize in Medicine

Murray Sanders

Bishop of Chicago, founder of hospital taken over by Rush Medical College

James Oliver Van de Velde

Rush University Medical Center

Rush University

Illinois Medical District

West Loop

(1953). The Story of Rush Medical College. Chicago: Board of Trustees of Rush Medical College.

Irons, Ernest E.

Official website

at the University of Chicago Special Collections Research Center

Guide to the Rush Medical College Records 1923-1941