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Duke, Singapore Create a Medical School
In an international effort to share education
strategies, research, and health care know-how, Duke Medical Center
and the National University of Singapore have formalized a partnership
to establish that country’s first graduate medical school.
The new school will be based on Duke’s medical-school curriculum
and the U.S. model, in which students enter medical school after
earning their baccalaureate degrees. The new Graduate Medical School
(GMS) will supplement the existing National University of Singapore’s
medical school, which is based on the British model, where students
enter medical school with the equivalent of a high-school diploma.
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The government of Singapore has launched an impressive and thoughtful
campaign to reorient their educational and economic emphasis toward
biomedicine,” says Ralph Snyderman, M.D., chancellor for
health affairs and president and CEO of Duke University Health
System. “This new school and Duke will play a key role in
this effort.”
For Duke, the endeavor represents an opportunity to work in a rapidly
evolving research and clinical-care environment in a region of
the world with great scientific and economic potential, Snyderman
says. Moreover, there is a mutual commitment to “prospective
health planning” that stresses preventive care and individualized
plans for confronting health care.
Duke will play a key role in the new school. The first dean will
be from Duke, and Duke will help select and evaluate both students
and faculty members. In addition, the GMS will follow Duke’s
four-year curriculum, which features one year of basic science,
one clinical year, one research year, and one final clinical year.
This curriculum is focused on producing physician-scientists and
leaders in new approaches to medicine, says Snyderman. The program
will lead to a Doctor of Medicine degree.
The government of Singapore approached Duke about the partnership,
because of the medical center’s reputation and the medical
school’s distinctive educational program, its research activity,
and its faculty resources, according to Singapore’s Ministry
of Education. It expects Duke’s involvement to raise the
profile of the GMS and enhance the standing of Singapore as a regional
center for medical education and research.
Singapore, with an economy and health system equivalent to the
United Kingdom and France, has a population of 4.2 million.
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