The school is committed to helping fill the nationwide physician shortage, contributing to cutting-edge medical research and continuing its original mission to reduce health disparities and train students for work in under-served communities, he said to students, faculty and community members on the campus grounds.
After being placed on probation in 2009, the university was reaccredited by the Western Assn. of Schools and Colleges last year. The university also received new accreditation for an urban public health program and a nursing school.
“There was a time that our future was anything but guaranteed,” Carlisle said. “Those days are behind us.”
The university’s decline coincided with the problems at King-Drew Medical Center, which closed five years ago and is scheduled to reopen in 2014. Charles R. Drew was forced to close its residency program. read more…