AMA marks milestone in medical education

| 6 Min Read

CHICAGO — With five medical schools this year graduating their first classes of students fully trained under a transformative national curricula redesign initiative, the American Medical Association (AMA) is highlighting innovations from recent years that have better trained the next generation of physicians. Launched five years ago, the AMA’s Accelerating Change in Medical Education Consortium includes 32 of the country’s leading medical schools working together to create the medical school of the future.

The first medical students to graduate after receiving full training using the Consortium’s innovative curricula include, NYU School of Medicine, Indiana University (IU) School of Medicine, the Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University, Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) School of Medicine, and Penn State College of Medicine. These schools were among the 11 founding medical schools (PDF) to receive $1 million AMA grants to develop curricula to reimagine medical education and join the AMA Consortium.

Full press release available when you sign in

Sign in to the AMA website to get the full version of this press release. 

AMA membership has its advantages

  • Be a part of the nation's largest physician organization
  • Play a role in shaping the future of health care
  • Enjoy exclusive perks and savings

Not a member? Become a member now.

 

FEATURED STORIES

U.S. Capitol

In health care’s defining moment, AMA helps drive positive change

| 6 Min Read
Smiling woman sits on couch while typing on laptop

Medicare telehealth coverage renewed for two years

| 5 Min Read
Three businesspeople brainstorming together on a whiteboard in an office

Don’t miss out on this unique physician advocacy fellowship

| 4 Min Read
 Child standing in front of a shelf full of fresh products in a supermarket

What doctors wish patients knew about food allergies

| 13 Min Read