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Loma Linda University is not ranked in the 2022 version of the U.S. News & World Report Best Colleges Ranking, but its nursing program is tied for 76th. [28] It was listed as the 994th best university in the world and the 213th best university in the United States by the Center for World University Rankings in their 2018–2019 rankings.
Sutton graduated from medical school at Loma Linda University in 1985, and completed her internship and residency in psychiatry at Letterman Army Medical Center. [4] [5] She is also a graduate of the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College, with an M.S. in national security strategic studies, and the National War College. [6] [7]
La Sierra University (La Sierra [4] or LSU) is a private, Seventh-day Adventist university in Riverside, California.Founded in 1922 [5] as La Sierra Academy, it later became La Sierra College, a liberal arts college, and then was merged into Loma Linda University (LLU) in 1967 and became the Loma Linda University La Sierra College of Arts and Sciences (or better known as La Sierra Campus of LLU).
In 2018, he was awarded "Alumnus of the Year" by Loma Linda University, [28] being described as "a maker of social change who betters understanding of the Christian tradition." [ 29 ] He is regularly invited to offer plenary addresses at conferences relating to questions around disability and religion, or Christian Ethics more broadly construed.
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Diehl obtained a Master of Public Health and Doctor of Health Science from Loma Linda University in 1975. [5] He was a professor of preventative medicine at Loma Linda University School of Medicine. [1] Diehl established the Lifestyle Medicine Institute in Loma Linda, California which enhanced knowledge of the role lifestyle plays in health. [6]
From 1911, he taught physiology at Loma Linda University. [4] He was medical director of Glendale Sanitarium in southern California during 1923–1924 and 1941–1946. He served as General Conference medical secretary for 14 years until 1936. [1] He was the editor of Life and Health magazine, 1933–1935.
Gauntlett attended Atlantic Union College in Massachusetts, and began medical school at the College of Medical Evangelists, part of Loma Linda University, in 1946. At Loma Linda, she was the only Black woman in her class of 96 students, and she had to live off-campus, because there was no on-campus housing available for a Black woman student.