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The New England Female Medical College was the first institution to medically train women, founded in 1848. [3] The institution was reformed and renamed in 1873 when Boston University merged with the New England Female Medical College and began to admit men as well as women.
Boston City Hospital was the first municipal hospital in the United States, opening in 1864. [4]In 1960 Boston University's Medical School founded the Boston University Medical Center in the South End neighborhood to provide residency programs and research opportunities for students and faculty.
Mildred Fay Jefferson, 1951, professor of surgery at the Boston University School of Medicine; William Jencks, 1951, biochemist and professor at Brandeis University; Hershel Jick, 1956, professor of medicine at Boston University School of Medicine; Eric A. Johnson, microbiologist and professor of bacteriology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
In 2023, enrollment at these colleges and universities ranged from 33 students at Boston Baptist College to 36,624 students at Boston University. The first to be founded was Harvard University , also the oldest institution of higher education in the United States, while the most recently established institution is Sattler College .
Pages in category "Boston University School of Medicine alumni" The following 89 pages are in this category, out of 89 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. *
The school was, from the very beginning, coeducational, and of the twenty-two students who graduated that first year, eight were women. When the trustees changed the name of the institution from "Tufts College" to "Tufts University" in 1954, the medical school became the "Tufts University School of Medicine."
Levy received his B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1976 and his M.D. from Boston University School of Medicine in 1980. He then completed his internal medicine residency at University Hospital, Boston, as well as a research fellowship in cardiology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard School of Public Health.
Georgiana Jagiello (CAS '49) – physician, known for perfecting the technique for in vitro fertilization, first woman appointed to an endowed chair at Columbia University Medical School, first woman appointed to the Institute of Advanced Study at the UIUC; Rollin Williams (SSW '49) – first African-American professor at the University of ...