indiana university school of Medicine Fact Sheet for 2014-2015 M.D. AnnuAl TuiTion

Indiana University School of Medicine
Fact Sheet for 2014-2015
2014 Entering Class
• The IU School of Medicine has
nine medical campuses across
Indiana: Indianapolis, Bloomington,
Evansville, Fort Wayne, Gary,
Lafayette, Muncie, South Bend and
Terre Haute.
• The IU School of Medicine has over
1,300 M.D. students and nearly 250
Ph.D. students.
• The IU School of Medicine received
more than $260 million in research
awards in FY 2014, including over
$100 million in NIH funding.
• The IU School of Medicine has
nearly 825,000 square feet of
dedicated research space.
• The IU School of Medicine has the
only NCI-designated cancer center in
Indiana that provides patient care.
• The discovery of the cure for
testicular cancer was made in 1974 at
the IU School of Medicine.
• IU faculty have performed many
“firsts” in Indiana including
transplants of the kidney, liver,
cornea, bone marrow, pancreas, and
infant and newborn hearts.
• More than half of all physicians in
Indiana trained as students and/
or residents at the IU School of
Medicine.
• Nearly 40 percent of IU School of
Medicine graduates enter primary
care specialties.
M.D. Students
Number of applicants.....................5,485
Number of students enrolled.............352
Male...............................191
Female............................161
Minorities……........….....68
In-state............................263
Out-of-state……...............89
Average GPA of class.......3.74
Average MCAT score.....31/0
Graduate Students
Number of students enrolled
Ph.D. students……..............32
M.D./Ph.D. students........…8
Master of Science In Medical
Science (MSMS)….........…....28
Master’s students……...........55
Certificate Students.................8
M.D. Annual Tuition
In-State………………....…...$33,349
Out-of-State………….…..... …..$53,703
Residents and Fellows
Number of accredited residency
and fellowship programs.....84
residents and fellows......1,154
Faculty & Staff
Full-time faculty..............................2,017
Part-time faculty………...…………..203
Volunteer faculty.............................3,194
Staff.............................................1,716
Research
Grants awarded for fiscal year
2013-2014.........…$260,736,170
Awarded research studies for fiscal
year 2013-2014…...............1,510
Research centers and institutes..........29
Total Student Body
M.D. Programs…....…..…1,379
Ph.D. Program…...…....…..191
M.D./Ph.D. Program…….....49
Master of Science In Medical
Science (MSMS)……...….….28
Master’s Programs…..….....126
Health Professions…..........264
Certificate Program...............9
Subsets of total student body
Male.............................971
Female........................1,075
Minorities....................452
In-state........................1,531
Out-of-state.....................515
M.D. students at Indianapolis
Campus….…....…….…823
M.D. students at
Northwest......................77
South Bend…..........................70
Fort Wayne…........................81
Evansville…....................57
Terre Haute…........................69
Bloomington..................85
Lafayette........................66
Muncie..........................51
Living Alumni…..........................19,480
Website
medicine.iu.edu
E-mail addresses:
[email protected]
[email protected]
Financial Aid…[email protected]
Important Numbers:
Student Admissions…....(317) 274-3772
Student Financial Aid ....(317) 274-8568
Residency Program …....(317) 274-8282
Dean’s Office……...…….(317) 278-3048
Alumni Office……...…....(317) 274-8828
Development Office.........(317) 274-3270
Media Relations.…......….(317) 274-7722
Continuing Medical Ed....(317) 274-0104
CME Registration …....… (317) 274-8353
Mailing Address:
IU School of Medicine
340 West 10th Street, Suite 6200
Indianapolis, IN 46202
Indiana University School of Medicine
Fact Sheet for 2014-2015
1903 IU School of Medicine is established
in Bloomington, Indiana.
1906 Third-year medical students begin
clinical study in Indianapolis.
1911 First courses in medical social work
are offered.
1914 Long Hospital, the first IU hospital,
is dedicated.
1974 IU Distinguished Professor Lawrence program begins.
1919 Medical School Building, now
Emerson Hall, opens.
1983 IU School of Medicine awarded fiscal IU School of Medicine opens Elks
Cancer Research Center.
reaches 100 - among largest in the U.S.
1924 Riley Memorial Association opens James
Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children and grants ownership to IU.
1928 Coleman Hospital for Women opens,
the first Indiana hospital exclusively
for obstetrics and gynecology.
1933 Department of Medical Illustrations established.
1952 Roudebush VA Medical Center opens; staffed by IU physicians.
LaRue Carter Hospital opens; staffed by IU physicians.
1956 Institute for Psychiatric Research is
Diabetes Research and Training Center.
and medical control of Wishard
Memorial Hospital.
1987 National Institutes of Health funds Alcohol Research Center at IU School
of Medicine.
Walther Oncology Center established.
1989 Medical Research and Ruth Lilly
Library Building is dedicated.
1990 Herman B Wells Center for Pediatric Research is dedicated. Bowen Research Center established.
National Institutes of Health funds Midwest Sexually Transmitted Disease
Collaborative Research Center.
1991 National Institutes of Health funds Indiana University Alzheimer Disease Center.
1995 National Institutes of Health establishes
a National Gene Vector Laboratory at IU School of Medicine.
dedicated.
1996 Indiana Cancer Pavilion is dedicated.
1958 Medical Science Building opens, later 1997 IU Hospital and Riley Hospital for re-named after John VanNuys, M.D., dean, 1947-1964.
IU School of Medicine moves to
Indianapolis.
1959 IU School of Medicine establishes the Division of Allied Health Sciences.
Medical Sciences Program established
in Bloomington.
1963 Krannert Institute of Cardiology
is dedicated.
1967 Regenstrief Institute for Health Care
is established
1970 Indiana University Hospital opens.
1971 Statewide Medical Education Centers established.
Children consolidate with Methodist Hospital of Indiana to form Clarian Health.
Indiana University Center for Aging Research opens.
Department of Health and Human Services funds National Center of
Excellence in Women’s Health at IU.
Indiana University Cancer Research Institute is dedicated.
1999 IU Cancer Center receives National
Cancer Institute designation.
2000 Riley Hospital for Children opens Riley Outpatient Center.
Indiana Genomics Initiative (INGEN™) formed with $105 million grant from
Lilly Endoment.
IUPUI campus.
2003 Biotechnology Research and Training 1920 IU School of Medicine freshman class 2001 IU Center for Bioethics established on 1977 National Institutes of Health funds 1915 IU Continuing Medical Education
Einhorn, M.D., pioneers cure for
testicular cancer.
Center and Research II buildings open.
2005 IUSM-South Bend opens new center with University of Notre Dame, dedicate Raclin-Carmichael Hall.
2006 The Fairbanks Institute is established
by BioCrossroads with IU School of
Medicine and Regenstrief Institute.
2007 Health Information and Translational
Sciences building dedicated; this extends
the IUSM campus to the Indianapolis Central Canal.
The first class of PhD students enter the Indiana BioMedical Gateway Program.
2008The Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center opens a
new patient care facility.
2009 Joseph E. Walther Hall building is
dedicated.
IUSM-Fort Wayne opens the Medical Education and Research Building.
2010 Lilly Endowment Inc. boosts research at IUSM with a $60 million grant for the Indiana Physician Scientist Inititive
2011 IUSM-South Bend and University of
Notre Dame dedicate Harper Hall.
Eugene and Marilyn Glick Eye Institute
is dedicated.
2012 The IU School of Medicine and Indiana University Health each invest $75 million
in the new Strategic Research Initiative, to
recruit new scientists in neurosciences, cancer and cardiovascular disease, and to speed discoveries into new therapies.
The Department of Public Health,
established by the school in 1998,
becomes the Indiana University Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health.
2013IU School of Medicine breaks ground for
the Indiana University Neurosciences
Research Building, a 138,000-square-foot
building designed to bring neuroscientists
together to advance multidisciplinary
research.
2014The IU School of Medicine and the
Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana
open one of the world’s most advanced
laboratories designed to improve the
understanding and treatment of those
with moderate-to-severe brain injuries.