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chair.jpgWelcome to the Brown Medical School Department of Surgery Web page. This site serves as the primary source for information about the Department of Surgery and is updated regularly with regard to conferences and departmental activities.

The Brown University School of Medicine was founded in 1811, but for logistical reasons was disbanded in 1827. The year 1963 marked the formation of the Masters of Medical Science Program, which evolved into the Brown University Program in Medicine. Full accreditation as a four-year medical school was granted in 1975 and since then the School has experienced enormous growth. Brown Medical School is comprised of approximately 1,500 faculty members: approximately 400 full-time campus and hospital-based faculty, 1,000 clinical (voluntary) faculty, and 90 adjunct, emeritus, or visiting professors. The total professional aggregate of the basic science faculty is approximately 100 scientists. Faculty serve the institute centers and special programs in the Brown Medical School, to include the Clinical Cancer Center (NIH Clinical Cancer Center) and the Center for Surgical Research. Each center is directed by a full-time faculty member of the Medical School. Brown Medical School and the Department of Surgery respond to the needs of increasingly diverse student, resident, faculty, practicing physician, and patient populations as we meet the challenges of an ever-changing health care environment.

OR imageThe Department of Surgery was established to incorporate all traditional surgical specialties as well as those that have ultimately gained departmental status in many established medical schools. The Department of Surgery includes General Surgery, Anesthesiology, Cardiothoracic Surgery, Critical Care Medicine (Surgery), Emergency Medicine, Endocrine Surgery, Ophthalmology, Oral Maxillofacial Surgery, Otolaryngology, Pediatric Surgery, Plastic Surgery, Surgical Oncology, Surgical Endocrinology, Trauma and Burns, Vascular Surgery and Urology. The Department strives to adhere to the mission of the Medical School to educate physicians in the scientific, ethical and humanistic dimensions of medicine and to guide them in the art and science of the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of illness. We offer a diversified curriculum of premedical and medical studies that encompasses all facets of the medical sciences, fostering innovative approaches and sound medical education. Unlike traditional university medical schools, the Department of Surgery encompasses the faculty and facilities of five affiliated hospitals: its parent institution Rhode Island Hospital and four affiliated institutions - The Miriam Hospital, Veterans Administration Medical Center, Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island, and Women & Infants Hospital.

OR imageResearch endeavors are increasingly affected by diminished Federal, pharmaceutical and industrial support; however, support of basic and clinical research is imperative to the advancement of the surgical sciences and clinical medicine. It is, therefore, the objective of the Department of Surgery to enhance integration of basic sciences with medical education, healthcare delivery and public health policy.

The goal of the Brown Medical School Department of Surgery is to foster an environment for the optimal education of residents and medical students and to prepare them to assume their roles in scientific and medical communities. If, after visiting this web page, you have questions about the program, please contact Mrs. Pamela Richardson in the Surgical Education Office at (401) 444-5180 or use the e-mail link to the left.



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