Through its three colleges, the College of Medicine, the College of Science and Health, and the Mervyn M. Dymally College of Nursing, Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science offers 18 academic programs focused on health professions and health equity. The university confers associate, bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degrees, as well as certificate and postbaccalaureate training programs. CDU is accredited by the
Western Association of Schools and Colleges - Senior College and University Commission. Doctoral degrees offered include the Doctor of Medicine (MD), Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP), and doctoral-level training in biomedical and health sciences fields. Master’s programs are available in disciplines such as Nursing, Public Health, Physician Assistant Studies, Genetic Counseling, and Biomedical Sciences. Bachelor’s degree programs include Nursing, Public Health, Biomedical Sciences, Radiologic Sciences, and Psychology with an emphasis in Community Counseling. An Associate of Science in Radiologic Technology is also offered.
Research Research at CDU focuses on ways to address health disparities within the state of California, nationally, and globally. Research is organized around several health pillars, including cancer, cardiometabolic disease,
HIV, mental health, and health services/health policy research. Research areas such as biostatistics and biomedical informatics cut across the five research pillars. In addition, the university has a Black Maternal Health Center of Excellence, established to address the crisis in health outcomes for Black mothers in the South Los Angeles, partially funded by a $9 million
Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) grant. Faculty and student researchers at CDU conduct ongoing NIH and DoD-funded research on conditions such as hypertension, diabetes, cancer, tobacco use and HIV/AIDs. CDU researchers have secured patents in fields such as cancer therapeutics, metabolic disease, e-cigarette health research, and behavioral health interventions. The university's Department of Research and Health Affairs was initially established as the Office of Research in 1973 to coordinate research activities and provide a focus for encouraging participation in laboratory work.
Physician Assistant program The Physician Assistant program at the Charles R. Drew Postgraduate Medical School (now "CDU") began as MEDEX in 1971. The physician assistant program, which was originally an undergraduate program, returned to the university in August 2016 as a master's degree granting program after a five-year closure period that began in 2011.
Residency programs In September 2017, the L.A. County Board of Supervisors voted to allocate $800,000 to CDU to fund two residency training programs in Family Medicine and Psychiatry. The funds were made available through a Pre-Medical School Affiliation Agreement signed between L.A. County and CDU in October 2017. A Medical School Affiliation Agreement between L.A. County Health Agency and CDU provides the programs with support of up to $14.6 million until 2023. meaning that the university offered residency training as part of its curriculum for the first time since the closure of the former King-Drew Medical Center, and consequently the university's own training programs, in 2007.
Gladys L. Dymally Simulation Center A cornerstone of the university's hands-on clinical training is the Gladys L. Dymally Simulation Center, a 7,000-square-foot facility that serves students from all three colleges. The center provides a realistic environment where students can develop and practice clinical and decision-making skills without risk to patients. It features a range of simulated healthcare environments, including an intensive care unit, operating room, labor and delivery suite, and clinical exam rooms. Training is facilitated through high-fidelity human patient simulators, task trainers, and standardized patients (actors), all recorded by an advanced
audio-visual system for detailed debriefing sessions.
Affiliations and designations CDU is recognized as a minority-serving institution by the U.S. Office for Civil Rights, as well as a historically black graduate institution under the U.S. Department of Education's Strengthening Historically Black Graduate Institutions Program, also known as Title III B. The university is also a member of the
Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities and the
Thurgood Marshall College Fund. == Student body ==