In 1963, Governor
Nelson Rockefeller commissioned the report “Education of Health Professions,” also known as the Muir Report. This document recommended the creation of a Health Sciences Center and an academic hospital to serve the need of the fastest growing counties in New York at the time,
Nassau and
Suffolk. In response to the Muir Report, an objective was set to build an academic medical center to lure established doctors to Long Island and to train new physicians. In 1965, planning for the new medical center began under the leadership of
Dr. Edmund D. Pellegrino. In 1968, Dr. Pellegrino and
Dr. Alfred Knudson, the school's first appointed Professor of Medicine, presented a vision for a "revolutionary approach" towards medical education, including a compressed three-year clinical training period, early direct patient contact, and encouragement of specialization. The
Stony Brook University School of Medicine opened on August 10, 1971.
Pellegrino was appointed the first Dean of Medicine. The inaugural class of 17 medical doctors graduated in 1974. During the early years of the School of Medicine, the
Northport Veteran Affairs Medical Center was used as the primary clinical site. Clinical training was shifted over to Stony Brook University Hospital after it opened in 1980. The School of Medicine expanded rapidly in the ensuing years to encompass an educational consortium of hospitals, including the Northport VA Medical Center,
Nassau County Medical Center,
Long Island Jewish Hospital,
Queens Hospital, and
Nassau Hospital, as well as establishing the Department of Surgery under Harry S. Soroff and
Clarence Dennis. Starting in 2013, the RSOM campus underwent a $423 million expansion project. In November 2018, the Medical and Research Translation (MART) building, an eight-story research center, opened with medical education/classroom spaces and the Stony Brook Cancer Center. The expansion project was completed the following year with the opening of the Stony Brook Children's Hospital and a new 150-bed Hospital Pavilion.
MagicAid, a non-profit organization, was founded by medical students at the school in 2016. Stony Brook University School of Medicine was renamed the
Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University in 2018. This was done to acknowledge over $500 million in donations from employees of
Renaissance Technologies — a hedge fund located 2 miles from the Stony Brook University campus — with $150 million being pledged by
Jim and Marilyn Simons, and the
Simons Foundation. The name change acknowledges not only the namesake of Simons' hedge fund, Renaissance Technologies, but also the "renaissance" in biomedical research and innovation that the donations have fueled. The donations have helped create 9 academic and research centers, endowed 34 chairs and professorships, and funded $35 million in scholarships and fellowships. ==About==