Upstate is an upper-division transfer and doctoral university
classified among "Special Focus Four-Year: Medical Schools and Centers", 1 of only 54 in the nation specializing solely in health care careers. This means students applying to the
bachelors programs take the prerequisite courses (minimum 60 semester hours) at another college and then complete their junior and senior years of the bachelor's degree at Upstate for their program of study. Students in the graduate and post-graduate programs enter having completed a bachelor's and/or a master's degree before enrollment. Total enrollment is 1,592 students (including 699 medical students) in addition to 619 residents and clinical fellows. Upstate employs 623 full-time faculty members and 1,809 part-time and voluntary faculty. Students in the College of Medicine have access to research facilities, classrooms, laboratories and clinical facilities, including the Clinical Skills Teaching Center,
Surgical Simulation, Research and Training Center, Gross Anatomy lab and Research Labs at the Institute of Human Performance (IHP). All College of Medicine students spend their first two years at the Upstate Medical University campus in Syracuse. At the start of the third year, one-fourth of the class moves to the
Binghamton Clinical Campus, one hour south of Syracuse, for their third year, and most elect to stay for their fourth. The rest of the class remains in Syracuse. As an academic medical center, most of the physicians providing services at Upstate University Hospital are also faculty at Upstate's College of Medicine, demonstrating an ongoing commitment to education and training. Several departments —
Internal Medicine,
Ophthalmology,
Urology,
Orthopedics, and
Neurosurgery, in particular — have considerable faculty and external funding dedicated to their research mission. Physicians also partner with external institutions, such as nearby
Syracuse and
Cornell Universities for
tissue engineering and brain tumor research. •
Crouse Hospital, in operation since 1887, serves more than 22,000 discharges, over 82,000 emergency services visits, and more than 365,000 outpatient visits each year • Upstate Community Hospital has a medical staff of 460 physicians who provide outpatient and surgical services to more than 12,000 patients each year , home of the
Syracuse Crunch In addition, there are more than 20 clinical departments at the college fully accredited by the
Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), training more than 700 resident physicians. On December 22, 2021, the College of Medicine was renamed the Alan and Marlene Norton College of Medicine in recognition of a $25 million estate gift made by Alan and Marlene Norton. Alan Norton graduated from the College of Medicine in 1966 and then went on to complete his residency and fellowship training at the Wilmer Eye Institute of Johns Hopkins University and Massachusetts Eye and Ear. On April 20, 2022, SUNY Upstate Medical University and Syracuse University reached a partnership to start a joint M.D./MBA program that will allow students the opportunity to earn two degrees within a five-year program.
College of Graduate Studies The College of Graduate Studies awards the
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) and
Master of Science (M.S.) in a variety of
Biomedical Research Departments and is known for its basic science education and research. The graduate studies program began in 1947 when the college first offered master's and PhD degrees in biochemistry. The college now has graduate programs for
Biochemistry &
Molecular Biology,
Cell & Developmental Biology,
Microbiology &
Immunology,
Neuroscience,
Pharmacology and
Physiology. In addition, the college, along with the College of Medicine,e offers a joint MD/PhD.
College of Nursing To meet the shortage of nurses, the State University of New York Upstate Medical University initiated an
Associate degree program in 1959. More than 500
registered nurses graduated from the program between 1959 and 1976. In 1974, as a response to the need for primary care nurses, a Nurse Practitioner Certificate Program was implemented. This program was supported primarily by federal grant monies. As enrollment grew, the College of Nursing was initially established in 1986, with M. Janice Nelson appointed as the first dean.
College of Health Professions The College of Health Professions was formed in 1971. However, programs in the Health Professions have been in existence on this campus since 1956. Students can choose from nine health care fields: Behavior Analysis Studies (MS),
Cardiovascular Perfusion (MS),
Medical Biotechnology (BS and MS),
Medical Imaging Sciences (BS),
Physical Therapy (DPT),
Physician Assistant (MS),
Radiation Therapy (BS) and
Respiratory Therapy (BS). The College of Health Professions annually admits over 130 students into its programs. There are 32 full-time and 8 part-time faculty. In addition, there are more than 240 clinical and adjunct faculty who contribute to the college's educational programs. == Research ==