Northeast News
December 2, 2015
KANSAS CITY, Missouri — Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences is growing with more partnerships.
The Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences (KCU), the largest medical school in Missouri and one of the oldest osteopathic medical schools in the country, signed a partnership agreement with Harris-Stowe State University (HSSU), in St. Louis, Mo., the highest ranking institution in Missouri for granting degrees in mathematics and statistics to African Americans. The partnership creates a dual undergraduate and graduate degree program, as well as guaranteed acceptance into KCU’s College of Osteopathic Medicine.
Dual four-year undergraduate and graduate biomedical sciences degree program will provide students with new opportunities and paths to medical school. Five HSSU students will be selected each year to participate. Upon completion of their first three years of undergraduate studies at HSSU, these students will attend their fourth and final year at KCU where they will receive a full scholarship from and to simultaneously matriculate in the one-year master of sciences in biomedical sciences program. Upon successful completion of their year at KCU, these students will be awarded an undergraduate degree from HSSU and a master of science degree from KCU. They will also be guaranteed admission into the KCU-COM medical school, pending fulfillment of all admissions requirements.
According to the press release announcing the partnership, senior administrators for both universities see this collaboration as an aggressive and exciting opportunity that provides a pathway for under-represented minorities to enter the profession of medicine and create a physician base that is more representative of the ever-changing face of the communities they serve. Marc B. Hahn, president and chief executive officer of KCU, said they are excited to enter into a partnership with Harris-Stowe State University.
“This partnership is not simply about enhancing diversity within our student body; it is about addressing intolerance, improving cultural competency in the next generation of physicians and most importantly, tackling the key issue of health disparities within the communities we serve,” Hahn said
Dwaun J. Warmack, president of Harris-Stowe State University, added HSSU is committed to continuing academic excellence in all its programs and has been particularly focused on STEM-related curriculum for the past few years.
“The newest partnership with Kansas City University is extraordinary because it guarantees our most capable students a direct path to medical school, preparing them for careers as physicians or medical researchers,” Warmack said,