Bay City, Michigan 48706
Front Page 04/24/2024 09:44 About us
Home Sports Community Arts/Theater Business Economy - Local The Scene
History Health/Fitness Contests
Issue 1207 April 10, 2011
(Prior Story)   Health/Fitness ArTicle 009521   (Next Story)


MSU has unveiled its new medical education and public health research space in the former Flint Journal building in downtown Flint.

MSU GROWS: Medical Education, Research in former Flint Journal Building

December 20, 2014       Leave a Comment
By: MyBayCity Staff

Printer Friendly Story View

Michigan State University College of Human Medicine has unveiled its new medical education and public health research space in the former Flint Journal building in downtown Flint, the university has announced.

The event comes as part of MSU's expansion into the area including the launch of the college's public health research and programs, along with doubling the number of medical students to nearly 100 being placed in Flint hospitals.

Three years ago, the Flint Journal and its parent, the MLive Media group, moved into new, smaller space at the nearby Rowe Building downtown. That left empty the Journal building which is at First and Harrison Streets. It's a classic Albert Kahn design that housed Journal employees since it was built in 1924.

The new space consists of shared student areas, four study rooms, six clinical skills examination rooms, as well as offices for the public health program and workstations for the six principal investigators and research teams that are being recruited to the city.

"Michigan State is excited to have this opportunity to expand our medical education and research program here with the support of exceptional partners such as the C.S. Mott Foundation and the Flint-area hospitals," said MSU President Lou Anna K. Simon. "It's an important chance to conduct in-depth studies of public health problems and develop solutions that can be applied in Flint and in other urban communities."

MSU occupies about 40,000 square feet of the historic Flint Journal building -- now owned by Uptown Reinvestment Corp., a Mott grantee that is leading efforts in the city's ongoing revitalization. Over the next six months, more than 20 faculty and staff from the college are moving into the new space, with room for additional people planned.

The expansion was made possible with more than $11 million in grants from the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation and the continued medical education support from MSU's hospital partners Genesys Regional Medical Center, Hurley Medical Center and McLaren Flint.

"Our public health research component will build on the superb medical education and outstanding health care provided by Genesys, Hurley and McLaren," said Marsha Rappley, dean of the College of Human Medicine at MSU. "We have already recruited two senior public health investigators whose research complements the wellness initiatives underway at our Flint hospitals and health organizations."

###

Printer Friendly Story View
Prior Article

February 10, 2020
by: Rachel Reh
Family Winter Fun Fest is BACC Hot Spot for 2/10/2020
Next Article

February 2, 2020
by: Kathy Rupert-Mathews
MOVIE REVIEW: "Just Mercy" ... You Will Shed Tears, or at Least You Should
Agree? or Disagree?


MyBayCity Staff



More from MyBayCity Staff

Send This Story to a Friend!       Letter to the editor       Link to this Story
Printer-Friendly Story View


--- Advertisments ---
     


0200 Nd: 04-20-2024 d 4 cpr 1






12/31/2020 P3v3-0200-Ad.cfm

SPONSORED LINKS



12/31/2020 drop ads P3v3-0200-Ad.cfm


Designed at OJ Advertising, Inc. (V3) (v3) Software by Mid-Michigan Computer Consultants
Bay City, Michigan USA
All Photographs and Content Copyright © 1998 - 2024 by OJA/MMCC. They may be used by permission only.
P3V3-0200 (1) 0   ID:Default   UserID:Default   Type:reader   R:x   PubID:mbC   NewspaperID:1207
  pid:1560   pd:11-18-2012   nd:2024-04-20   ax:2024-04-24   Site:5   ArticleID:009521   MaxA: 999999   MaxAA: 999999
Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)