News
Charles Drew University Shows Largest Gains In Published Research Among Top 200 Universities With Federal Research Funding
Los Angeles, CA — Topping a list of 200 select U.S. universities,
the Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science led the academic
sector with a 127% growth in published medical and scientific research
over a 10-year period. This achievement occurred despite an overall
static number of research publications nationally during the same
timeframe. It was highlighted in a recent study by the National Science
Foundation of those educational institutions in the U.S. receiving the
largest federal research funding from 1992-2001, as reported in a
recent issue of Science Magazine
The
university performs high quality research that focuses on key health
issues that affect minority and underserved populations, under the
direction of Keith Norris, M.D. FACP and Vice President for Research at
the Charles Drew University. Of the 3,419 institutions funded by the
National Institute of Health (NIH), the Charles Drew University ranked
180th in the level of funding, ahead of many much larger schools. Its
College of Science and Health ranks seventh among NIH-funded colleges
in the U.S. with comparable specializations.
“This
ranking underscores — and sends an important message about — the depth
and quality of research talent we have at Charles Drew University, and
the extraordinary credibility that accompanies our team’s published
research,” said Dr. Susan Kelly, President and CEO of The Charles Drew
University. “Our research capabilities have long been a major source of
pride within the University, and its ranking here provides us with
public recognition of this leadership.”
Added
Dr. Norris, “Ranking first on this list of educational institutions is
evidence of the University’s accomplishing one of its goals of medical
and scientific research — keeping academic pace with funding. In
effect, we are making the research funding dollars count even more with
increasing rates of peer-reviewed published results.”
The
university’s research portfolio has achieved national recognition,
particularly in advancing medical solutions to meet the unique health
care needs of undeserved communities — diabetes, hypertension,
HIV-AIDS, depression, and kidney disease. Dr. Norris has been one of
the most prominent professionals in the field of Translational Research
— focused on bringing research to clinical applications quickly for
minority and disadvantaged communities.
The
Charles Drew University is the only academic health sciences center in
an area of 1.6 million people—the largest urban underserved area in the
United States. The university is also the nation’s only dually
designated Historically Black Graduate Institution and Hispanic Serving
Health Professions School. It was created from the ashes of the Watts
Rebellion in 1965. Since 1971, The Charles Drew University has
graduated over 500 medical doctors, 2,500 specialist physicians, 2,000
physician assistants and hundreds of other, mainly minority, health
professionals. Research shows that the vast majority of these
professionals are still serving the people in greatest need a decade or
more after graduation.