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Special Programs and Community Outreach
Office of Special Programs
Welcome to the Office of Special Programs (OSP) Web site. Our mission is to
develop individuals underrepresented in medicine and other health professions,
as well as to champion cultural competency and humanism in all aspects of medical
education. We at NJMS are resolutely responding to the need for a diverse healthcare
workforce that resembles the diversity of today’s patients. To accomplish
this, a myriad of programs have been implemented in collaboration with partners
at the pre-college, undergraduate, professional school,and community levels.
Collectively, this partnership embraces and recognizes the impact that diversity
has on the educational experience of all students and on the delivery of culturally
competent quality healthcare.
The OSP has established pipeline programs to address the entire educational
spectrum through federally and privately funded programs including the Hispanic
Center of Excellence, Health Careers Opportunity Program, Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation/AAMC Summer Medical Education Program and the Students Health Advocates
for Resources and Education (S.H.A.R.E.) Center.
History
NJMS’s commitment to the education of students from economically and
educationally disadvantaged backgrounds is closely intertwined with the University’s
pledge to the urban community of Newark. Through the articulated document, “The
Newark Agreements,” the institution ratified its promise to provide educational
and employment opportunities to Newark’s largely disadvantaged residents.
This commitment began to materialize in 1972 with the establishment of the Office
of Minority Student Affairs. The office’s primary goal was to develop
a competitive minority/disadvantaged applicant pool for medicine and other health
professions.
Recognizing the importance of developing individuals at a younger level, NJMS
began to work with high school students through the Minority High School Student
Summer Research Apprentice Program in 1981, which was funded by the National
Institutes of Health.
In 1992, the Office of Minority Affairs
became the Office of Special Programs. The associate dean for this office was
charged with developing a pipeline at the middle- and high school level. In
November 1997, the dean appointed Maria Soto-Greene, MD, as the acting associate
dean for Special Programs. For the first time, all programs related to minority
health professions education were housed in one office. This resulted in a new,
more comprehensive vision for the medical school. In 1996, the Office of Special
Programs began establishing a partnership funded through a cooperative agreement
from the Bureau of Health Professions. Today, the partnership has proven to
be valuable, providing the tools and flexibility to impact students from different
educational backgrounds. The partnership consists of UMDNJ-New Jersey Dental
School (NJDS), UMDNJ-Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (GSBS); three undergraduate
institutions: Montclair State University, Rutgers University- Newark; Rutgers
University-New Brunswick; Newark secondary schools; and the FOCUS Community
Health Center. As a result of this partnership, a supportive environment that
provides for career choices in many health professions has been created. Initiatives
promoted by the partnership are focused toward recruiting individuals who will
advance the goals of diversity in the medical profession, reduce health disparities
and/or improve healthcare to underserved populations.
The Office of Special Programs also
supports student community service activities through the S.H.A.R.E. Center
and the Healthcare Foundation Center for Humanism and Medicine.
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