University of Tennessee Health Science Center

University of Tennessee
TypePublic
Established1911 (1911)
ChancellorPeter F. Buckley
Students3,139
Location, ,
United States

35°8′27″N 90°1′48″W / 35.14083°N 90.03000°W / 35.14083; -90.03000
Campus41 acres (17 ha)
Websitewww.uthsc.edu

The University of Tennessee Health Science Center (UTHSC) is a public medical school in Memphis, Tennessee. It includes the Colleges of Health Professions, Dentistry, Graduate Health Sciences, Medicine, Nursing, and Pharmacy. Since 1911, the University of Tennessee Health Science Center has educated nearly 57,000 health care professionals. As of 2010, U.S. News & World Report ranked the College of Pharmacy 17th among American pharmacy schools.[1]

A Cancer Research Building owned by UTHSC

Graduate medical education programs are located in Chattanooga, Knoxville, and Nashville; family medicine centers in Jackson, Knoxville, and Memphis; dentistry clinics in Bristol, Jackson, and Union City, as well as public and continuing education programs across the state. The Health Science Center is part of the statewide, multi-campus University of Tennessee system.

The University of Tennessee Health Science Center also runs the Plough Center for Sterile Drug Delivery Systems, which celebrated its 53-year anniversary in 2016. The center educates on sterile product preparation, develops a basis for parenteral medications, and provides services to the pharmaceutical industry and individuals. Hands-on training in aseptic processing is also offered four times a year at the facility.

Areas of emphasis are the university's research efforts, which receive nearly $100 million in yearly grants from the National Institutes of Health and private foundations. The Translational Science Research Building and the Cancer Research Building house collaborative research teams for the UTHSC campus.

In its early years the school was segregated, and it desegregated in the early 1960s. The first black student, Alvin Crawford, graduated in 1964.[2]

  1. ^ "Ranking". www.usnews.com. Retrieved 2019-06-29.
  2. ^ Maki, Aisling (February 15, 2011). "UTHSC Celebrates Career of First Black Student". Retrieved 3 October 2019.