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Top Story: UMMS welcomes historically large School of Medicine class

Class of 162 includes first cohort of urban and rural community health track students

It’s hard to pick a favorite story from among all the great news we covered this year. So we’re letting our readers pick. Below is one of the most-read stories from 2017. It originally ran on Aug. 3.

From the UMassMedNow editorial staff


UMass Medical School welcomed 162 members of the School of Medicine Class of 2021 to campus on Wednesday, Aug. 2. The new class of medical students is the largest in the school’s history.

Students came from across the country as well as Massachusetts to attend UMMS, numbering 31 from out-of-state and 131 from the commonwealth. This is the second year that the school has accepted a limited number of highly qualified students from other states.

New this year, 22 entrants are enrolled in the inaugural cohort of the innovative Population-based Urban and Rural Community Health (PURCH) track, which will train these students to be primary care doctors in urban and rural community health. They will spend their first two years focused on basic science at the Worcester campus, with years 3 and 4 largely spent completing clinical rotations at the new UMMS-Baystate campus in Springfield.

The SOM Class of 2021 comprises 70 men and 92 women; six are commencing studies in the combined MD/PhD program. Seventeen students come from groups underrepresented in medicine, and 26 were the first in their families to attend college.

Also setting a new record, 24 class members attended University of Massachusetts undergraduate campuses, underscoring the commitment of the commonwealth’s only public medical school to provide affordable medical education to residents.

Related stories on UMassMedNow:
Worcester Business Journal: UMMS-Baystate program focuses on health of underserved communities
UMass Medical School, Baystate Health celebrate launch of regional campus