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Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar

Coordinates: 25°19′05″N 51°26′20″E / 25.3180°N 51.4389°E / 25.3180; 51.4389
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Weill Cornell Medicine-Qatar
TypePrivate, nonprofit medical school
Established2001 (2001)[1]
Parent institution
Cornell University
AffiliationWeill Cornell Medicine
Hamad Medical Corporation
Qatar Foundation
DeanJavaid I. Sheikh, M.D.[2]
Vice DeanRobert K. Crone, M.D.[2]
Academic staff
77 full-time, 602 affiliated[3]
Students318[3]
Location, ,
25°19′05″N 51°26′20″E / 25.3180°N 51.4389°E / 25.3180; 51.4389
Websiteqatar-weill.cornell.edu

History

Interior of Weill Cornell–Qatar
Exterior of Weill Cornell–Qatar

Weill Cornell Medicine – Qatar (formerly Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar), was established in 2001 as a partnership between Cornell University in the US, and Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development. WCM-Q is part of Cornell University and was the first US university to offer its MD degree overseas.

Teaching began in 2002 with the inaugural class entering the college’s two-year pre-medical program. The college’s first graduation ceremony was held in 2008 with 15 new doctors receiving their MD degrees.

WCM-Q’s building was officially opened in 2003, having been designed by the internationally renowned architect Arata Isozaki. It has four distinctively shaped lecture halls – two ovoids and two polyhedrons – and a technologically advanced e-library.


Students/Alumni

As of May 2019, WCM-Q has graduated 384 new doctors, approximately half of whom are women and half are men. The college attracts undergraduates from throughout the world, but particularly Qatar and the wider MENA region, and the student body is particularly diverse, comprising around 40 different nationalities.

Graduates of WCM-Q primarily move onto residency courses at US teaching hospitals including Johns Hopkins, NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center and the Cleveland Clinic, but a significant number remain in Qatar to take their residencies at Hamad Medical Corporation, boosting national medical and human capacity. Alumni have also begun to return to Qatar from the US so as to practice at Hamad Medical Corporation and lecture at WCM-Q.

Admissions/Programs

WCM-Q has the same admissions standards as Weill Cornell Medicine in New York and admits students on merit alone. Candidates are selected based on academic scores, attitude and dedication to their studies and medicine, and interview. All teaching is in English and potential students are expected to have a high-degree of proficiency in the language.

WCM-Q operates a six-year medical program for those coming straight from high school, or graduates with no scientific background. The six-year program comprises two years of pre-medical instruction, followed by four years of the medical curriculum. Students who satisfy all the criteria during the pre-medical curriculum are automatically promoted to the four-year medical curriculum.

Graduates who have previously completed a science-based degree elsewhere may be admitted directly onto the four-year medical curriculum. The curriculum is identical to that followed at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York and graduates of WCM-Q receive the Cornell University MD degree.

The four-year medical curriculum consists of the following modules:

1.    Essential Principles of Medicine (EPOM)

2.    Health, Illness & Disease – I (HID-I)

Heart

Lung

Gastro-Intestinal

Renal

Endocrinology

3.    Health, Illness & Disease – II (HID-II)

Neuroscience

Rheumatology

Dermatology

Infectious Disease

Hematology-Oncology

Reproduction

4.    Area of Concentration (AOC)

5.    Clerkships

Intro to Clerkships

Anesthesia & Critical Care

Medicine

Neurology

Ob-Gyn

Primary Care

Pediatrics

Psychiatry

Surgery

Healthcare & Public Health

Palliative Care

6.    Electives

7.    Sub-Internship (Sub-I)

In 2007, WCM-Q faculty realized some highly gifted local students needed some extra support so as to improve their English language skills and to make the transition to a Western institution and Western style of education. For this reason, the 12-month foundation program was developed to provide predominantly Qatari students the time to acquire the language skills they need and to adjust to different methods of study. Successful completion of the foundation program allows students to apply for the six-year medical program.

Research

WCM-Q’s cutting-edge biomedical research program (BMRP) was established in 2008 and was the first of its kind in the Middle East. The aim, which has been successfully achieved, was to form a biomedical research infrastructure, developing a scientific and technical work force for the benefit of the region and to create a hub of biomedical research excellence. The research focus of the program is diseases which are prevalent in the Gulf region including - but not limited to - certain cancers and neurological disorders, and metabolic diseases like obesity, diabetes and heart disease.

Each year the Division of Research hosts the Industry-Academia conference, which is designed to foster partnerships between academia and business and help bring innovations in the laboratory to the commercial market.

Criticism

Universities with campuses in Education City, which include Texas A&M, Carnegie Mellon, Georgetown, and Northwestern alongside Cornell, have been criticized that they cannot uphold the same levels of academic freedom in Qatar that exist the United States.[4][5] In response, Cornell has said that its presence in Qatar “is the best way to promote understanding” and that their “collaborations across the globe” fulfill its mission of “teaching, discovery and engagement.”[6]

A 2017 opinion piece in Cornell's student newspaper, The Cornell Daily Sun, called on Cornell's incoming president Martha E. Pollack to be more transparent about the relationship between the University and the Qatar Foundation, particularly in the context of the ability for Cornell employees to form a union, something that is illegal in Qatar.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Weill Cornell Medicine – Qatar". Weill Cornell Medicine – Qatar. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Administrative Officials". Weill Cornell Medicine–Qatar. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  3. ^ a b "Fact Sheet 2018-2019" (PDF). Office of Communications, Weill Cornell Medicine–Qatar. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  4. ^ Anderson, Nick. "Texas university gets $76 million each year to operate in Qatar, contract says". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 8, 2016.
  5. ^ "Roots of American universities grow deeper in Qatar, drawing criticism". Gulf News Journal. June 8, 2015. Retrieved June 8, 2016.
  6. ^ Ain, Stewart (September 3, 2014). "Cornell's Ties To Qatar Getting Fresh Scrutiny". The Jewish Week. Retrieved June 8, 2016.
  7. ^ Eddy, Xavier; Hanna, Christopher (April 22, 2017). "Letter to the Editor: On Weill Medical College in Qatar". The Cornell Daily Sun. Retrieved May 20, 2019.

External links