杜克-新加坡国立大学医学院 (Chinese) | |
Former name | Duke–NUS Graduate Medical School |
|---|---|
| Type | Medical school |
| Established | April 2005; 20 years ago (2005-04) |
Parent institution | Duke University and National University of Singapore |
| Dean | Thomas M. Coffman |
| Location | |
| Website | duke-nus duke.nus.edu |
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TheDuke–NUS Medical School (Duke–NUS) is agraduatemedical school inSingapore. Established in April 2005 as theDuke–NUS Graduate Medical School, it is Singapore's second medical school (after theNUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine and before theNTU Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine).
The school is a collaboration betweenDuke University in theUnited States and theNational University of Singapore inSingapore. Duke–NUS follows the American model of post-baccalaureatemedical education, in which students begin their medical studies after earning abachelor's degree. Students are awarded degrees from bothDuke University and theNational University of Singapore.
The construction of Duke–NUS Medical School's primary facility, the Khoo Teck Puat Building, started in December 2006.[1] In May 2009, the School shifted from its first campus at Jalan Bukit Merah into the Outram campus ofSingapore General Hospital, next to theCollege of Medicine Building. The 13-storey green-certified building was officially inaugurated by then-Prime Minister of SingaporeLee Hsien Loong on 28 September 2009.
On 30 November 2010, the strategic collaboration between Duke and NUS was extended by a further five years. On 2 June 2016, the stakeholders extended this through another five-year agreement. During this third phase of the partnership, SingHealth came onboard as Duke–NUS' academic medicine partner. Together, Duke–NUS and SingHealth transformed the campus at Outram into the SingHealth Duke–NUS Academic Medical Centre.[2]
On 13 October 2022, the fourth phase of the Duke–NUS collaboration agreement was signed by the presidents of Duke–NUS Medical School's two parent universities at a ceremony held inDurham, North Carolina, extending the partnership for another five years.[3]
Below are graduate programmes that are offered at Duke–NUS Medical School.[4]
Duke–NUS'Doctor of Medicine (MD) programme is a four-year programme based on theDuke University School of Medicine curriculum.[5][6] Students who successfully complete the course of study and fulfill all requirements are awarded a joint MD degree from Duke University and the National University of Singapore.
The Duke–NUS curriculum is similar to that of the Duke University School of Medicine, consisting of four years: the first year is for pre-clerkship, the second year for clerkship, the third year for research, and the fourth year for advanced clinical rotations. Duke–NUS employs an extensive team-based learning method called TeamLEAD (Learn, Engage, Apply, Develop). Students prepare for classes with pre-reading materials and recorded lectures. They begin the class with a test, and then proceed to discuss the test questions and other open-ended questions in a small group setting. The faculty act as facilitators for student discussions, moving away from traditional pedagogical teaching.[5]
Prospective students are required to take theMedical College Admission Test (MCAT)[7] or theGraduate Medical School Admissions Test (GMAT). Applicants are also evaluated based on their academic performance, research experience, and evidence of leadership capabilities.[8]
Duke–NUS offers aDoctor of Philosophy (PhD) programmes in Integrated Biology and Medicine, Clinical and Translational Sciences, as well as Quantitative Biology and Medicine. Graduates from the IBM track are conferred PhD degrees jointly award by Duke University and the National University of Singapore, while graduates from the other two tracks receive their PhD degrees from the National University of Singapore.
Duke–NUS also offers an MD-PhD programme, where students complete the following: one year of basic science coursework, one year of clinical rotations, four years of research work in Singapore or the United States, and a final year of clinical rotations.
Signature research programmes at Duke–NUS focus on the following areas.[9]
Duke–NUS hosts several research and medical centres.[10]
The SingHealth Duke–NUS Academic Medical Centre (AMC) was established by SingHealth and Duke–NUS. Through this partnership in academic medicine, the AMC harnesses the collective strengths of Duke–NUS' medical education and research capabilities, and SingHealth's clinical expertise to bring about improved healthcare and patient outcomes.
Some of the centres launched under this partnership include:[12]
Graduates are awarded degrees from both Duke University and the National University of Singapore.
Academic clinical programmes were created for 15 clinical specialties, harnessing the expertise of each discipline across SingHealth and Duke–NUS for cooperation in clinical care, education and research.[17]
cPass is a COVID-19 test kit that Duke–NUS co-developed with biotech companyGenScript Biotech Corporation and theAgency for Science, Technology and Research's (A*Star) Diagnostics Development Hub (DxD Hub), capable of checking for signs of a COVID-19 infection in individuals within an hour.[18][19]
Developed by a team led by Professor Wang Linfa, from Duke–NUS' Emerging Infectious Diseases programme, the kit was also the first of its kind to receive emergency authorisation from theUnited States Food and Drug Administration (FDA).[20]
A precursor of the test was also used to detect Singapore's largest coronavirus infection cluster at the Grace Assembly of God Church.[21]
Known as SwabBot, the robot developed by Rena Dharmawan and her team carries out nasal swabbing, helping to address the limitations of manual COVID-19 swabbing as well as to standardise the consistency of swabs taken.[22]
Co-developed by SingHealth Duke–NUS Academic Medical Centre and the National University of Singapore researchers, this saliva-based COVID-19 Antigen Rapid Test (ART) technology uses a proprietary on-kit amplification technique, enabling detection of the SARS-CoV-2 virus with sensitivity close to that of laboratory-basedpolymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests, in 15 minutes.[23]
To chronicle the School's research and innovations made in the fight against COVID-19, Duke–NUS launched a book titledDuke–NUS COVID Stories, along with a microsite.[24]
Senior management at Duke–NUS Medical School includes the following.[25]
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