Via College of Osteopathic Medicine Receives Grant

Via College of Osteopathic Medicine Receives Grant 4The William Randolph Hearst Foundation has awarded $125,000 to the Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine (VCOM) to fund scholarships for 50 VCOM medical students pursuing careers in primary care medicine.

In receiving news of the grant, VCOM President and Provost Dixie Tooke-Rawlins said, “We appreciate so much the commitment of The Hearst Foundations. As a medical school committed to educating physicians to serve rural and medically underserved populations, and a focus on the southern Appalachian and Delta regions of the southeastern United States, our mission aligns well with the commitment of the Hearst Foundations. The scholarship will help to support our students with this goal as well as the lives of the patients they will serve.”

Paul “Dino” Dinovitz, Hearst Foundations’ Executive Director, added, “The VCOM Scholarship Program embodies our dual commitment to helping leading academic institutions respond to the country’s evolving healthcare needs and to supporting medical students who are pursuing their dreams to become primary care physicians and returning to practice in underserved communities.”

President Tooke-Rawlins also added, “From its earliest beginning, VCOM has recruited students from, provided training in and returned qualified graduates to the southeastern United States. More than 47% of our students are from rural communities of less than 30,000, with 23% coming from communities of less than 10,000. These scholarships from the Hearst Foundations will assist our students who have a commitment to returning to these regions to serve.”

Last year, with the opening of a fourth campus at the University of Louisiana Monroe, VCOM became the largest provider of physicians in the southeastern United States and the second-largest in the country, enrolling 650 new students each year. The four VCOM campuses are located in the southeast United States where the largest physician shortages exist and life expectancy is often up to 10 years shorter than the rest of the nation. The campuses located in southwest Virginia, Alabama, and South Carolina will graduate 476 new physicians in 2021 and raise the total number of VCOM physician graduates to more than 4,100.

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