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Duke University Medical Center

Part of a Solution to the Nation's Medical Needs

Every gift to Duke University Medical Center reaches beyond specific facilities, programs, or people to strengthen patient care, medical research, and the education of the next generation of leaders in medicine, nursing, and science.

Lauren Taylor and
Ben Moeller
at the McGovern-Davison Children’s Health Center.


Duke Medicine
Campaign Total: $706,484,283

Duke University Medical Center funded a host of research needs and programs in areas of world importance. It established 36 professorships, five associate and assistant professorships, and many new scholarships; it inaugurated a new bachelor of science in nursing program. Built were the McGovern-Davison Children’s Health Center and new research buildings; planned or started with significant funding are the Albert Eye Institute and the Duke Center for Integrative Medicine.

When Lauren Taylor N’03 interned at a hospital during her senior year at Elon University, she decided to become a nurse. Although she was admitted to another top nursing program, Taylor was thrilled to join the inaugural class of Duke’s Accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing Program. Established with a gift from the Helene Fuld Health Trust to help address the national shortage of nurses, Duke’s BSN program prepares people with bachelor’s degrees, many from established careers, to enter the nursing profession in just 16 months.

The program requires over 1,000 clinical hours and includes graduate-level courses with experts from throughout the medical center. “Duke is really preparing us to become nursing leaders who think critically about patient care and work to improve nursing as a profession,” Taylor says. She entered the program interested in labor and delivery nursing, but is now considering graduate study in pediatric oncology. Initially she was nervous about the pace of the program, but now feels “this is definitely a place where a budding nurse wants to be.”

For MIT graduate Ben Moeller M’04, G’06, “what made Duke stand out among excellent medical schools was its unique curriculum. The traditional medical school program requires two years of basic science classes before you get into the hospital. At Duke you get into the hospital in your second year—which is an incentive in itself—and you can use the third year to pursue a research project or a second degree.” As a result, Duke students have a great advantage when applying for top residency spots. Many enroll in joint JD or MBA programs, while others, like Moeller, seek a mentor and enter a lab before beginning advanced clinical rotations in their fourth year.

Moeller entered the radiation oncology lab of Professor Mark Dewhirst to study ways to enhance radiation’s destruction of tumor blood vessels. “If we can keep tumors from growing blood vessels,” Moeller explains, “the hope is that tumors couldn’t continue to grow.” His research has been funded by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

The medical faculty encouraged Moeller to continue his research in Duke’s Medical Scientist Training Program, which has graduated more MD/PhD students than any other program and trains physician-scientists “on translating the findings in basic science labs into results they can really bring to the bedside.” After he finishes his residency, Moeller would like to practice in an academic hospital. Like Lauren Taylor, he intends to be part of a solution to the nation’s medical needs.


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Further Information

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The Campaign for Duke

For more information about the Campaign for Duke, visit the archived web site.


Charts and Information

Divisional totals and percentages

Progress through the Campaign

Distribution of Campaign Funds

Student Financial Aid

Campaign Commitments and Cash Received

Support for Faculty

Yearly Annual Fund Cash Totals

Growth of Duke University's Endowment During the Campaign

Changes at Duke

Annual Fund Progress Through The Campaign

Endowment Progress Through Campaign

 

 

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