Weill Cornell Medicine will eliminate medical education debt for all students who qualify for financial aid through a transformative new scholarship program.
No Medical Education Debt
Weill Cornell Medicine Offers Transformative New Scholarship Program
Weill Cornell Medicine will eliminate medical education debt for all students who qualify for financial aid through a transformative new scholarship program. A lead gift from The Starr Foundation, directed by Weill Cornell Medicine Overseer Maurice R. Greenberg, in partnership with gifts from Joan and Board of Overseers Chairman Emeritus Sanford I. Weill and the Weill Family Foundation have made this longstanding goal possible. These landmark gifts and other generous donors total $160 million so the institution can ensure that the best and brightest aspiring doctors have the financial support and freedom to seek careers in medicine.
The game-changing new financial aid program expands Weill Cornell Medicine’s scholarship offerings to provide debt-free education to all medical students with demonstrated financial need beginning with the 2019-2020 academic year and then every year thereafter in perpetuity. By replacing student loans with scholarships that cover tuition, housing and other living expenses, the program ensures that all students, including those from economically diverse backgrounds, can pursue their medical education without financial burden. This program empowers students to ultimately focus their careers on their interests and talents, rather than the requisite future salaries to repay their loans.
“Weill Cornell Medicine has been a leader in medical education since its inception in 1898, dedicated to training outstanding physicians and scientists from all walks of life,” said Dr. Augustine M.K. Choi, the Stephen and Suzanne Weiss Dean of Weill Cornell Medicine and provost for medical affairs at Cornell University. “It is with extraordinary pride that we are able to increase our support of medical education for our students, ensuring that we can welcome the voices and talents of those who are passionate about improving human health. We are profoundly grateful to The Starr Foundation and Maurice and Corinne Greenberg, Joan and Sandy Weill, the Weill Family Foundation, and many other Weill Cornell Medicine donors for making this possible and helping us change the future of medical education.”
“This bold initiative to eliminate medical education student debt ensures that every student who wishes to become a doctor can do so—for their betterment and for the patients they serve,” said Martha E. Pollack, president of Cornell University. “By investing in our medical students, we impart a lasting, positive effect on the healthcare landscape across the country.”
The program is the result of three decades of philanthropy from numerous Weill Cornell Medicine benefactors whose gifts have established and strengthened the institution’s scholarship endowment. The Starr Foundation’s lead gift toward scholarship—the single largest in its history—together with the Weills’ and their family foundation’s pivotal support, makes this new program possible. Significant gifts from Christine Seix and Overseer Robert S. Dow, who in March made an eight-figure commitment toward scholarship support, and a multitude of generous donors and alumni have enabled Weill Cornell to reach this milestone. To ensure this program continues in perpetuity, the institution will need to raise additional money to fully fund its scholarship endowment.
“Students whose passions, skills and talents point the way to medicine can now pursue their career aspirations, unencumbered by the pressure that comes with significant debt burdens,” said Jessica M. Bibliowicz, chairman of the Weill Cornell Medicine Board of Overseers. “We are immensely thankful to our visionary donors, who are committed to making this program possible for our students.”
“It is a great privilege to make such an important and impactful contribution to the futures of our medical students,” said Overseer Greenberg, chairman of The Starr Foundation and the architect of this ambitious new scholarship program. “Scholarships are crucial to the success of our trainees, freeing them from the weight of excess debt that has traditionally accompanied medical education. We couldn’t be more pleased to support our students as they work to improve the lives of patients worldwide.”
“Joan and I and the Weill Family Foundation have been honored to support Weill Cornell Medicine’s mission over the last 30 years, making an impact where the need is greatest,” said Overseer Weill, chairman emeritus of Weill Cornell Medicine’s board. “Providing debt-free medical education isn’t just what’s right for our students; it is critical to creating the best doctors for all generations to come. We are proud to be champions of our students at one of the most pivotal times of their lives.”
Historically, more than half of Weill Cornell Medicine’s medical students have received need-based scholarships to help defray the institution’s cost of attendance, which is an average of $90,000 a year, and have taken out loans to cover the difference. Now, under the new financial aid program, all medical students who qualify for aid will be able to forego that borrowing and have their medical education—including tuition, books, housing, food and related expenses—covered by scholarships. Students pursuing dual M.D.-Ph.D. degrees, through a separate program, receive full tuition and stipends for living expenses from the National Institutes of Health and Weill Cornell Medicine. Together, these two programs will now enable two-thirds of Weill Cornell Medicine’s medical student body to graduate without debt.
Medical students who qualify for aid do not accumulate new medical education-related debt starting in the 2019-2020 academic year. First-year students in the Class of 2023, entering this fall, and those in every subsequent entering class will have their student loans replaced by scholarships for the entirety of their education at Weill Cornell Medicine. Returning aid-eligible students who matriculated prior to this year will receive scholarships to replace their loans for this year and their remaining years as Weill Cornell Medicine medical students.
To ensure that its students and future physicians reflect the patients they will serve, Weill Cornell Medicine has expanded the breadth and depth of numerous initiatives intended to increase representation of women and minorities in medicine and provide the mentorship necessary for all students to succeed. The institution was recently awarded two grants from the National Institutes of Health, as well as one from the Health Resources and Services Administration of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, to strengthen the pipeline of graduate students and medical trainees from communities historically underrepresented in the STEM fields. In 2018, Weill Cornell Medicine also introduced the Dean’s Diversity Scholarships, which provide full-tuition scholarships to two medical students annually from diverse communities. The medical school’s top-ranked curriculum also includes the Areas of Concentration program, in which all students are paired with a mentor in their first year, who provides guidance as students explore and ultimately conduct scholarly work. Weill Cornell Medicine has the highest proportion of M.D. graduates becoming full-time academic faculty—nearly 40 percent—according to data from the Association of American Medical Colleges.
Read more here
In addition to bringing our readers stories about education issues in America, we here at Hispanic Outlook feature news articles on topics both related to and outside of the field of education on our website and in our social media.
Hispanic Outlook is an education magazine in the US available both in print and digital form. Visit https://www.hispanicoutlook.com/education-magazine for information about our latest issue, including our new supplement Physician Outlook.