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Washington State University
and the University
of Idaho are members of
WWAMI, the University of Washington School of Medicine’s regional medical
education program. WWAMI places
special emphasis on meeting the healthcare needs of the Northwest,
recognizing the importance of primary care and clinical research, and making
public medical education accessible to residents in
Washington,
Wyoming, Alaska,
Montana and Idaho.
Currently, the combined UI and WSU program supports a
class of 40 first-year medical students, sharing the resources of the two
regional research universities in Moscow and Pullman.
Classes, labs, and clinical experiences take place on both campuses
and in both communities.
Students benefit from the smaller class sizes, compared to a major medical
center, and students find easy access to faculty and community preceptors
outside of scheduled class times.
First Year Program
The first year medical curriculum is consistent
throughout the WWAMI region, and students take common final exams across all
sites. In addition to basic
sciences course work, first year students begin seeing patients under the
supervision of their medical preceptors within the first few weeks of
school. Throughout the academic
year, students also participate in Introduction to Clinical Medicine small
group learning, where they develop their skills and comfort in medical
interviewing and physical examinations of patients.
Students “scrub in” during their first week, learn universal
precautions and have the opportunity to complete suturing training early in
the year. These skills assist
students who are working with their preceptors in hospitals, clinics, or
emergency settings throughout the year.
Following the first year of course work, students have the
opportunity to participate in a full month of clinical experience in a rural
or underserved setting within the five state region.
Some students combine these summer experiences with community or
public health research, while others pursue summer research fellowships in
Seattle at one of the UW medical centers.
Second Year at the University of Washington
School of Medicine
Currently, all WWAMI medical students complete their
second year classes in Seattle at the University of Washington Medical Center.
Courses are taught in a “system curriculum” in which each organ
system is discussed from basic sciences and pathology to medicine and
treatment. Learning is enriched
through patient presentations and clinical correlates, from faculty who both
teach and practice medicine. To
continue their clinical skills training, all students participate in the
College System, a unique program of mentoring and small group tutoring that
takes students back to the bedside to learn and refine their skills in
patient assessment and relationships, and in case presentation with their
attending faculty.
Years Three
and Four
For their clinical years, students may complete their
required course work through a wide variety of training sites or tracks
throughout the five states. All
students are required to complete some of their training in Seattle and some
of it regionally. This gives
students a greater understanding of regional medical needs, as well as
acquaints students with different specialties and practice settings as they
make future career selections.
Students with a strong commitment to rural medicine may apply for the WRITE
program, an integrated primary care training track that allows students to
live and train in a carefully selected rural community with excellent
training opportunities during their third year of medical school.
The Idaho Track offers any WWAMI student the opportunity to complete
all of the third and fourth years of medical school in Idaho, through a
carefully organized network of training sites that includes the Boise VA,
area hospitals, residency programs, and private clinics.
The program is dedicated to ethical conduct in all its activities.