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Programs > Ph.D. Programs > Tissue
Engineering and Regenerative Medicine
Ph.D. Program in Tissue Engineering
and Regenerative Medicine
Thomas
Jefferson University, founded in 1824 as the Jefferson Medical
College, is an institution committed to medical education,
biomedical research, and the delivery of high quality health
care. Throughout its long history, a significant number of
technological breakthroughs have been achieved at Jefferson,
which have opened new vistas in biomedicine. A short list
of these achievements includes invention of the heart-lung
machine, discovery of erythropoietin, development of cement-less
orthopedic implants, pioneering chorionic villus sampling,
and identification of disease-associated collagen gene mutations.
A priority of the university is maintaining and expanding
this tradition of excellence, and ultimately fostering the
application of the results of basic biomedical research to
clinical medicine.
Within the past decade, there has been expansion of the
research activities of the Division of Orthopaedic Surgery,
the sponsoring unit of the Tissue Engineering and Regenerative
Medicine (T.E.R.M.) Graduate Program. These developments
have involved expansion of the research faculty at both junior
and senior levels. The result has been the creation of a
dynamic and vital research environment and the assembly of
a highly productive group of investigators. These investigators
together with the colleagues in the Department of Dermatology
and the Department of Medicine (Division of Rheumatology)
as well as other collaborating departments have research
interests in the skeletal and orthopaedic sciences, the pathogenesis
of musculoskeletal and vascular diseases and the biology
of the extracellular matrix. The research programs of these
investigators provide an excellent platform for training
the next generation of young scientists in this critical
new sector of the biomedical sciences.
The unique features of the T.E.R.M. Ph.D. Graduate Program
are:
-
integration of contemporary advances in cell, molecular,
and developmental biology for the purpose of understanding
tissue function
-
relating fundamental advances in the life sciences to
contemporary concepts in tissue engineering
-
understanding the pathogenesis of diseases that afflict
the musculoskeletal system
-
fostering of a practical understanding of translational
medicine linking basic science research with clinical
medicine
Graduates of the program are expected to be highly prepared,
and competitive, for careers in academia, industry and government.
Please email your questions or comments to:
Noreen Hickok, PhD
Graduate Coordinator
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery
Thomas Jefferson University
Philadelphia, PA 19107
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