Abstract: | There were 35,944 applicants for the 1984-1985 year in US medical schools. Of this number, 17,194 were accepted by at least one school. First-year enrollment equaled 16,992. Be-accepted by at least one school. First-year enrollment equaled 16,992. Because some students were repeating the first year, the number of first-time enrolled students was 16,459. This represents a decrease of 113 from the previous year. The number of students enrolled in 127 US medical schools in 1984-1985 was 67,090; of this number, 21,287 (31.7%) were women. The estimated number of graduates in 1984-1985 was 16,347. The total enrollment of students of minority groups was 10,552 (15.7%), of which 3,663 (5.5%) were black not of Hispanic origin. The number of full-time medical school faculty was 58,767, another 123,002 were part-time or volunteer faculty. Medical school faculties also have teaching responsibility for a variety of other students, in addition to patient care and research responsibility. The average time needed to complete the curriculum requirements leading to the MD degree is 153 weeks. Twenty-one medical schools offered a combined college-medical school program. The length of these combined programs averaged 262 weeks. Ninety-six percent of students entering medical school in 1984-1985 had completed at least four years of college. More than two fifths of students had a premedical GPA of 3.6 or higher. |