PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

ASU’s new School of Medicine receives preliminary accreditation, gift and new name

John Shufeldt School of Medicine and Medical Engineering can now begin to recruit first class of students for 2026

2025-10-22
(Press-News.org) The opening of Arizona State University’s new medical school took a giant leap forward today with two important pieces of news that will accelerate activity as the school begins to prepare for its first class in August 2026.

ASU leaders announced that the school, the flagship of the university’s ASU Health system, received preliminary accreditation from the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME), enabling the school to begin recruiting its first class of students. In addition, the university received a nine-figure gift, the second largest in university history, to establish and operate the new school, which now will be known as the John Shufeldt School of Medicine and Medical Engineering.

“While it is something we expected, accreditation is not to be taken lightly. We are grateful to the LCME and to our team that has been working tirelessly to help make that happen,” said ASU President Michael Crow.

The generous investment in naming the school made the news even more impactful, Crow said.

“John Shufeldt is the embodiment of the kind of student we want to produce. He is a doctor, an entrepreneur developing new things that impact people’s health and well-being, and is always looking ahead,” Crow said. “He sees the scale of ASU Health impacting all of Arizona and beyond, and he sees the unique design of a school focused on both medicine and engineering. He is not only contributing financially and lending his name — he is giving his time and talent to what we are building here.”

Shufeldt is a man of many accomplishments, holding an MD, JD and MBA, and he is board certified in emergency medicine. He founded NextCare in 1993, MeMD in 2010 and Tribal Health in 2015. His gift to ASU will also support the creation of an endowed professorship for a professor of entrepreneurship in medicine, as well as a health-tech venture philanthropy fund that will be operated by the ASU Foundation for a New American University. The university will identify entrepreneurs funded through the endowment, who will be called Xcellerant Ventures Founders.

“When I heard President Crow talk about the medical school, how he intended to design it and what his hope for it is for the future, all I could think of was, ‘Well, I know what I want to do for the next 30 years,’” Shufeldt said.

“For decades I've worked at the intersection of business, law and innovation. I've seen where the systems work from the inside, and where they don't work. From the inside, I've treated patients in overcrowded emergency departments, I built companies to address health care inequities, care in underserved areas and improve the efficiency and improve the patient experience. But one truth with a capital T stands out to me: We don't simply need more physicians. What we do need is more physicians who can innovate, who are leaders, who can do it with a high degree of compassion. That's why I'm so excited about the new school at ASU because I know that's what we'll be teaching.”

The John Shufeldt School of Medicine and Medical Engineering, together with its primary clinical affiliate HonorHealth, will train students to blend multiple disciplines — medicine, engineering, technology and humanities — to create a new kind of health care leader with a strong sense of innovation and problem-solving, along with a comfort in using new devices and new protocols in treatment. Students will receive two degrees in four years, concurrently earning an MD and a Master of Science in medical engineering, leaving them prepared for careers in medicine, research, entrepreneurship and health leadership. Graduates will leverage new tools such as AI and data science to connect with patients and develop innovative practices. 

The founding dean of the new school, Dr. Holly Lisanby, called Shufeldt’s gift “transformative” and said, “Dr. Shufeldt really personifies excellence and innovation at this intersection of clinical care and entrepreneurship.”

She said the preliminary accreditation from LCME means the wait is over and the school can begin to recruit students whose interests and qualifications match the school’s unique offerings.

“Our students are going to be fully immersed in both cultures from the very beginning: the medical culture as well as engineering,” Lisanby said. “They'll be dually trained. They'll learn how to read both literatures and how to work with faculty and mentors who are not just coming from clinical fields or engineering, but also entrepreneurship and the VC (venture capital) sector so that they will be physician-engineer-entrepreneurs who will really transform the future of health care.”

The John Shufeldt School of Medicine and Medical Engineering is one part of ASU Health, a diverse interdisciplinary learning system that is creating new schools, connecting existing ones and leveraging the entire university to focus the nation’s most innovative university on the health needs of the state and the nation.

ASU Health includes the new John Shufeldt School of Medicine and Medical Engineering, the new School of Technology for Public Health, the Edson College of Nursing and Health Innovation, the College of Health Solutions and the new ASU Health Observatory. All will be headquartered in downtown Phoenix as part of the Phoenix Bioscience Core.

“Today’s news is another giant step forward in building the learning ecosystem that is ASU Health,” said Dr. Sherine Gabriel, the executive vice president of ASU Health. “We have and continue to assemble an incredibly talented faculty. The medical and engineering school is aligned with a high-quality and like-minded primary clinical affiliate in HonorHealth. We have a fantastic location for our future headquarters. And now, with accreditation, we can begin the process of recruiting and welcoming the medical and engineering students who will make up our first class. It is a very exciting time for everyone who is involved and contributing to this new beginning.”

The new medical and engineering school will be located at the Mercado in downtown Phoenix until the ASU Health headquarters is complete. Groundbreaking on the headquarters is expected in spring 2026, with a planned completion date in 2028.

 

 

 

NOTE:

Preliminary accreditation is granted by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME), which is the official accrediting body for medical doctor (MD) degree programs in the United States. The preliminary accreditation means the school has successfully completed the early phases of the rigorous accreditation process and is authorized to begin recruiting and enrolling students. LCME accreditation is required for students to be eligible for federal financial aid, residency programs and licensure exams. 

 

The John Shufeldt School of Medicine and Medical Engineering will be subject to ongoing evaluation by the LCME before receiving provisional accreditation, which is granted once the school has enrolled students and demonstrated progress toward meeting standards. Full accreditation would be granted after the first class graduates and the school continues to show that it meets all LCME standards in practice.

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Do fitness apps do more harm than good?

2025-10-22
A study published in the British Journal of Health Psychology reveals the negative behavioral and psychological consequences of commercial fitness apps reported by users on social media. These impacts may undermine the potential of apps to promote health and wellbeing. When investigators used artificial intelligence (AI) using a method called Machine-Assisted Topic Analysis (MATA), which combines AI-powered topic modelling with human qualitative analysis, to help them analyze 58,881 X posts referring ...

Can blood analyses in dogs provide insights into human aging?

2025-10-22
Lab-based studies have provided lots of information on the biology of aging, but it’s unclear how lab discoveries apply to aging in the real world. Research in Aging Cell provides insights into aging based on studies in dogs. The Dog Aging Project (DAP) is designed to identify patterns of aging and how these are shaped by the diversity of genetic and environmental variation among companion dogs. By analyzing metabolites from blood samples of dogs in the DAP, investigators identified effects of age on more than one-third of measured metabolites. They also discovered that post-translationally ...

Do some antihistamines increase dementia risk in older hospitalized patients?

2025-10-22
An analysis in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society reveals that older inpatients admitted to physicians who prescribe higher amounts of first-generation antihistamines face an elevated risk of delirium while in the hospital. First-generation antihistamines, such as diphenhydramine (Benadryl), are among the leading causes of medication-related harms in older adults, and although these medications are indicated for histamine-related conditions such as hives and anaphylaxis, they may be prescribed inappropriately. When investigators analyzed data on 328,140 patients ...

How do land use policies contribute to racial segregation in communities?

2025-10-22
New research published in International Studies of Economics sheds light on an important but often overlooked driver of racial segregation in housing: minimum lot size zoning policies, or local regulations requiring a minimum amount of land for a property. The study focused on the impact of minimum lot size regulations in Connecticut towns on the likelihood of ethnic minorities integrating into a community. Investigators found that households with higher incomes are more willing to pay for larger residential lots, reinforcing economic divides, and that Black ...

New method noninvasively measures Achilles tendon structure and function in professional dancers

2025-10-22
A study in the Journal of Orthopaedic Research uses a noninvasive, nonradioactive imaging-based method to measure the structure and function of the Achilles tendon in professional ballet dancers. The method could potentially be developed to help prevent injuries and improve rehabilitation efforts in athletes, as well as in the general public. The study involved what is called multi-echo ultrashort echo time (UTE) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to assess collagen and other components of the Achilles tendon. These ...

Does floral scent affect insect visitors and bacterial strains on flowers?

2025-10-22
Using information on alpine plant species, researchers investigated how the chemistry of flowers’ scent affects not only the diversity of insect pollinators but also the communities of bacteria living on the flowers. The study, which is published in New Phytologist, reveals that high floral scent chemodiversity—or the presence of a range of different chemical compounds—is associated with increased pollinator richness but reduced bacterial richness on flowers. The findings led the scientists ...

How is radiation therapy portrayed in art?

2025-10-22
Because patient perceptions of radiation can influence their willingness to receive it as treatment, researchers recently examined how radiation therapy is represented in different forms of art. The analysis in the Journal of Medical Radiation Sciences found that overall, novels, poems, music, film, and paintings tend to depict radiation therapy as associated with fear, mystery, and fascination. The authors note that radiation therapy is widely perceived as having both lifesaving and life-threatening potential. As such, exploring how radiation therapy ...

Emotional strain of fitness and calorie counting apps revealed

2025-10-22
Some users of popular fitness and calorie counting apps experience shame, disappointment and demotivation, potentially undermining their health and wellbeing, according to a new study led by researchers at UCL (University College London) and Loughborough University. The study, published in the British Journal of Health Psychology, looked at 58,881 posts on Twitter (i.e., posted prior to the platform becoming X) relating to five popular fitness apps*. The research team used AI models to filter out 13,799 posts judged to contain negative sentiment and then to group these posts into broad themes or topics. They found users expressing ...

Uncovering the biology of growing old

2025-10-22
Scientists have long sought measurable signs in the body, called biomarkers, that reliably reveal our biological age or predict future health issues. Now, a new study in dogs—an ideal model for this research because they share our genetic diversity, diseases, and home environments—has uncovered molecular clues that could shed light on how aging unfolds in pets and people alike. For the study published October 22 in Aging Cell, scientists from the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (HNRCA) at Tufts University, University of Washington, and other institutions analyzed blood samples from a group of nearly 800 dogs enrolled ...

Why do so many pro soccer players develop osteoarthritis?

2025-10-22
A new paper in Rheumatology, published by Oxford University Press, finds that retired UK male professional football players who reported foot or ankle injuries during their careers were more likely to develop osteoarthritis in retirement. Retired players treated routinely with cortisone injections for their injuries were even more likely to report osteoarthritis. Professional football is a high-speed contact sport with high risk of injury. Foot and ankle injuries are particularly common, with ankle sprains being the most regular ankle injury and metatarsal fractures the most frequent foot injury. These injuries occur more often during football matches than ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Drug prevents congenital heart block recurrence in a high-risk pregnancy

Wiley announces winners of Advanced Science Young Innovator Award

Towards new ionic liquid-modified zeolite membranes for efficient CO2 conversion

UK Capital's ULEZ quickly cut air pollution —high vehicle compliance may have left little room for further gains after expansion

Retreating glaciers may send fewer nutrients to the ocean

Scientists develop a way to track donor bacteria after fecal microbiota transplants

Telescope hack opens a sharper view into the universe

ASU’s new School of Medicine receives preliminary accreditation, gift and new name

Do fitness apps do more harm than good?

Can blood analyses in dogs provide insights into human aging?

Do some antihistamines increase dementia risk in older hospitalized patients?

How do land use policies contribute to racial segregation in communities?

New method noninvasively measures Achilles tendon structure and function in professional dancers

Does floral scent affect insect visitors and bacterial strains on flowers?

How is radiation therapy portrayed in art?

Emotional strain of fitness and calorie counting apps revealed

Uncovering the biology of growing old

Why do so many pro soccer players develop osteoarthritis?

Successful ground-to-satellite laser communications applying next-generation error correction codes, mitigating atmospheric turbulence

Photosynthesis without the burn

Not hunters but collectors: the bone that challenges the ‘humans wiped out Australian megafauna’ theory

Discovery of new mechanism concerning plasma confinement performance

Humans evolved fastest amongst the apes

Biochar and wetter soils offer breakthrough path to slash farm emissions without cutting crop yields

New biochar-enhanced cement could lock away more carbon dioxide

Strong evidence supports skin-to-skin contact after birth as standard care

Why it’s not just about money: Who goes to the ballet, opera and symphony

Daily step counts of 4,000 or more tied to reduced risk of heart disease, mortality in older women

Number of steps taken matters more for better health in older women than the frequency

Less than half of schoolkids at risk of food anaphylaxis in England prescribed adrenaline ‘antidote’

[Press-News.org] ASU’s new School of Medicine receives preliminary accreditation, gift and new name
John Shufeldt School of Medicine and Medical Engineering can now begin to recruit first class of students for 2026