Imperial College School of Medicine
(ICSM) is the medical school of Imperial College London in England, and one of the United Hospitals.
The School was formed in 1997 through the merger of several historic medical schools, and has core campuses at South Kensington, St Mary's Hospital, London, Charing Cross Hospital, Hammersmith Hospital and Chelsea and Westminster Hospital.
The School is ranked fifth in the world and third in the UK in the 2015 Times Higher Education World University Rankings.[1] It is ranked 8th in the UK by the Guardian University Guide 2014 [2] and 5th in the UK by the 2016 Complete University Guide.[3] It was ranked 2nd in the UK for research in the latest RAE in 2008, behind the University of Edinburgh Medical School.
The School is especially known for its heart and lung transplant surgery skills led by Sir Magdi Yacoub, rheumatology treatments by Sir Marc Feldmann, and recent robot-assisted surgery techniques by world leading surgeon
History[edit]
Main article: Timeline of Imperial College School of Medicine
Imperial College London first gained a medical school by merger with St Mary's Medical School in 1988. The current School of Medicine was formed in 1997 by the merger of St Mary's Medical School with Charing Cross and Westminster Medical School (formerly Charing Cross Hospital Medical School and Westminster Hospital Medical School), the Royal Postgraduate Medical School and the National Heart and Lung Institute.
Organisation[edit]
Imperial College School of Medicine is organised into six sections: Institute of Clinical Sciences, School of Public Health, Department of Medicine, Department of Surgery & Cancer, National Heart and Lung Institute, and the Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology.[5]
Unlike several other medical schools in the UK which are part of a Life Sciences Department or similar, ICSM belongs to its own Faculty of Medicine. Furthermore, the school runs a number of courses besides the standard MBBS degree programme. These include the Imperial College MPH Programme. Teaching hospitals of the School are part of the Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, which was formed in 2007 and is the UK's first academic health science centre. All undergraduate students within the Faculty of Medicine (including Biomedical Science and Pharmacology BScs) are supported by the Imperial College School of Medicine Students' Union. The Faculty of Medicine also offers postgraduate MSc, MRes and PhD programmes, but these fall under the Graduate School of Life Sciences and Medicine, not the School of Medicine.
Campuses and associated hospitals[edit]
The School's teaching campuses include:
Undergraduate campus
South Kensington campus - Sir Alexander Fleming Building
Charing Cross Hospital campus - The Reynolds Building
Hammersmith Hospital campus - Wolfson Education Centre
Main teaching hospitals
Charing Cross Hospital
St Mary's Hospital
Chelsea & Westminster Hospital
Hammersmith Hospital
Students in the 1st and 2nd years as well as those on the BSc courses attend lectures and labs mainly at the main campuses. Parts of the 4th year, as well as other clinical modules are also held at the postgraduate hospitals, where much of the School's research is based:
Postgraduate hospitals
Royal Brompton Hospital
Harefield Hospital
Queen Charlotte's & Chelsea Hospital
Western Eye Hospital
District general hospitals
Ashford Hospital
Central Middlesex Hospital
Ealing Hospital
Hillingdon Hospital
Mount Vernon Hospital
Northwick Park Hospital
St. Mark's Hospital
West Middlesex Hospital
St Peter's Hospital, Chertsey
Mental health hospitals
St. Bernard's Hospital
St.Charles' Hospital
Three Bridges Medium Secure Unit
Gordon Hospital
Broadmoor Hospital
Cassel Hospital
Clinical attachments and teaching in years 2 (three weeks), 3 (30 weeks), 5 and 6 (all year) are held at these hospitals. These hospitals also have small research divisions which are part of the Imperial College Faculty of Medicine.
Undergraduate courses[edit]
The school accepts approximately 290 school leavers as medical undergraduates each year (including 21 from outside the EU) for a six-year course leading to the award of an MBBS and BSc. Fifty graduates (including ten from outside the EU) are accepted for the four-year course that leads to the MBBS.
Entry is highly competitive with applicants requiring AAAb at A-level, with chemistry and/or biology required at A-level. A 2:1 degree and/or PhD in a biological subject is required for graduate entry. Furthermore, the BMAT is required for entry to the six-year course and the UKCAT for the four-year course, as well as an interview. For 2008 entry, there were approximately 3,000 applicants for the six-year and 500 for the four-year course. However, medical students from other institutions may also join various portions of the course.
The school runs four undergraduate courses.[6]
Six-year MBBS/BSc[edit]
Teaching in the first two years is focused on the scientific basis of medicine with study focussing on a systems-based format, moving towards integrated disease and including clinical aspects later on. It also includes communication skills, medical ethics and law. Teaching comprises lectures, clinical demonstrations, tutorials, dissection, computer workshops, laboratory practical and clinical skills classes, independent study, and some problem-based learning.
Clinical experience in first year is provided by a patient contact course and in the second year with a three-week attachment in general medicine or surgery at one of the attached teaching hospitals.
Third year consists of three ten-week attachments in general medicine and surgery. Teaching consists of in-hospital clinical teaching, problem based learning within firms and a lecture programme delivered at one of the central teaching sites and via the faculty intranet. This year also consists of a 3-week background to clinical specialties course.
Fourth year involves study for the BSc, comprising 3 5-week modules then a 10-week supervised research project or specialist course, leading to a BSc (Hons) in Medical Sciences with one of the following: Cardiovascular sciences; Endocrinology; Gastroenterology and hepatology; Haematology; Immunity and infection; Management; Neuroscience and mental health; Reproductive and developmental sciences; Respiratory science; Surgery and anaesthesia. The following specialist courses are available instead of undertaking a research project: Medical humanities, History of medicine, Epidemiology and international health. BSc courses that have available places after the allocation of Imperial students are open to medical students from other universities who wish to intercalate.
Fifth year covers the specialties of obstetrics and gynaecology, radiology, paediatrics, psychiatry, oncology, general practice, critical care, infectious diseases, dermatology, rheumatology and orthopaedics through clinical attachments. It includes a 4-week course in clinical pathology at the start of the year and a one-week teaching skills course.
Final year consists of seven three-week clinical attachments in accident and emergency medicine; general practice; cardiology and radiology; ear, nose and throat, ophthalmology and renal medicine; two professional work experience attachments (one in medicine and one in surgery); one specialty choice module; an eight-week elective period which may be spent in the UK or overseas, and a practical medicine course, which provides specific preparation for the foundation year after graduation.[7]
Oxbridge entry[edit]
Historically, all Oxbridge students completed their clinical training at one of the London medical schools. Although those universities now have their own clinical schools, Imperial accepts students who have completed the first three pre-clinical years at the University of Oxford or the University of Cambridge. Oxbridge students join the third year of the undergraduate course. This begins with a 10-week attachment to bring their clinical experience into line with that of other Imperial students, then joining the rest of the undergraduate year for two further 10 week attachment. After this, they progress to the fifth and sixth years of the standard course.[8]
Five-year graduate-entry MBBS[edit]
Despite only accepting graduates, this is still considered an undergraduate course. The first year is an accelerated programme, which is designed to bring students to the same level as someone who has completed Years 1 and 2 of the 6-year course. The second, third and fourth years of the graduate-entry course correspond to the third, fifth and final years of the six-year course respectively.[9]
Biomedical Science[edit]
The school offers a 3-year BSc degree which first commenced in 2006 and accepts 50 students per year. Although a four-year undergraduate Master's (MSci) was initially offered, students would not have been awarded the BSc. In 2008, the MSci was withdrawn and instead, students who achieve a 2:1 average by their second year will be guaranteed a place on one of the school's MSc taught courses, thus obtaining a BSc and an MSc in four years to comply with the Bologna process. From 2006-2012, the course was taught in conjunction with the School of Life Sciences, though from 2013 onwards the course has been fully absorbed into the School of Medicine.
The entry requirements are identical to those required for the MBBS course: AAAb at A-level/38 with 667 HL for the International Baccalaureate and the BMAT test.
In the first year, students are initially taught introductory modules for cellular and molecular biology, along with genetics, with their MBBS counterparts. This is then followed by a variety of modules based on human anatomy and system physiology in the second and third terms, taught independently from the MBBS students (though sharing considerable similarity in content). Students are also given teaching on basic laboratory techniques and "transferrable skills" sessions which aim to develop a more comprehensive skillset.
In the second year, students again follow the 2nd year of the Biology degree completing the Applied Molecular Biology, Immunology, Genetics or Parasitology, Tutored Dissertation and compulsory humanities modules. However, instead of the animal, plant and microbiological modules of the biology degree, students attend the newly developed Human Pathophysiology and Disease course which comprises basic pharmacology (from medicine year 2), ethics, epidemiology, radiology, cancer and other human diseases.
In the third year, students take one of the BSc modules from Year 4 of the medical course, followed by a research project. These modules (including Management) may be combined with or replaced by modules from Biology and Biochemistry degrees.[10]
Student life[edit]
ICSM Students' Union[edit]
Main article: Imperial College School of Medicine Students' Union
In contrast to other British universities where medical students may merely be part of a "Medsoc", the School of Medicine has its own complete union. Imperial College School of Medicine Students' Union is a subsidiary part of Imperial College Union, and medical and BSc students are members of both. As such, they may join any of the 300 ICU clubs and societies and take up positions of responsibility in them. However, over 40 of these clubs and societies are under the direct jurisdiction of ICSMSU. Further, the medical students' union also owns the Reynolds building at the Charing Cross Hospital campus, as medical students live or spend more time around that area than the South Kensington campus. The Reynolds Bar represents the heart and soul of ICSM, and regularly plays host to themed parties or "Bops". It also fulfils the role of a normal student bar, where medical students can congregate and socialise whilst enjoying the occasional pint at a lower price than the average London pub.
Shrove Tuesday Final Year Dinner[edit]
The Shrove Tuesday Dinner started in 1940 during the Blitz at the old Westminster Hospital Medical School. Students and house staff decided to have dinner to alleviate the oppressive mood. A senior member of staff was invited to address the assembled doctors and whilst he was talking a caricature was sketched on the tablecloth by one of his audience. It was cut out, passed round, signed and mounted and started the unbroken tradition that has evolved into the Shrove Tuesday Final Year Dinner that has continued even after the amalgamation of Westminster Hospital Medical School into Charing Cross Hospital Medical School and then Imperial College School of Medicine.
The event is held in March every year and it is a chance to look back on the last six years before finalists put their heads down for finals revision. The dinner is specifically for the year but other doctors and friends are allowed to attend the after-dinner festivities. So the dinner is quite unique as it is very intimate with just final years and has very quirky traditions such as the caricature (all of which are displayed in the basement of Chelsea and Westminster Hospital), and more recently, the music video, in which the professors send up a popular song.
Alumni associations[edit]
The ICSM Alumni Association was founded in 2004 with the graduation of the first cohort of ICSM doctors.[11] Still in its infancy, it is jointly run with help from ICSMSU and members of the alumni. The association aims to provide funding for the clubs and societies of the medical school, as well as offer support to students.
Two other alumni associations also exist for graduates of the original medical schools - the St Mary's Association and the Charing Cross and Westminster Alumni.
Notable staff and alumni[edit]
The list below, including five Nobel Laureates in Physiology and Medicine, shows the notable past or current staff and alumni from Imperial College School of Medicine or from the various institutions which are now part of it.
Viscount Christopher Addison (Ex Leader of the House of Lords, Ex Minister for Health) Charing Cross Hospital
Dr N.H. Ashton (ophthalmologist, Buchanan medalist)
Sir Ernst Chain (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine)
Lord Ara Darzi (Baron Darzi of Denham, Parliamentary Under-Secretary, Leading Surgeon) St Mary's Hospital
Professor Carl Djerassi (chemist; first oral contraceptive pill progestin norethindrone)
Professor Harold Ellis (surgeon and anatomist) Westminster Hospital
Sir Joseph Fayrer (physician noted for his writings on medicine in India)
Sir Marc Feldmann (expert on rheumatology) Kennedy Institute / Charing Cross Hospital
Sir Alexander Fleming (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine) St Mary's Hospital
Sir Malcolm Green (inorganic chemist)
Professor John Henry (clinical toxicologist who did crucial work on poisoning and drug overdose) St Mary's Hospital
Sir Frederick Hopkins (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine)
Dame Rosalind Hurley (medical microbiologist, researcher, and ethicist)
Sir Andrew Huxley (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine)
Professor Thomas Huxley (notable biologist) Charing Cross Hospital
Dr W Hyde-Salter (characterised Asthma) Charing Cross Hospital
Sir Bruce Keogh (medical director of the National Health Service)
Dame Louise Lake-Tack, Governor-General of Antigua and Barbuda Charing Cross Hospital
Dr David Livingstone (congregationalist pioneer medical missionary in South Africa) Charing Cross Hospital
Sir Ravinder Nath Maini (expert on Rheumatology) Kennedy Institute/Charing Cross Hospital
Professor Christine Moffatt (nurse in leg ulcer care) Charing Cross Hospital
Professor Albert Neuberger (chemical pathologist) St Mary's Hospital
Professor William Kitchen Parker (physician and zoologist) Charing Cross Hospital
Sir William Stanley Peart (Buchanan Medalist) St Mary's Hospital
Dame Julia Polak (tissue engineer)
Sir Rodney Robert Porter (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine)
Lady Ann Redgrave (orthopaedic surgery, ex Chief Medical Officer of GB Rowing) Charing Cross Hospital
Sir Bernard Spilsbury (pathologist and one of the pioneers of modern forensic medicine)
Baroness Edith Summerskill (Politician) Charing Cross Hospital
Dr Joseph Toynbee (otologist) St Mary's Hospital
Dr Augustus Waller (the invention of the electrocardiogram (ECG))
Sir Almroth Wright (advanced vaccination through the use of autogenous vaccines) St Mary's Hospital
Sir Magdi Yacoub (expert cardiothoracic surgeon)
Sir Roger Bannister (neurologist, runner of the first four-minute mile) St Mary's Hospital
Dr Jane Yardley, (author) Charing Cross Hospital
(ICSM) is the medical school of Imperial College London in England, and one of the United Hospitals.
The School was formed in 1997 through the merger of several historic medical schools, and has core campuses at South Kensington, St Mary's Hospital, London, Charing Cross Hospital, Hammersmith Hospital and Chelsea and Westminster Hospital.
The School is ranked fifth in the world and third in the UK in the 2015 Times Higher Education World University Rankings.[1] It is ranked 8th in the UK by the Guardian University Guide 2014 [2] and 5th in the UK by the 2016 Complete University Guide.[3] It was ranked 2nd in the UK for research in the latest RAE in 2008, behind the University of Edinburgh Medical School.
The School is especially known for its heart and lung transplant surgery skills led by Sir Magdi Yacoub, rheumatology treatments by Sir Marc Feldmann, and recent robot-assisted surgery techniques by world leading surgeon
History[edit]
Main article: Timeline of Imperial College School of Medicine
Imperial College London first gained a medical school by merger with St Mary's Medical School in 1988. The current School of Medicine was formed in 1997 by the merger of St Mary's Medical School with Charing Cross and Westminster Medical School (formerly Charing Cross Hospital Medical School and Westminster Hospital Medical School), the Royal Postgraduate Medical School and the National Heart and Lung Institute.
Organisation[edit]
Imperial College School of Medicine is organised into six sections: Institute of Clinical Sciences, School of Public Health, Department of Medicine, Department of Surgery & Cancer, National Heart and Lung Institute, and the Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology.[5]
Unlike several other medical schools in the UK which are part of a Life Sciences Department or similar, ICSM belongs to its own Faculty of Medicine. Furthermore, the school runs a number of courses besides the standard MBBS degree programme. These include the Imperial College MPH Programme. Teaching hospitals of the School are part of the Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, which was formed in 2007 and is the UK's first academic health science centre. All undergraduate students within the Faculty of Medicine (including Biomedical Science and Pharmacology BScs) are supported by the Imperial College School of Medicine Students' Union. The Faculty of Medicine also offers postgraduate MSc, MRes and PhD programmes, but these fall under the Graduate School of Life Sciences and Medicine, not the School of Medicine.
Campuses and associated hospitals[edit]
The School's teaching campuses include:
Undergraduate campus
South Kensington campus - Sir Alexander Fleming Building
Charing Cross Hospital campus - The Reynolds Building
Hammersmith Hospital campus - Wolfson Education Centre
Main teaching hospitals
Charing Cross Hospital
St Mary's Hospital
Chelsea & Westminster Hospital
Hammersmith Hospital
Students in the 1st and 2nd years as well as those on the BSc courses attend lectures and labs mainly at the main campuses. Parts of the 4th year, as well as other clinical modules are also held at the postgraduate hospitals, where much of the School's research is based:
Postgraduate hospitals
Royal Brompton Hospital
Harefield Hospital
Queen Charlotte's & Chelsea Hospital
Western Eye Hospital
District general hospitals
Ashford Hospital
Central Middlesex Hospital
Ealing Hospital
Hillingdon Hospital
Mount Vernon Hospital
Northwick Park Hospital
St. Mark's Hospital
West Middlesex Hospital
St Peter's Hospital, Chertsey
Mental health hospitals
St. Bernard's Hospital
St.Charles' Hospital
Three Bridges Medium Secure Unit
Gordon Hospital
Broadmoor Hospital
Cassel Hospital
Clinical attachments and teaching in years 2 (three weeks), 3 (30 weeks), 5 and 6 (all year) are held at these hospitals. These hospitals also have small research divisions which are part of the Imperial College Faculty of Medicine.
Undergraduate courses[edit]
The school accepts approximately 290 school leavers as medical undergraduates each year (including 21 from outside the EU) for a six-year course leading to the award of an MBBS and BSc. Fifty graduates (including ten from outside the EU) are accepted for the four-year course that leads to the MBBS.
Entry is highly competitive with applicants requiring AAAb at A-level, with chemistry and/or biology required at A-level. A 2:1 degree and/or PhD in a biological subject is required for graduate entry. Furthermore, the BMAT is required for entry to the six-year course and the UKCAT for the four-year course, as well as an interview. For 2008 entry, there were approximately 3,000 applicants for the six-year and 500 for the four-year course. However, medical students from other institutions may also join various portions of the course.
The school runs four undergraduate courses.[6]
Six-year MBBS/BSc[edit]
Teaching in the first two years is focused on the scientific basis of medicine with study focussing on a systems-based format, moving towards integrated disease and including clinical aspects later on. It also includes communication skills, medical ethics and law. Teaching comprises lectures, clinical demonstrations, tutorials, dissection, computer workshops, laboratory practical and clinical skills classes, independent study, and some problem-based learning.
Clinical experience in first year is provided by a patient contact course and in the second year with a three-week attachment in general medicine or surgery at one of the attached teaching hospitals.
Third year consists of three ten-week attachments in general medicine and surgery. Teaching consists of in-hospital clinical teaching, problem based learning within firms and a lecture programme delivered at one of the central teaching sites and via the faculty intranet. This year also consists of a 3-week background to clinical specialties course.
Fourth year involves study for the BSc, comprising 3 5-week modules then a 10-week supervised research project or specialist course, leading to a BSc (Hons) in Medical Sciences with one of the following: Cardiovascular sciences; Endocrinology; Gastroenterology and hepatology; Haematology; Immunity and infection; Management; Neuroscience and mental health; Reproductive and developmental sciences; Respiratory science; Surgery and anaesthesia. The following specialist courses are available instead of undertaking a research project: Medical humanities, History of medicine, Epidemiology and international health. BSc courses that have available places after the allocation of Imperial students are open to medical students from other universities who wish to intercalate.
Fifth year covers the specialties of obstetrics and gynaecology, radiology, paediatrics, psychiatry, oncology, general practice, critical care, infectious diseases, dermatology, rheumatology and orthopaedics through clinical attachments. It includes a 4-week course in clinical pathology at the start of the year and a one-week teaching skills course.
Final year consists of seven three-week clinical attachments in accident and emergency medicine; general practice; cardiology and radiology; ear, nose and throat, ophthalmology and renal medicine; two professional work experience attachments (one in medicine and one in surgery); one specialty choice module; an eight-week elective period which may be spent in the UK or overseas, and a practical medicine course, which provides specific preparation for the foundation year after graduation.[7]
Oxbridge entry[edit]
Historically, all Oxbridge students completed their clinical training at one of the London medical schools. Although those universities now have their own clinical schools, Imperial accepts students who have completed the first three pre-clinical years at the University of Oxford or the University of Cambridge. Oxbridge students join the third year of the undergraduate course. This begins with a 10-week attachment to bring their clinical experience into line with that of other Imperial students, then joining the rest of the undergraduate year for two further 10 week attachment. After this, they progress to the fifth and sixth years of the standard course.[8]
Five-year graduate-entry MBBS[edit]
Despite only accepting graduates, this is still considered an undergraduate course. The first year is an accelerated programme, which is designed to bring students to the same level as someone who has completed Years 1 and 2 of the 6-year course. The second, third and fourth years of the graduate-entry course correspond to the third, fifth and final years of the six-year course respectively.[9]
Biomedical Science[edit]
The school offers a 3-year BSc degree which first commenced in 2006 and accepts 50 students per year. Although a four-year undergraduate Master's (MSci) was initially offered, students would not have been awarded the BSc. In 2008, the MSci was withdrawn and instead, students who achieve a 2:1 average by their second year will be guaranteed a place on one of the school's MSc taught courses, thus obtaining a BSc and an MSc in four years to comply with the Bologna process. From 2006-2012, the course was taught in conjunction with the School of Life Sciences, though from 2013 onwards the course has been fully absorbed into the School of Medicine.
The entry requirements are identical to those required for the MBBS course: AAAb at A-level/38 with 667 HL for the International Baccalaureate and the BMAT test.
In the first year, students are initially taught introductory modules for cellular and molecular biology, along with genetics, with their MBBS counterparts. This is then followed by a variety of modules based on human anatomy and system physiology in the second and third terms, taught independently from the MBBS students (though sharing considerable similarity in content). Students are also given teaching on basic laboratory techniques and "transferrable skills" sessions which aim to develop a more comprehensive skillset.
In the second year, students again follow the 2nd year of the Biology degree completing the Applied Molecular Biology, Immunology, Genetics or Parasitology, Tutored Dissertation and compulsory humanities modules. However, instead of the animal, plant and microbiological modules of the biology degree, students attend the newly developed Human Pathophysiology and Disease course which comprises basic pharmacology (from medicine year 2), ethics, epidemiology, radiology, cancer and other human diseases.
In the third year, students take one of the BSc modules from Year 4 of the medical course, followed by a research project. These modules (including Management) may be combined with or replaced by modules from Biology and Biochemistry degrees.[10]
Student life[edit]
ICSM Students' Union[edit]
Main article: Imperial College School of Medicine Students' Union
In contrast to other British universities where medical students may merely be part of a "Medsoc", the School of Medicine has its own complete union. Imperial College School of Medicine Students' Union is a subsidiary part of Imperial College Union, and medical and BSc students are members of both. As such, they may join any of the 300 ICU clubs and societies and take up positions of responsibility in them. However, over 40 of these clubs and societies are under the direct jurisdiction of ICSMSU. Further, the medical students' union also owns the Reynolds building at the Charing Cross Hospital campus, as medical students live or spend more time around that area than the South Kensington campus. The Reynolds Bar represents the heart and soul of ICSM, and regularly plays host to themed parties or "Bops". It also fulfils the role of a normal student bar, where medical students can congregate and socialise whilst enjoying the occasional pint at a lower price than the average London pub.
Shrove Tuesday Final Year Dinner[edit]
The Shrove Tuesday Dinner started in 1940 during the Blitz at the old Westminster Hospital Medical School. Students and house staff decided to have dinner to alleviate the oppressive mood. A senior member of staff was invited to address the assembled doctors and whilst he was talking a caricature was sketched on the tablecloth by one of his audience. It was cut out, passed round, signed and mounted and started the unbroken tradition that has evolved into the Shrove Tuesday Final Year Dinner that has continued even after the amalgamation of Westminster Hospital Medical School into Charing Cross Hospital Medical School and then Imperial College School of Medicine.
The event is held in March every year and it is a chance to look back on the last six years before finalists put their heads down for finals revision. The dinner is specifically for the year but other doctors and friends are allowed to attend the after-dinner festivities. So the dinner is quite unique as it is very intimate with just final years and has very quirky traditions such as the caricature (all of which are displayed in the basement of Chelsea and Westminster Hospital), and more recently, the music video, in which the professors send up a popular song.
Alumni associations[edit]
The ICSM Alumni Association was founded in 2004 with the graduation of the first cohort of ICSM doctors.[11] Still in its infancy, it is jointly run with help from ICSMSU and members of the alumni. The association aims to provide funding for the clubs and societies of the medical school, as well as offer support to students.
Two other alumni associations also exist for graduates of the original medical schools - the St Mary's Association and the Charing Cross and Westminster Alumni.
Notable staff and alumni[edit]
The list below, including five Nobel Laureates in Physiology and Medicine, shows the notable past or current staff and alumni from Imperial College School of Medicine or from the various institutions which are now part of it.
Viscount Christopher Addison (Ex Leader of the House of Lords, Ex Minister for Health) Charing Cross Hospital
Dr N.H. Ashton (ophthalmologist, Buchanan medalist)
Sir Ernst Chain (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine)
Lord Ara Darzi (Baron Darzi of Denham, Parliamentary Under-Secretary, Leading Surgeon) St Mary's Hospital
Professor Carl Djerassi (chemist; first oral contraceptive pill progestin norethindrone)
Professor Harold Ellis (surgeon and anatomist) Westminster Hospital
Sir Joseph Fayrer (physician noted for his writings on medicine in India)
Sir Marc Feldmann (expert on rheumatology) Kennedy Institute / Charing Cross Hospital
Sir Alexander Fleming (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine) St Mary's Hospital
Sir Malcolm Green (inorganic chemist)
Professor John Henry (clinical toxicologist who did crucial work on poisoning and drug overdose) St Mary's Hospital
Sir Frederick Hopkins (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine)
Dame Rosalind Hurley (medical microbiologist, researcher, and ethicist)
Sir Andrew Huxley (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine)
Professor Thomas Huxley (notable biologist) Charing Cross Hospital
Dr W Hyde-Salter (characterised Asthma) Charing Cross Hospital
Sir Bruce Keogh (medical director of the National Health Service)
Dame Louise Lake-Tack, Governor-General of Antigua and Barbuda Charing Cross Hospital
Dr David Livingstone (congregationalist pioneer medical missionary in South Africa) Charing Cross Hospital
Sir Ravinder Nath Maini (expert on Rheumatology) Kennedy Institute/Charing Cross Hospital
Professor Christine Moffatt (nurse in leg ulcer care) Charing Cross Hospital
Professor Albert Neuberger (chemical pathologist) St Mary's Hospital
Professor William Kitchen Parker (physician and zoologist) Charing Cross Hospital
Sir William Stanley Peart (Buchanan Medalist) St Mary's Hospital
Dame Julia Polak (tissue engineer)
Sir Rodney Robert Porter (Nobel Laureate, Physiology and Medicine)
Lady Ann Redgrave (orthopaedic surgery, ex Chief Medical Officer of GB Rowing) Charing Cross Hospital
Sir Bernard Spilsbury (pathologist and one of the pioneers of modern forensic medicine)
Baroness Edith Summerskill (Politician) Charing Cross Hospital
Dr Joseph Toynbee (otologist) St Mary's Hospital
Dr Augustus Waller (the invention of the electrocardiogram (ECG))
Sir Almroth Wright (advanced vaccination through the use of autogenous vaccines) St Mary's Hospital
Sir Magdi Yacoub (expert cardiothoracic surgeon)
Sir Roger Bannister (neurologist, runner of the first four-minute mile) St Mary's Hospital
Dr Jane Yardley, (author) Charing Cross Hospital