Mary Washington Healthcare is planning a partnership with the University of Mary Washington to start a new medical school. The program — based in Fredericksburg — could start as soon as 2029.
Christopher Newman, president and CEO of Mary Washington Healthcare, told Virginia Business that the health care system and UMW are in “serious planning stages” to create the medical school. He said that state representatives, members of Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s administration, and community leaders have recently discussed the project.
“We’re really starting to push things forward,” Newman told Virginia Business. “And the university has put it in their six-year strategic plan, which they are presenting to the state.” He said the cost of launching a new medical school is typically around $200 million. And that a large portion of those funds has already been invested through completed or in-progress facilities.
One of those facilities includes the Mary Washington Healthcare Conference Center. The $40 million, 39,000-square-foot building is currently under construction and is slated to open next year. It will house the hospital’s graduate medical education program, and includes conference spaces, classrooms, and simulation areas. Newman said that in the future, the new building could also be used for medical school training.
Shortage of Physicians
Newman told Virginia Business the medical school is needed because of a shortage of physicians available in the Fredericksburg area. “You would have an easier time finding a primary care doc in rural Wyoming or South Dakota than you would in the Fredericksburg region,” he said. “And folks that are moving into this area are definitely feeling that. And we’re also one of the fastest-growing regions in the country, particularly [in] the state of Virginia, and that’s only compounding the issue.”
Newman said that only about 25 percent of medical school graduates in Virginia remain in the state. And that the proposed new medical school program would offer a “community-focused” approach to help retain physicians in the area.
Feature image courtesy Mary Washington Healthcare