Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine

An old photo of Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine (before 1951)

Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine (京都府立医科大学 Kyoto furitsu ika daigaku) is a public university in Kyoto, Kyoto, Japan. The predecessor of the school was founded in 1872, and it was chartered as a university in 1921.

KPUM Hospital has a long history in the Kansai area beginning in 1872, more than 4 years after the Meiji Restoration that ended the Late Tokugawa Shogunate. Due to wishes from the citizens for western style medicine to be more accessible, a local hospital and training institute was lobbied for, but owing to the political turmoil of these early years, the new government couldn't do much to help. So the people took on the mission and through fundraising from businesses, temples and individuals, the hospital finally got built. Since that time the hospital has been designated as a central facility for the treatment of cancer, and is one of fifteen centres nationwide for the treatment of childhood cancer. There is also a facility with an integrated approach to the treatment of dementia.

The University has two main divisions - a medical school and a nursing school. Yearly student capacity is just over 100 for medical, and 75 to 80 for nursing enrollment. It is a government supported university with the distinction of being the 3rd oldest in Japan. A major goal for KPUM has been the broadcasting of leading edge medical knowledge and technique to the outer limits of Kyoto prefecture, which covers over 4600 square kilometres straight across to the Sea of Japan.To help accomplish this, the 'KPUM Medical Care Center' was established in 1971 as an official administrative body in charge of sending graduate medical doctors to affiliated hospitals, medical agencies and health care centres throughout the greater Kyoto region. This program is regular and ongoing, and involves 120 hospitals.

The Pediatric Research Institute that was set up in 1979 is mainly concerned with severe childhood related diseases that are hard to treat by regular healthcare institutions. Along the same lines as Toronto's Hospital For Sick Children, wards were created in the newly built headquarters of the hospital, and the Institute was re-named 'Children's Medical Care Center' in 2011. The president is Toshikazu Yoshikawa M.D., Ph.D.

Alumni

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Coordinates: 35°01′22″N 135°46′13″E / 35.02278°N 135.77028°E / 35.02278; 135.77028

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