Page:Carnegie Flexner Report.djvu/215
Colorado
Population, 653,506. Number of physicians, 1690. Ratio, 1:328.
Number of medical schools, 2.
DENVER: Population, 158,329.
(1) Denver and Gross College of Medicine. Organized by consolidation 1909. Nominally the medical department of the University of Denver, with which institution it has, however, only a six months' contract; to all intents and purposes, a proprietary school, managed by its own faculty.
{{hi|Teaching staff: 44 professors and 35 of other grade, none of them giving their whole time to teaching.
For hospital facilities the school depends largely on the County Hospital, the management of which is political. Clinics are held daily from 8.30 to 10, "purely through courtesy." Students from all schools merely "look on;" they are "not much at the bedside." Obstetrical work is limited, post-mortems rare. Hospital staff appointments are secured through "pull;" the college must take into the faculty the men who are already on the hospital staff. Supplementary opportunities are furnished by several local institutions. In several of these, however, the clinics are not regularly scheduled: "announcements appear upon the bulletin board of the college."
Date of visit: April, 1909.
BOULDER: Population, 9,652.
(2) University of Colorado School of Medicine. Organized 1888. An integral part of the university.