The University of Alabama College of Community Health Sciences is home to one of the nation’s largest and oldest family medicine residencies – The University of Alabama Tuscaloosa Family Medicine Residency Program – and offers post-graduate fellowships in behavioral health, emergency medicine, geriatrics, hospital medicine, obstetrics, pediatrics and sports medicine. In its role as a regional campus of the University of Alabama at Birmingham Marnix E. Heersink School of Medicine, the College provides the third and fourth years of clinical education and training to a portion of medical students. Through a series of nationally recognized pipeline programs, the College recruits and mentors students from rural Alabama who wish to return to their hometowns or similar areas to practice. The College operates University Medical Center, with six locations that together comprise the largest community medical practice in West Alabama, as well as the UA Student Health Center and Pharmacy and Capstone Hospitalist Group. The College also houses the Institute for Rural Health Research, which conducts research focused on improving the health and lives of Alabama’s rural citizens, and members of its faculty are core researchers at the UA Center for Convergent Bioscience & Medicine.
Our Mission
We are dedicated to improving and promoting the health of individuals and communities in rural Alabama and the Southeast region through leadership in medical and health-related education, primary care and population health; the provision of high quality, accessible health care services; and research and scholarship.
We pursue this mission by:
- Shaping globally capable, locally relevant and culturally competent physicians through learner-centered, innovative, community-based programs across the continuum of medical education.
- Addressing the physician workforce needs of Alabama and the region with a focus on comprehensive Family Medicine residency training.
- Forging an international reputation as a health sciences academic research center.
- Providing high-quality, patient-centered and accessible clinical services delivered by health-care professionals of all disciplines.
- Creating a culture of employee wellness and growth.
Our Core Values
- Integrity
- Social Accountability
- Learning
- Innovation
- Patient-Centeredness
- Transparency
- Interprofessional Collaboration
Our History
The College of Community Health Sciences was established at The University of Alabama in 1972 in response to the Alabama Legislature’s mandate to solve the critical need for health care in rural Alabama. That same year, the College was also designated as a regional campus of the University of Alabama School of Medicine (now the UAB Heersink School of Medicine) to provide clinical training to medical students. Dr. William R. Willard was recruited as the College’s first dean following his retirement from the University of Kentucky. Willard, known as the father of family medicine for his national role in establishing family medicine as a specialty, began recruiting faculty and staff, and the College’s first full-time students enrolled in 1974.
Since that time, the College has educated and graduated 588 family medicine physicians who are working in medical practices, hospitals and universities throughout the United States. In its role as the Tuscaloosa Regional Campus of the Heersink School of Medicine, the College has educated more than 900 medical students who have been competitive in obtaining entry to prestigious residencies across the country in family medicine and other specialties, including internal medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, psychiatry, neurology and surgery.
The College’s first medical clinic opened in 1975 in Tuscaloosa and by 1993 had 13,800 patients. Today, University Medical Center provides comprehensive patient-centered care from six locations – Tuscaloosa, Northport, Demopolis, Fayette, Carrollton and Livingston – that form the largest community practice in West Alabama with more than 185,000 annual patient visits. University Medical Center also serves as the base for the College’s clinical teaching program. The College also operates the UA Student Health Center and Pharmacy, which cares for and serves as the medical home for the University’s 40,000 students, and Capstone Hospitalist Group, whose physicians and nurse practitioners care for hospitalized patients at DCH Regional Medical Center in Tuscaloosa and Northport Medical Center in Northport, Alabama.
CCHS faculty and graduate students engage in research and scholarship and provide community outreach through the Institute for Rural Health Research, established by the College in 2001 with the goal of improving health in Alabama and the region, and the UA Center for Convergent Bioscience & Medicine.