by Richard Schaefer on 2023-04-19

Loma Linda University Health might be seen as a little United Nations. Students come from 60 to more than 90 countries. 

Employees of the Medical Center come from up to 100 countries. The institution’s 100th-anniversary celebration in 2005, featured a flag-carrying parade of nations featuring students, faculty, and staff from 118 countries, some dressed in their national costumes. 

Sometimes students and staff speak as many as 40 different languages. 

But not all of Loma Linda University Health’s international influence is felt in Loma Linda. 

In 2014, the institution helped the Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital in Hangzhou, China, celebrate its 20th anniversary. Future columns will outline Loma Linda’s profound influence there. The institution’s influence is felt around the world. 

Another project started in China in 1997. 

The West China University of Medical Sciences (WCUMS) in Chengdu, People’s Republic of China, wanted to start a school of allied health professions. It received a $1 million from the New York City-based China Medical Board to start such a school. 

Its vice president, Zhou Tongfu, MD, headed a group of Chinese physicians to visit several institutions throughout the United States to study various schools and their curicula. 

Their last stop was Loma Linda University, where they spent two weeks discussing options with Dean Joyce W. Hopp, PhD, MPH, and a number of her School of Allied Health Professions faculty. 

In addition to learning that Loma Linda’s programs are among the top in the nation, he found something else—people who were willing to work with him to make his project a reality. 

“What impressed me the most about Loma Linda were the people,” Dr. Zhou wrote. “All of the other institutions I visited in the United States have excellent programs, but something was missing—and I found it at Loma Linda. The faculty and staff at Loma Linda have something that I did not find at the other places. It is hard to put into words,” he wrote,” but your institution has a special spirit. I cannot say enough about your faculty, staff, and students.” 

West China University of Medical Sciences asked Loma Linda University to assist in developing a school of allied health professions beginning with four primary components—rehabilitation (physical and occupational therapy), nutrition and dietetics, respiratory therapy/critical care, and radiation medicine; services usually provided by physicians in that country. It became the first school of allied health professions in China. 

West China University of Medical Sciences was founded in 1910 through the joint effort of five Christian missions from the United States, Great Britain, and Canada. 

It started with programs in medicine, dentistry, and liberal arts. 

In 1999, it had 5,700 students enrolled in 12 specialties.

As part of the agreement, WCUMS sent six faculty members to Loma Linda in late 1997. 

This first group returned to China in early 1998 with course outlines, textbooks, and other teaching materials, to begin the foundations of the program. 

Because there were no textbooks in China relating to the specifics of the allied health professions, they wrote their own from what they learned in Loma Linda. 

One book on critical care, written by Dr. Ying Mingying is now one of the standard textbooks on that subject in China. 

Five physicians returned to Loma Linda in the spring of 1999 for three months. Although they would direct the new curricula, they took classes alongside Loma Linda University students. 

In late May, 1999, faculty from Loma Linda University spent 10 days at West China University of Medical Sciences, presenting standing-room-only lectures, consulting with faculty and administration, and making recommendations about the future of the program. 

Several hospitals are operated by the University, including the largest University hospital in southwest China. 

“With more than a million outpatients and 50,000 inpatients per year, there are plenty of occasions for student participation in clinical opportunities,” Dr. Hopp says. “The clinical facilities are excellent.”