Johns Hopkins University has announced a $1 billion donation from Bloomberg Philanthropies, aimed at making medical school free for the majority of its students.
This contribution addresses the twin challenges of declining health and education in the United States, according to Michael Bloomberg, a Johns Hopkins alumnus and the founder of Bloomberg Philanthropies.
The donation will cover the full cost of attendance, including tuition and living expenses, for most medical students. Specifically, students from families earning less than $300,000 will be eligible for the gift, with living expenses covered for those from families earning less than $175,000.
This follows similar high-profile donations to other medical schools. In February, the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York received a $1 billion donation from former faculty member Dr. Ruth Gottesman, enabling free tuition for its students.
Additionally, NYU’s School of Medicine became the first top 10 medical school in the country to offer free tuition to accepted students in 2018.
Bloomberg stated the ongoing health crisis in the U.S., exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic, and the high cost of medical education as key motivators for his donation. He emphasized that the burden of medical school debt discourages many prospective students from lower-income families and influences graduates to pursue high-paying specialties over primary care, which is in dire need of more practitioners.
According to an October survey by the Association of American Medical Colleges, 70% of medical students who graduated in 2023 carried educational debt, with the average graduate owing more than $200,000. Bloomberg noted that financial pressures cause many students to drop out and deter those from underrepresented backgrounds from pursuing medical careers.
This latest donation builds on Bloomberg’s history of supporting education at Johns Hopkins University. In 2018, he donated $1.8 billion to undergraduate financial aid at the institution. Bloomberg expressed hope that this new gift would help alleviate the financial barriers to medical education and unite political efforts to address the nation’s health crisis.