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The academic medical center associated with Temple University is a cornerstone of healthcare, research, and education in Philadelphia. As a leading institution in the region, it combines clinical excellence with cutting-edge medical research, serving as a vital resource for patients, students, and the broader community. The center's integration with Temple University underscores its role in advancing medical knowledge and training the next generation of healthcare professionals. Its contributions extend beyond clinical care, influencing public health initiatives, technological innovation, and interdisciplinary collaboration. This article explores the history, geography, educational impact, and demographic significance of the academic medical center, highlighting its enduring influence on Philadelphia and the field of medicine.
The '''Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University''' and its clinical partner, '''Temple University Hospital''', form one of Philadelphia's most significant academic medical centers. Located in the [[North Philadelphia]] neighborhood along North Broad Street, the institution combines medical education, clinical care, and research under a single organizational framework tied to [[Temple University]]. Temple University Hospital operates more than 700 licensed beds and serves as the primary teaching hospital for the Lewis Katz School of Medicine, which was founded in 1901 and renamed in 2014 following a naming gift from alumnus and philanthropist Lewis Katz.<ref>["Lewis Katz's $50 million gift names Temple medical school", ''Philadelphia Inquirer'', May 2014.]</ref> Together, the two institutions train thousands of medical students and residents while providing care to one of Philadelphia's most economically and culturally diverse patient populations.


== History ==
== History ==
The academic medical center associated with Temple University traces its origins to the early 20th century, when the university began expanding its commitment to medical education and patient care. Initially established as a separate entity, the center underwent significant transformations, including mergers and reorganizations that solidified its role as a comprehensive healthcare provider. A pivotal moment came in the 1970s, when the institution formally affiliated with Temple University, creating a unified entity that combined academic rigor with clinical practice. This partnership allowed the center to leverage Temple University's research capabilities and resources, fostering a culture of innovation that continues to define its operations today. 


Over the decades, the medical center has grown in both size and scope, responding to evolving healthcare needs and technological advancements. Key developments include the construction of state-of-the-art facilities, the expansion of specialty programs, and the integration of digital health technologies. For example, the center's investment in telemedicine and electronic health records has enhanced patient access and care coordination, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. These efforts have been documented in reports from the [[Philadelphia Department of Public Health]], which highlight the institution's role in shaping regional healthcare policy and practice. The medical center's history reflects a commitment to adaptability, ensuring its continued relevance in an ever-changing medical landscape.
Temple University's entry into medical education dates to 1901, when the university established its School of Medicine as part of a broader mission to expand access to professional education in Philadelphia. The early school operated with limited resources but grew steadily through the first half of the 20th century, adding clinical affiliations and expanding its curriculum to reflect advances in medicine. The hospital that would become Temple University Hospital developed in parallel, serving North Philadelphia residents who had few other options for hospital care.


== Geography == 
Major reorganizations shaped the institution across several decades. Mergers, consolidations, and formal affiliation agreements gradually brought the hospital and the medical school into closer operational alignment, culminating in a unified academic medical center structure. The 1970s saw significant formalization of this relationship, though the institution continued to evolve well past that point.
Located in the heart of Philadelphia, the academic medical center occupies a strategic position that facilitates its role as a regional healthcare hub. Situated in the [[Center City]] neighborhood, the center is adjacent to major cultural and commercial landmarks, including the [[Philadelphia Museum of Art]] and the [[Reading Terminal Market]]. Its proximity to public transportation, such as the Market-Frankford Line and the SEPTA subway system, ensures accessibility for patients and staff from across the city and surrounding counties. This central location also allows the medical center to serve a diverse population, drawing patients from both urban and suburban areas.


The medical center's physical footprint includes multiple buildings that house clinical departments, research laboratories, and administrative offices. These facilities are designed to promote interdisciplinary collaboration, with open spaces and shared resources that encourage innovation. The campus's integration with Temple University further enhances its geographic significance, creating a seamless connection between academic and clinical environments. According to a [[Philly.com]] article, the medical center's location has been instrumental in attracting top-tier medical professionals and researchers, reinforcing its reputation as a premier institution in the region. The surrounding area's mix of residential, commercial, and educational zones also supports the center's mission of community engagement and outreach.
A turning point came in 2014. Lewis Katz, a Temple alumnus who built his fortune in parking, media, and sports ownership, donated $50 million to the medical school, prompting the university to rename it the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University.<ref>["Lewis Katz's $50 million gift names Temple medical school", ''Philadelphia Inquirer'', May 2014.]</ref> Katz died in a plane crash just days after the announcement, making the gift his final major philanthropic act. The renaming brought national attention to the institution and accelerated fundraising efforts across its departments.


== Education == 
Over the following decade, the medical center expanded its research infrastructure, specialty care programs, and community health outreach. The COVID-19 pandemic tested these systems severely. Temple University Hospital served as a regional surge facility during the height of the crisis, and the institution's investments in telemedicine and electronic health record integration helped maintain care continuity when in-person access became difficult. Reports from the [[Philadelphia Department of Public Health]] documented the institution's role in regional pandemic response and its influence on public health policy during that period.
As a key component of Temple University, the academic medical center plays a critical role in medical education and training. It operates one of the largest and most comprehensive medical schools in the United States, offering programs that span undergraduate, graduate, and postgraduate levels. The center's curriculum emphasizes clinical experience, research, and community service, preparing students for careers in diverse healthcare settings. Faculty members, many of whom are also practicing clinicians, contribute to both teaching and patient care, ensuring that students receive a well-rounded education.


The medical center's educational impact extends beyond its own walls, influencing healthcare training across the region. Through partnerships with local hospitals and clinics, it provides opportunities for students and residents to gain hands-on experience in a variety of specialties. Additionally, the center hosts numerous research initiatives that involve students in cutting-edge projects, from cancer treatments to public health studies. These efforts have been recognized by [[The Pew Charitable Trusts]], which has highlighted the institution's contributions to medical education and innovation. By fostering a culture of lifelong learning, the academic medical center continues to shape the future of healthcare in Philadelphia and beyond.
In 2025 and 2026, the Lewis Katz School of Medicine entered agreements with two major health systems that represent the most significant geographic expansion in the school's history. In 2025, the school signed a memorandum of understanding with [[WellSpan Health]] to establish a regional medical education campus in central Pennsylvania, extending Temple's training reach well beyond the Philadelphia region.<ref>["WellSpan and Temple University Lewis Katz School of Medicine sign MOU", ''WellSpan Health'', 2025.]</ref> Then in April 2026, Temple and [[AtlantiCare]] formalized an agreement to open a medical school campus in Atlantic City, New Jersey, marking the school's first sustained presence outside Pennsylvania.<ref>["AtlantiCare and Temple Formalize Agreement for Medical School in Atlantic City", ''AtlantiCare'', April 2026.]</ref><ref>["Temple University to launch campus in Atlantic City, NJ", ''WHYY'', 2026.]</ref> The Atlantic City campus is intended to address physician shortages in southern New Jersey while giving medical students clinical training in underserved coastal communities. Not a small undertaking. The WHYY report noted that the partnership reflects a growing national trend of academic medical centers extending their footprints into regions with limited healthcare infrastructure.<ref>["Temple University to launch campus in Atlantic City, NJ", ''WHYY'', 2026.]</ref>


== Demographics ==
== Geography ==
The academic medical center serves a diverse patient population, reflecting the broader demographic makeup of Philadelphia. Its services cater to individuals from various socioeconomic backgrounds, ethnicities, and age groups, ensuring equitable access to high-quality healthcare. The center's commitment to inclusivity is evident in its outreach programs, which target underserved communities and provide care to those with limited resources. According to data from the [[Philadelphia Health Department]], the medical center consistently ranks among the top institutions in the city for treating patients from low-income households and minority populations. 


The demographic diversity of the medical center's workforce further enhances its ability to meet the needs of its patient base. Employees and physicians come from a wide range of cultural and professional backgrounds, contributing to a collaborative and inclusive work environment. This diversity is particularly important in a city like Philadelphia, where cultural and linguistic differences can impact healthcare outcomes. The center's efforts to recruit and retain a diverse staff have been acknowledged in a [[Philly Magazine]] article, which praised its approach to fostering equity in healthcare delivery. By prioritizing inclusivity, the academic medical center strengthens its role as a trusted institution in the community.
Temple University Hospital and the Lewis Katz School of Medicine sit on the Health Sciences Center campus along North Broad Street in [[North Philadelphia]], not in [[Center City]] as sometimes assumed. The campus is roughly two miles north of City Hall, in a neighborhood that's predominantly working-class and majority Black. That location isn't incidental. It reflects Temple University's historical mission to serve the communities surrounding its main campus, and it shapes the patient population the hospital draws every day.


{{#seo: |title=Academic medical center associated with Temple University. — History, Facts & Guide | Philadelphia.Wiki |description=Explore the academic medical center linked to Temple University, its history, role in healthcare, and impact on Philadelphia. |type=Article }}
The [[Broad Street Line]], operated by [[SEPTA]], runs directly beneath North Broad Street and provides the most direct transit access to the campus for patients and staff coming from South Philadelphia, Center City, and points north. The [[Market-Frankford Line]] serves as a secondary connection for riders traveling from West Philadelphia or the eastern neighborhoods. This transit infrastructure matters practically: a significant share of the hospital's patients do not own cars and rely on public transportation to reach their appointments.
[[Category:Philadelphia landmarks]]
 
The physical campus comprises multiple buildings housing clinical departments, research laboratories, administrative offices, and educational facilities. The layout is designed to keep clinical and academic functions close together, so medical students can move between classrooms and patient floors without crossing large distances. Fox Chase Cancer Center, a National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center, is affiliated with Temple Health and adds specialized oncology capacity to the network, though it operates from a separate campus in the [[Fox Chase, Philadelphia|Fox Chase]] neighborhood in Northeast Philadelphia. Jeanes Hospital, also part of the Temple Health system, serves the northern neighborhoods of the city. According to a [[Philly.com]] article, the medical center's location in North Philadelphia has been central to its ability to attract clinicians and researchers committed to urban health and health equity work.
 
== Education ==
 
The Lewis Katz School of Medicine is one of the larger medical schools in the United States by enrollment and has trained physicians continuously since 1901. Its degree programs span the MD, PhD, and combined MD/PhD tracks, along with master's level programs in public health and biomedical sciences. The curriculum is structured around early clinical exposure, meaning students begin working with patients well before the traditional third-year clerkship rotations that define most American medical school programs.
 
Faculty members at the school hold dual roles, practicing clinically at Temple University Hospital and its affiliates while maintaining teaching and research responsibilities. That integration isn't just organizational. It means the physicians teaching the next generation of doctors are also seeing patients every week, which keeps instruction grounded in current clinical reality. The school runs residency and fellowship programs across dozens of specialties, making Temple University Hospital one of the largest graduate medical education sites in Pennsylvania.
 
Research programs at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine span several priority areas, including cardiovascular disease, infectious disease, cancer biology, and public health. The school has ongoing collaborations with external research institutions and has received funding through the National Institutes of Health for several of its research centers. The [[Pew Charitable Trusts]] has recognized the institution's contributions to medical education and research innovation in the Philadelphia region. Students and residents participate in active research projects, including cancer treatment trials and population health studies targeting conditions prevalent in the North Philadelphia community the hospital serves.
 
The 2025 WellSpan MOU and the 2026 AtlantiCare agreement extend the school's educational reach significantly. Under both arrangements, Lewis Katz School of Medicine students will have access to clinical training sites in central Pennsylvania and Atlantic City, exposing them to patient populations and healthcare environments distinct from urban Philadelphia.<ref>["WellSpan and Temple University Lewis Katz School of Medicine sign MOU", ''WellSpan Health'', 2025.]</ref><ref>["AtlantiCare and Temple Formalize Agreement for Medical School in Atlantic City", ''AtlantiCare'', April 2026.]</ref> The Atlantic City campus, specifically, is designed partly to create a pipeline of physicians who may choose to practice in southern New Jersey after completing their training there, a deliberate strategy to address the region's documented physician shortage.<ref>["AtlantiCare, Temple to open Atlantic City med school", ''NJBIZ'', 2026.]</ref>
 
== Demographics ==
 
Temple University Hospital serves one of the most economically and racially diverse patient populations of any hospital in Pennsylvania. The [[Philadelphia Health Department]] has consistently reported that the hospital ranks among the city's top institutions for care provided to low-income patients and to Black, Hispanic, and immigrant populations. A substantial portion of the hospital's patients are enrolled in Medicaid or receive charity care, reflecting the socioeconomic profile of North Philadelphia and the institution's commitment to open-access care regardless of insurance status.
 
Workforce diversity at the medical center mirrors this commitment. Physicians, nurses, researchers, and administrative staff come from a wide range of cultural, linguistic, and professional backgrounds. That matters in practice, not just as a policy statement. In a city where language barriers can delay diagnosis or discourage patients from seeking care, having clinical staff who speak patients' languages and understand their cultural contexts can change outcomes. A [[Philadelphia Magazine]] article praised the medical center's approach to recruiting and retaining diverse clinical staff, pointing to its equity commitments as a distinguishing feature relative to other major Philadelphia health systems.
 
Outreach programs run through the medical center target underserved communities across North Philadelphia and extend into neighborhoods where preventive care has historically been limited. These programs address chronic conditions including diabetes, hypertension, and asthma at rates significantly above the city average in the surrounding zip codes. Still, gaps remain, and the institution has acknowledged publicly that serving a population with high rates of poverty and limited healthcare access requires ongoing investment beyond the hospital walls. The expansion into Atlantic City and central Pennsylvania through the 2026 AtlantiCare and 2025 WellSpan agreements will bring the institution's educational and care mission to communities facing similar structural challenges.<ref>["Temple University to launch campus in Atlantic City, NJ", ''WHYY'', 2026.]</ref><ref>["WellSpan and Temple University Lewis Katz School of Medicine sign MOU", ''WellSpan Health'', 2025.]</ref>
 
== Patient Care and Rankings ==
 
Temple University Hospital is designated as a Level I Trauma Center by the [[Pennsylvania Trauma Systems Foundation]], one of a limited number of hospitals in the Philadelphia region to hold that designation. Level I status requires the hospital to maintain 24-hour in-house coverage by surgical specialists and to meet minimum annual trauma volume thresholds, reflecting the hospital's role as a regional resource for the most severe injuries. The hospital's trauma program draws patients from across Philadelphia and from surrounding counties when cases exceed the capacity of smaller facilities.
 
The hospital has received recognition from U.S. News and World Report in several specialty areas, including pulmonology, where Temple has long maintained a nationally regarded program tied to its lung transplant and thoracic surgery capabilities. The lung transplant program at Temple University Hospital is among the most active in the northeastern United States. These rankings provide one external measure of clinical quality, though the institution's patient population, which skews toward higher-acuity cases and patients with complex social circumstances, makes direct comparisons with suburban or specialty hospitals incomplete at best.
 
Fox Chase Cancer Center, operating within the Temple Health network, holds designation as a National Cancer Institute Comprehensive Cancer Center, a status awarded to institutions that meet rigorous standards for cancer research, clinical trials, and community outreach. That designation, combined with Temple University Hospital's trauma and pulmonology programs, gives the broader Temple Health system a clinical depth that few regional health systems in Pennsylvania can match.
 
{{#seo: |title=Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University and Temple University Hospital | Philadelphia.Wiki |description=Explore the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University and Temple University Hospital: their history, North Philadelphia location, medical education programs, patient demographics, and 2025-2026 expansions to Atlantic City and central Pennsylvania. |type=Article }}
 
[[Category:Philadelphia landmarks]]
[[Category:Philadelphia history]]
[[Category:Philadelphia history]]
[[Category:Temple University]]
[[Category:Hospitals in Philadelphia]]
[[Category:Medical schools in Pennsylvania]]

Latest revision as of 02:04, 14 May 2026

The Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University and its clinical partner, Temple University Hospital, form one of Philadelphia's most significant academic medical centers. Located in the North Philadelphia neighborhood along North Broad Street, the institution combines medical education, clinical care, and research under a single organizational framework tied to Temple University. Temple University Hospital operates more than 700 licensed beds and serves as the primary teaching hospital for the Lewis Katz School of Medicine, which was founded in 1901 and renamed in 2014 following a naming gift from alumnus and philanthropist Lewis Katz.[1] Together, the two institutions train thousands of medical students and residents while providing care to one of Philadelphia's most economically and culturally diverse patient populations.

History

Temple University's entry into medical education dates to 1901, when the university established its School of Medicine as part of a broader mission to expand access to professional education in Philadelphia. The early school operated with limited resources but grew steadily through the first half of the 20th century, adding clinical affiliations and expanding its curriculum to reflect advances in medicine. The hospital that would become Temple University Hospital developed in parallel, serving North Philadelphia residents who had few other options for hospital care.

Major reorganizations shaped the institution across several decades. Mergers, consolidations, and formal affiliation agreements gradually brought the hospital and the medical school into closer operational alignment, culminating in a unified academic medical center structure. The 1970s saw significant formalization of this relationship, though the institution continued to evolve well past that point.

A turning point came in 2014. Lewis Katz, a Temple alumnus who built his fortune in parking, media, and sports ownership, donated $50 million to the medical school, prompting the university to rename it the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University.[2] Katz died in a plane crash just days after the announcement, making the gift his final major philanthropic act. The renaming brought national attention to the institution and accelerated fundraising efforts across its departments.

Over the following decade, the medical center expanded its research infrastructure, specialty care programs, and community health outreach. The COVID-19 pandemic tested these systems severely. Temple University Hospital served as a regional surge facility during the height of the crisis, and the institution's investments in telemedicine and electronic health record integration helped maintain care continuity when in-person access became difficult. Reports from the Philadelphia Department of Public Health documented the institution's role in regional pandemic response and its influence on public health policy during that period.

In 2025 and 2026, the Lewis Katz School of Medicine entered agreements with two major health systems that represent the most significant geographic expansion in the school's history. In 2025, the school signed a memorandum of understanding with WellSpan Health to establish a regional medical education campus in central Pennsylvania, extending Temple's training reach well beyond the Philadelphia region.[3] Then in April 2026, Temple and AtlantiCare formalized an agreement to open a medical school campus in Atlantic City, New Jersey, marking the school's first sustained presence outside Pennsylvania.[4][5] The Atlantic City campus is intended to address physician shortages in southern New Jersey while giving medical students clinical training in underserved coastal communities. Not a small undertaking. The WHYY report noted that the partnership reflects a growing national trend of academic medical centers extending their footprints into regions with limited healthcare infrastructure.[6]

Geography

Temple University Hospital and the Lewis Katz School of Medicine sit on the Health Sciences Center campus along North Broad Street in North Philadelphia, not in Center City as sometimes assumed. The campus is roughly two miles north of City Hall, in a neighborhood that's predominantly working-class and majority Black. That location isn't incidental. It reflects Temple University's historical mission to serve the communities surrounding its main campus, and it shapes the patient population the hospital draws every day.

The Broad Street Line, operated by SEPTA, runs directly beneath North Broad Street and provides the most direct transit access to the campus for patients and staff coming from South Philadelphia, Center City, and points north. The Market-Frankford Line serves as a secondary connection for riders traveling from West Philadelphia or the eastern neighborhoods. This transit infrastructure matters practically: a significant share of the hospital's patients do not own cars and rely on public transportation to reach their appointments.

The physical campus comprises multiple buildings housing clinical departments, research laboratories, administrative offices, and educational facilities. The layout is designed to keep clinical and academic functions close together, so medical students can move between classrooms and patient floors without crossing large distances. Fox Chase Cancer Center, a National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center, is affiliated with Temple Health and adds specialized oncology capacity to the network, though it operates from a separate campus in the Fox Chase neighborhood in Northeast Philadelphia. Jeanes Hospital, also part of the Temple Health system, serves the northern neighborhoods of the city. According to a Philly.com article, the medical center's location in North Philadelphia has been central to its ability to attract clinicians and researchers committed to urban health and health equity work.

Education

The Lewis Katz School of Medicine is one of the larger medical schools in the United States by enrollment and has trained physicians continuously since 1901. Its degree programs span the MD, PhD, and combined MD/PhD tracks, along with master's level programs in public health and biomedical sciences. The curriculum is structured around early clinical exposure, meaning students begin working with patients well before the traditional third-year clerkship rotations that define most American medical school programs.

Faculty members at the school hold dual roles, practicing clinically at Temple University Hospital and its affiliates while maintaining teaching and research responsibilities. That integration isn't just organizational. It means the physicians teaching the next generation of doctors are also seeing patients every week, which keeps instruction grounded in current clinical reality. The school runs residency and fellowship programs across dozens of specialties, making Temple University Hospital one of the largest graduate medical education sites in Pennsylvania.

Research programs at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine span several priority areas, including cardiovascular disease, infectious disease, cancer biology, and public health. The school has ongoing collaborations with external research institutions and has received funding through the National Institutes of Health for several of its research centers. The Pew Charitable Trusts has recognized the institution's contributions to medical education and research innovation in the Philadelphia region. Students and residents participate in active research projects, including cancer treatment trials and population health studies targeting conditions prevalent in the North Philadelphia community the hospital serves.

The 2025 WellSpan MOU and the 2026 AtlantiCare agreement extend the school's educational reach significantly. Under both arrangements, Lewis Katz School of Medicine students will have access to clinical training sites in central Pennsylvania and Atlantic City, exposing them to patient populations and healthcare environments distinct from urban Philadelphia.[7][8] The Atlantic City campus, specifically, is designed partly to create a pipeline of physicians who may choose to practice in southern New Jersey after completing their training there, a deliberate strategy to address the region's documented physician shortage.[9]

Demographics

Temple University Hospital serves one of the most economically and racially diverse patient populations of any hospital in Pennsylvania. The Philadelphia Health Department has consistently reported that the hospital ranks among the city's top institutions for care provided to low-income patients and to Black, Hispanic, and immigrant populations. A substantial portion of the hospital's patients are enrolled in Medicaid or receive charity care, reflecting the socioeconomic profile of North Philadelphia and the institution's commitment to open-access care regardless of insurance status.

Workforce diversity at the medical center mirrors this commitment. Physicians, nurses, researchers, and administrative staff come from a wide range of cultural, linguistic, and professional backgrounds. That matters in practice, not just as a policy statement. In a city where language barriers can delay diagnosis or discourage patients from seeking care, having clinical staff who speak patients' languages and understand their cultural contexts can change outcomes. A Philadelphia Magazine article praised the medical center's approach to recruiting and retaining diverse clinical staff, pointing to its equity commitments as a distinguishing feature relative to other major Philadelphia health systems.

Outreach programs run through the medical center target underserved communities across North Philadelphia and extend into neighborhoods where preventive care has historically been limited. These programs address chronic conditions including diabetes, hypertension, and asthma at rates significantly above the city average in the surrounding zip codes. Still, gaps remain, and the institution has acknowledged publicly that serving a population with high rates of poverty and limited healthcare access requires ongoing investment beyond the hospital walls. The expansion into Atlantic City and central Pennsylvania through the 2026 AtlantiCare and 2025 WellSpan agreements will bring the institution's educational and care mission to communities facing similar structural challenges.[10][11]

Patient Care and Rankings

Temple University Hospital is designated as a Level I Trauma Center by the Pennsylvania Trauma Systems Foundation, one of a limited number of hospitals in the Philadelphia region to hold that designation. Level I status requires the hospital to maintain 24-hour in-house coverage by surgical specialists and to meet minimum annual trauma volume thresholds, reflecting the hospital's role as a regional resource for the most severe injuries. The hospital's trauma program draws patients from across Philadelphia and from surrounding counties when cases exceed the capacity of smaller facilities.

The hospital has received recognition from U.S. News and World Report in several specialty areas, including pulmonology, where Temple has long maintained a nationally regarded program tied to its lung transplant and thoracic surgery capabilities. The lung transplant program at Temple University Hospital is among the most active in the northeastern United States. These rankings provide one external measure of clinical quality, though the institution's patient population, which skews toward higher-acuity cases and patients with complex social circumstances, makes direct comparisons with suburban or specialty hospitals incomplete at best.

Fox Chase Cancer Center, operating within the Temple Health network, holds designation as a National Cancer Institute Comprehensive Cancer Center, a status awarded to institutions that meet rigorous standards for cancer research, clinical trials, and community outreach. That designation, combined with Temple University Hospital's trauma and pulmonology programs, gives the broader Temple Health system a clinical depth that few regional health systems in Pennsylvania can match.

  1. ["Lewis Katz's $50 million gift names Temple medical school", Philadelphia Inquirer, May 2014.]
  2. ["Lewis Katz's $50 million gift names Temple medical school", Philadelphia Inquirer, May 2014.]
  3. ["WellSpan and Temple University Lewis Katz School of Medicine sign MOU", WellSpan Health, 2025.]
  4. ["AtlantiCare and Temple Formalize Agreement for Medical School in Atlantic City", AtlantiCare, April 2026.]
  5. ["Temple University to launch campus in Atlantic City, NJ", WHYY, 2026.]
  6. ["Temple University to launch campus in Atlantic City, NJ", WHYY, 2026.]
  7. ["WellSpan and Temple University Lewis Katz School of Medicine sign MOU", WellSpan Health, 2025.]
  8. ["AtlantiCare and Temple Formalize Agreement for Medical School in Atlantic City", AtlantiCare, April 2026.]
  9. ["AtlantiCare, Temple to open Atlantic City med school", NJBIZ, 2026.]
  10. ["Temple University to launch campus in Atlantic City, NJ", WHYY, 2026.]
  11. ["WellSpan and Temple University Lewis Katz School of Medicine sign MOU", WellSpan Health, 2025.]