The school will be housed on the old Roche site, which straddles Nutley and Clifton along Route 3.
It recently received the OK from the Nutley Planning Board for site plans, and both Hackensack Meridian Health and Seton Hall have been building up faculty and staff and the curriculum in the past year.
“We are pleased to receive preliminary accreditation for the Seton Hall-Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine from the Liaison Committee on Medical Education,” Seton Hall said in a statement. “This is an essential requirement and great accomplishment in the complex process of establishing a new medical school. We continue to work with our partner, Hackensack Meridian Health, to address the next steps in this exciting project as it moves forward, including at the appropriate time, an announcement regarding our inaugural class recruitment.”
The two entities announced the venture, the first of its kind in the state between a health system and private college, in 2016 after signing a 25-year lease for the 116-acre former pharmaceutical site in Nutley and Clifton.
Of that, 16 acres will become the new school, including Seton Hall’s College of Nursing and School of Health and Medical Sciences. It is also slated to be the home for research and innovation.
Since then, Seton Hall lost its president, A. Gabriel Esteban, to Chicago-based DePaul University.
But the dual-entity venture has gained Dr. Bonita Stanton as the founding dean of the school. Stanton has had a prominent career consulting with the World Bank, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization.
The school has said it is building its curriculum to encourage greater interaction within the health system and focusing on the latest technologies and strategies of providing health care.
“Basic science content will be presented in its clinical context with clear medical relevance. Students will learn within an integrated curriculum in a team-oriented, collaborative environment,” according to the school’s website.
In the past, Robert Garrett, the co-CEO of Hackensack Meridian Health, has stated he hopes the school will help alleviate what is expected to be a coming shortage of primary care physicians in the state.
In 2020, the state is projected to have a shortage of 2,500 primary care physicians and specialists.
Garrett is so passionate about the project that he and his wife, Laura Garrett, provided a $2.65 million gift to endow a chair for Stanton.
The school comes just six years after Cooper Medical School of Rowan University enrolled its first class. That class represented the first medical school to open in New Jersey in 35 years.
It is the fifth medical school in the state, joining Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and Rowan University’s School of Osteopathic Medicine.