UConn Renames School of Pharmacy to Reflect Full Scope of its Educational and Research Impact

The School enters its second century as the UConn School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences

Exterior views of the Pharmacy/Biology Building on May 14, 2024. (Sean Flynn/UConn Photo)

Exterior views of the Pharmacy/Biology Building (UConn Photo)

With 100 years of nationally recognized academic and research excellence already to its credit, the UConn School of Pharmacy is entering its next century with a new name to better reflect the full scope of its comprehensive mission and impact in the field.

The new name – the UConn School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences – went into effect Wednesday with a vote from the Board of Trustees, which joined the school’s administration, faculty, alumni, and others in supporting the change.

The new name better reflects the school’s comprehensive offerings in training future pharmacists and advancing pharmaceutical sciences through research, graduate education, and innovation that translates into advances in the field.

The School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences houses robust programs in pharmaceutics, medicinal chemistry, pharmacology and toxicology, outcomes research, regulatory science, and related disciplines, along with the professional Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) program.

“The new name more accurately reflects the school’s academic breadth, research intensity, and societal impact while positioning it for continued growth, innovation, and national leadership,” says Philip M. Hritcko, the school’s dean and a clinical professor of pharmacy practice.

The new name also aligns with goals in the school’s Strategic Plan, along with those in the University’s overarching Strategic Plan to amplify UConn’s work in innovation, economic development, public impact, and global engagement.

The school’s faculty voted unanimously in September in support of the name change, which also garnered the enthusiastic support of the school’s alumni board and advisory board.

“We concur that the name more accurately reflects the school’s comprehensive academic mission and its significant contributions to the university’s research and innovation portfolio,” says Mary Inguanti, chair of the Dean’s Advisory Board and president of the school’s Alumni Board.

The change has no discernible fiscal impact, nor does it alter academic programs, students’ degree paths, accreditation status, faculty and staff appointments, the school’s organizational structure, or its relationships with external stakeholders such as industry partners and funding agencies.

However, it better captures the breadth of the school’s academic and scientific enterprise, which in turn is expected to elevate its reputation among potential new students, philanthropic supporters, grant funding sources, and prospective faculty hires.

It will also strengthen engagement with the school’s thousands of alumni: “(It) provides clarity and distinction for more than a century of graduates whose careers span clinical practice, industry, academia, and government service,” Inguanti says.

The school has a long and distinguished history of education, research, and service dating back 100 years to its start as the Connecticut College of Pharmacy, which opened its doors in October 1925.

The school held its first Commencement in 1927, later changing its name and awarding its first master’s degree in 1951. That was quickly followed by its first Ph.D. in 1953, and later, the school graduated its first Pharm.D. class in 2001.

It also enjoys strong affection and support from its alumni, faculty, and staff.

Last year, Dean Hritcko and his wife, Lorraine, pledged a $5 million planned gift, one of the largest in the school’s existence, to support scholarships and other programs. And earlier this month, pharmaceutical leader and philanthropist Jane Hirsh ’65 (PHARM) made a $250,000 gift to the school to seed non-animal research in drug discovery and development, including organ-on-a-chip innovations.

Both gifts advance the historic $1.5 billion Because of UConn campaign, bringing the campaign closer to its goals to ease students’ financial burdens and boost academic research.