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    Top 15 academic medicine stories of 2025

    The growing use of artificial intelligence in medical education. The impact of recent federal actions on student loans and hospitals. Changing vaccine guidance. These were among the most well-read AAMCNews stories of the year.

    Top stories of 2025

    2025 has been a year of immense change, from an explosion in interest in using AI in medical education, to cuts to federal student loans and Medicaid, to conflicting guidance around vaccines. All three topics garnered interest among readers of AAMCNews, whose reporters chronicled the impact of these changes on students, faculty, and biomedical researchers. Despite the challenges, though, interest in medical school has never been higher, with matriculants at an all-time high in 2025. Other stories that caught our readers’ attention? More students seeking dual degrees. Graduating seniors who overcame enormous barriers in their quest for an MD. And a medical student-professional triathlete who became the top American finisher at the Ironman World Championship. Below, we have compiled a list of our top 15 most popular stories of 2025. To get content like this delivered to your inbox every week, sign up for our free newsletter.

    A female nurse giving a vaccine to a woman at a vaccination center

    Your fall 2025 vaccine guide
    Here’s what academic experts recommend to combat COVID, flu, and RSV amid conflicting advice from the CDC, medical societies, and state coalitions.
     

    Portrait of young medical students friends outside the university

    More medical students want more than an MD
    As interest grows in dual advanced degrees, medical schools add opportunities. Students see benefits for building leadership skills and specific career paths.
     

    Reading bot

    AI will now read your medical school application
    Some schools are trying artificial intelligence as a first screener, hoping to make admissions more efficient and reduce human variability. Here are some early results.
     

    Students pose with flyers about loans

    Proposed changes to federal student loans could worsen the doctor shortage
    Congressional proposals to eliminate Grad PLUS loans, cap borrowing, and exclude residents from Public Service Loan Forgiveness could further strain primary care and may make medical school unattainable for some.

    Burke Family

    Think you’re too old for medical school? Think again
    Not everyone enters medical school right after college. Here, a sampling of students over the age of 30 share the unique benefits and challenges of being older than their peers.
     

    Diverse medical or nursing school students raise their hands to ask or answer a question during class. They are using laptop computers.

    U.S. medical schools enroll record number of students in 2025
    New AAMC data also show first-time applicants and women drove increase in applications to medical schools.

     

    Andrea Vélez Figueroa, MD, left, a graduate of the Universidad Central del Caribe (UCC), poses with Alexandra Conde Toro, right, a fourth-year medical student at UCC.

    Puerto Rican medical students face challenges when applying for residency
    Students report being misidentified as international medical graduates despite U.S. citizenship and medical school accreditation.

    Frankie McGinn, 17, is being treated for a basketball injury.

    How young is too young for GLP-1s? Bariatric surgery? Academic experts offer insights
    Pediatric prescriptions for some weight-loss medications jumped 700% during the past few years. Thousands of teens get bariatric surgery each year. What makes sense for kids diagnosed with obesity?

    Young woman uses mobile phone on virtual visual screen at night

    AI in medical education: 5 ways schools are employing new tools
    Artificial intelligence is being tapped to create quizzes, simulate patients, pinpoint student struggles, and write assessments. Human oversight is critical.
     

    Young female doctor looking at a screen that shows a digital overlay data in virtual reality.

    Medical schools move from worrying about AI to teaching it
    Faculty used to fret over how artificial intelligence might affect education. Now they’re training medical students how to use it for patient care and research.
     

    Susanna Goggans, MD, (right) poses with her fiancé, Trace Bowen (left), parents, Jennifer and Phil Goggans (center), and sister, Rebecca Goggans (front) on Match Day 2025.

    Rising above: These graduating medical students overcame immense challenges on the way to an MD
    Five new MDs share how they made it through medical school despite extraordinary barriers.
     

    Shot of a compassionate doctor comforting a young woman in a hospital waiting room

    Women tend to live longer than men. But not in medicine
    A new study shows that women doctors don’t reap the same longevity benefits of higher education and income as male doctors do. Gender equity advocates aren't surprised.
     

    Paul Offit, MD, right, with his colleague, H. Fred Clark, PhD, DVM, two of three scientists credited with developing the rotavirus vaccine RotaTeq.

    Vaccine hesitancy is causing needless death and suffering, a vaccine expert says.
    Paul Offit, MD, says vaccines have saved countless lives, but vaccine avoidance based on false claims of danger is causing a rise in preventable diseases.

    Medical team reviewing hospital financial information

    Hospitals make painful choices as federal cutbacks add to economic headwinds
    In the face of funding reductions and business challenges, academic health systems reduce staff, press lawmakers for relief, and work to keep patients insured.

    Matthew Marquardt, a third-year medical student at The Ohio State University College of Medicine, wins Ironman Cairns in June 2025.

    Pushing his limits: Medical student Matthew Marquardt goes for the podium at the Ironman World Championship
    The third-year medical student and professional triathlete keeps shattering expectations about what’s possible in triathlon and medicine. So far, he hasn’t found an obstacle he couldn’t conquer.