Korea University, UNIST team up to build Korean version of Harvard-MIT HST

by Kim Dong-young Posted : May 4, 2026, 14:09Updated : May 4, 2026, 14:09
Korea University College of Medicine Courtesy of Korea University
Korea University College of Medicine/ Courtesy of Korea University
 
SEOUL, May 04 (AJP) - Korea University College of Medicine and the Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST) have been picked for the government's flagship program to nurture physician-scientists, marking a fresh push to close the gap between Korean medical research and global leaders such as Harvard-MIT and Stanford.

The two institutions were selected as a new consortium under the 2026 K-MediST (Korea Medical Science & Technology) program, supervised by the Ministry of Health and Welfare and administered by the Korea Health Industry Development Institute.

The five-year project runs from April 2026 through December 2030. Kim Tae-hoon, professor at Korea University College of Medicine and head of research at Korea University Anam Hospital, will serve as principal investigator, while Baek Seung-jae, dean of UNIST's Graduate School of Health Sciences and Technology, takes on the role of co-principal investigator.

At the heart of the partnership lies what the schools call the "KUNIST" platform, a joint framework offering a joint MD-PhD degree, a shared research institute, and direct support for technology commercialization.

A roughly 502-square-meter research hub will be set up at Korea University's Chung Mong-koo Hall in northern Seoul, linked to UNIST's high-performance computing and analytical infrastructure in Ulsan.

The curriculum revolves around four pillars — medical AI, precision medicine, smart hospitals and extreme medicine — and will be built on the ADDIE instructional design model to tailor coursework to each student's research focus. A so-called 'Data Living Lab' is to feed real-time clinical data into research, allowing trainees to move between bedside and bench without friction.

The program was modelled on Harvard-MIT's Health Sciences and Technology and Stanford University's BioX, both regarded as global benchmarks for physician-scientist training. The Korean partners say they intend to pursue joint research and exchange ties with those institutions.

"Physician-scientists are the core talent in the bio-health field who can solve problems encountered in clinical settings through laboratory research," said Jung Eun-young, director-general for health industry policy at the Ministry of Health and Welfare, in a separate briefing on the broader program.