Oregon College of Oriental Medicine was founded in Portland, Oregon in 1983, and is one of the oldest Chinese medicine colleges in the United States.[citation needed] OCOM trains master's and doctoral students, conducts research and treats patients at its Old Town Chinatown campus (OCOM Clinic). In July 2005, OCOM became the first college to graduate a cohort of Doctors of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine.[4][5] The institution announced plans in July 2009, to move from Portland's eastside to a historic building in downtown'sOld Town Chinatown district.[6] The new LEED Gold certified facility was renovated[6] at a cost of $15.2 million.[7] In September 2012, the school moved into its new home in Portland's historic Old Town Chinatown neighborhood.[8]
In 2024, the institution's trustees voted to close the institution. They cited declining enrollments and financial challenges, including decreasing property values for their real estate, as the primary reasons for the closure. Teach out plans were established with other institutions, subject to approval by relevant regulatory bodies.[3]
Clinics
Building on the Southeast Portland campus
OCOM operates one clinic and an herbal medicinary at their location in Old Town as of 2024. OCOM Clinic, at the institution's Old Town Chinatown campus, opened in September 2012 and serves downtown residents and workers. The OCOM Herbal Medicinary is located on the ground floor of the institution's campus. More than 20,000 low-cost acupuncture, Chinese herbal medicine, tuina, and shiatsu patient treatments are offered annually by the clinics, which also serve as teaching facilities for the institution. OCOM has an active research department, and has received substantial research grants from the National Institutes of Health/NCCAM.[9][10]
OCOM research projects have included a collaborative grant with the University of Arizona to study temporomandibular joint disorder.[11]
Previous clinic locations included the OCOM Cherry Blossom Clinic and the OCOM Hollywood Clinic. The OCOM Hollywood Clinic, with eight clinic rooms, served residents of northeast Portland, including the neighborhoods of Hollywood, Grant Park, Irvington and Beaumont-Wilshire, and closed in December 2023.