Why choose UTMB Health?

UTMB Health offers innovative care provided with compassion and that is nationally recognized. We embrace a Best Care philosophy, which means that UTMB is committed to making sure each patient receives the right care for the best possible results.

UTMB Health remains committed to expanding access to advanced care on our Galveston, League City, Clear Lake and Angleton Danbury campuses and at more than 90 primary and specialty care clinics in Southeast Texas.

No matter where you enter the UTMB Health network, our providers, clinics and hospitals are seamlessly connected to one another.

Because we are an academic medical center, physicians share knowledge, the most advanced treatment options and leading-edge research – to bring you the benefits of academic medicine close to home.

Map of Texas with UTMB Health clinics marked

More reasons to choose UTMB Health:

UTMB Center for Violence Prevention named 2022 Texas Partner for Change

The Texas Council on Family Violence named the Center for Violence Prevention at the University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) the winner of its 2022 Texas Partner for Change award. 

The award recognizes an organization whose partnerships and efforts have given voice to violence prevention and have inspired systemic or community-wide change across the state of Texas.

“We are especially grateful that prevention science and our prevention work are being recognized,” said Dr. Jeff Temple, director of the center. “Prevention is not ‘sexy’ and not politically expedient, but it is the most efficient and cost-effective method to improving the lives and wellbeing of all citizens.”

The center continues to impact communities and policies throughout the state and nation.

“The Center for Violence Prevention is a longtime partner of the Texas Council on Family Violence,” said Roy Rios, prevention director for the council. “Notably, the center worked with TCFV to help spearhead the development of the Texas State Plan in 2019, contributing greatly to the massive survivor-centered research project, including a specific report on the needs of young adult female survivors.”

The center’s research helped the council create a comprehensive map of the needs and resources available to survivors in Texas, Rios said.  Some of that research contributed to an evidence-based healthy relationships and violence prevention curriculum—The Fourth R—that the center has implemented and evaluated throughout Texas. 

“We are moving from understanding what predicts violence to actually knowing how to prevent it,” Temple said. “We will continue fighting for minoritized communities and for structural change, while also making sure that communities throughout our state and country are provided with the resources and knowledge to implement effective violence prevention programming.”

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