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CORE receives high
praise
“Father” of OPTI
concept extols
quality,
achievements of the
CORE system
Nov.
24, 2008
Michael Opipari,
D.O.,
considered the
“father” of the
concept of
Osteopathic
Postdoctoral
Training
Institutions (OPTI),
praised OU-COM’s
Centers for
Osteopathic Research
and Education (CORE)
at the
organization’s
semi-annual board
meeting on Friday,
Nov. 21, at the
Fawcett Center in
Columbus.
Opipari, who
attended the meeting
to receive
his Phillips Medal
of Public
Service—the
highest honor given
by OU-COM—said the
CORE was “the
perfect example” of
what he envisioned
when developing the
OPTI concept.
Opipari said that an
OPTI is a
partnership between
one or more
osteopathic medical
colleges and a
consortium of
osteopathic
hospitals involved
in the education and
training of
osteopathic medical
students
and residents.
“What I see
happening here at
the CORE and at
(OU-COM) is exactly
what an OPTI is
supposed to be,”
Opipari said. “You
got it, you
understood it, you
are doing it and you
are doing it
extremely well.”
Opipari had planned
to accept his
Phillips Medal at
last summer’s OU-COM
Convocation and
White Coat Ceremony,
along with the two
other recipients,
Anne Pope and
Levente Batizy,
D.O., but he was
unable to attend due
to a brief illness.
“He has become one
of the true leaders
of the osteopathic
profession,”
Dean Jack Brose,
D.O., said of
Opipari, who this
summer was named one
of the 37 “Great
Pioneers” of the
osteopathic medical
profession by the
American Osteopathic
Association’s House
of Delegates.
Integrating
education, research
and faculty
development into
clinical training
provides the
foundation for an
OPTI, Opipari said.
“With the CORE,
those are not just
words, but the
reality of what is
happening
in this
organization: very
high quality
osteopathic medical
education.”
Opipari said that
the achievements and
quality of the CORE
have made receiving
the Phillips Medal
even more special to
him. “(An honor
like) this means so
much more when it
comes from an
individual or an
organization that is
highly regarded,
respected and
distinguished, and
that is certainly
the case of (OU-COM)
and the CORE, both
of which have
achieved significant
heights in terms of
high quality in
osteopathic medical
education.”
From 1971 to 2005,
Opipari taught
internal medicine at
Michigan State
University College
of Osteopathic
Medicine, and since
1979, he has served
in a variety of
educational and
administrative
positions with the
Detroit Osteopathic
Hospital Corporation
and the Henry Ford
Hospital System. To
date, he has
authored or
co-authored nearly
three dozen
scholarly
publications,
abstracts and book
chapters.
As a member of the
AOA and the American
College of
Osteopathic
Internists (ACOI)
since 1970, Opipari
served as a member,
officer and leader
in dozens of
committees,
programs, councils
and organizations
that focus on
graduate medical
education. He was
named a Fellow of
the ACOI in 1981,
and he received
distinguished
service awards from
the alumni
association of the
Chicago College of
Osteopathic Medicine
in 1996, the ACOI in
1998 and the AOA in
1999.
Opipari currently
serves as Attending
Physician Emeritus
in the Section of
Medical
Oncology/Hematology
at the Detroit
Osteopathic Hospital
Corporation, and as
chair of the Council
on Post-Doctoral
Training for the
AOA.
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