Q&A:
Marc D. Schrode,
D.O. (’87)
Cardiology
What has changed in
cardiology over the
past 10-15 years
that you’ve been
practicing?
Technologies have
helped people with
articular blockage,
valvular disease and
rhythm problems—to
name a few—survive
decades longer than
before. To treat
cardiac arrest, for
example, we’ve come
from saying, ‘stay
in bed and take some
nitrates,’ to
stenting arteries
and letting the
patients leave the
same day.
What do you find
most challenging
about your field?
The time commitment
and the
unpredictability of
people presenting
urgently for care.
You’re frequently on
call—all hours of
the day or night, so
you need to balance
providing excellent
care with personal
needs.
What are the
greatest rewards of
cardiology?
I’ll tell you, I
wanted to do family
medicine at first,
but during my
residency at South
Pointe, a young man
with diabetes
developed unstable
cardiac syndrome. I
must have shocked
him from cardiac
arrest about 20
times that day. Two
or three days later,
I passed by his room
and saw him sitting
up in bed, looking
much better. I
thought, ‘I’ve found
what I want to do.’
To see people
recovering because
you helped them
change their
lifestyle or you
opened up their
arteries—it’s worth
all those
sacrifices.
Does it get
frustrating when
people don’t change
their lifestyles?
There’s actually
been a five- to
six-year trend—at
least in Northern
Ohio—of people
leaning more toward
healthy maintenance
and preventative
medicine. Patients
are starting to get
the message. The key
is to continue the
dialogue with
patients about
lifestyle, be
realistic about your
expectations—but
don’t give up.
For you, made OU-COM
distinctive as a
medical school?
When interviewing
for medical schools,
I came in wearing an
unconventional
corduroy suit, and
at various
institutions people
asked me about that.
I said I thought
this interview was
not about the way I
dressed, but about
my interests and
skills. At OU-COM
they said, ‘You’re
right.’ I felt that
they were genuinely
interested in
finding individuals
with a commitment to
improving health
care.
I’ll also always
remember how at
OU-COM we really
worked together as
opposed to in
competition with one
another. That was my
first experience of
what is really the
best part of
medicine: becoming
part of a bigger
mission with your
colleagues.