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New Pocket Reference
Guide Promotes OMM
Fundamentals
A
first-of-its-kind
resource in
osteopathic medicine
By Angelina Young
Third-year
osteopathic medical
students will have
something new in
their pockets during
clinical rotations:
OMM Quick Cards.
Developed by the
CORE Osteopathic
Principles and
Practices Committee
(COPPC), this new
pocket-sized,
fold-out reference
guide is designed
“to facilitate the
integration of the
AOA core
competencies into
residents’ practice
of medicine to
improve the health
and healing of
patients,” according
to COPPC members.
A
card has been mailed
to every third-year
osteopathic medical
student in the
country in January.
Stevan Walkowski,
D.O. (’89), chairman
of COPPC, said the
group had been
working on a manual
for third-year
residents, when
committee member
Clay Walsh, D.O.,
clinical associate
professor of OMM at
Summa Western
Reserve Hospital,
recommended putting
the information into
a pocket-sized card
that residents could
easily keep with
them and refer to as
needed.
Walkowski said the
cards were the
perfect solution to
the committee
members’ desire to
create “something
easy to use; a handy
guide to keep close
by.”
“The OMM Quick Card
is a reference
manual, not a
solution-based
manual,” Walkowski
said. “In other
words, it does not
give solutions to
problems, like ‘if
this, then that.’ It
is a reminder to
students of the
osteopathic
principles that are
important to think
about on a
day-to-day basis.”
Walkowski notes that
“nothing this ‘down
and dirty’ has been
seen in the field in
the past,” and as
far any of the COPPC
members know, it is
the only such card
of its kind. The
publication was
designed by the
OU-COM Office of
Communication.
Soon the OMM Quick
Cards will be
distributed
throughout the CORE
and are slated to be
given to all CORE
residents, CORE
faculty, program
directors and DMEs,
among others.
“My hope is that
these cards become a
helpful reminder for
all students,
residents, trainers,
and practicing
physicians to use
OMM frequently when
they are treating
their patients,”
Walkowski said. “I
hope it serves as a
refresher for OMM
skills that need a
little dusting off
and a resource to
think about using
OMM on patients that
they may not have
considered in the
past.”
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