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by
Brooke Bunch
A surge of student-driven
research is sweeping OU-COM’s campus according to Joy
Matthews-López, Ph.D., CORE research director, marking one
of the highest research-oriented classes in years.
“Research is gaining tremendous
momentum,” says López. “Over the last two years I’ve seen an
interest in research grow enormously. Actually, we’ve seen a
2,000 percent increase in the number of recorded CORE student
and resident research projects since 2002. Students are
asking for more and more opportunities to be exposed to and
participate in research.”
López says there are no OU-COM
mandates (although all students are required to produce a case
report prior to graduation) for students to conduct research,
making it all the more ambitious of them to get involved. There
are, however, research requirements for all residents. By
engaging the research process as students, OU-COM graduates will
be better prepared to conduct quality and meaningful research as
residents.
“The students are taking it upon
themselves,” she says. “They are taking the initiative to grow
their research culture, to prepare themselves to practice
evidence-based medicine. I can only imagine what terrific
physicians and mentors they will someday become.”
López says the surge can be
attributed to a number of factors, one being the stiff
competition for admission into high-demand residence programs.
“Nearly everyone has great board
scores and great letters of recommendation,” López says. “The
students feel something that will set them apart is their
ability to handle research. Osteopaths bring a unique flavor to
clinical research.”
Jerald Hurdle, D.O. (‘04),
stressed the importance of such research in a time of
evidence-based medicine.
“Medicine in the 21st century is
mainly evidenced-based and is not like the anecdotal medicine of
old,” says Hurdle. “If the research has not been done, the
medical body of science tends to question the validity of the
information.”
Hurdle is currently involved in
an extensive research project that attempts to explore the
correlation between asthma and atopic eczema, a common infantile
disease. Hurdle says its nature and extent during childhood
remains unclear. He proposes to determine if eczema predisposes
individuals to asthma, determine the risk factors that lead to
eczema and asthma; and determine whether or not treatment with a
prescription drug in eczema patients will reduce the risk to
further progressive asthma symptoms.
Hurdle says it’s vital for all
D.O. students to embrace research now because it can mean a
better quality of professional life for physicians, which in
turn, can result in a higher quality of life for patients.
“The benefits are social,
economical and physical,” he says. “As the cost of health care
continues to rise in our country, we, as physicians, will need
to provide more preventive measures for the diseases we face.”
Jeremy Mauldin, a fourth-year medical student, says it’s vital for all medical
professionals to be involved in research, whether they are M.D.s,
D.O.s, R.N.s or P.A.s.
“I think if all medical
professionals were doing research, we’d have a lot less unknowns
out there,” Mauldin says. “And believe me, there are plenty.”
Mauldin is currently researching
a better formula for the estimation of fetal weight using
ultrasound-derived fetal measurements. The formulas in current
use are only accurate to within plus or minus 10 percent, says
Mauldin, who thinks research as a student will make future
research more manageable.
“Some might say we’re trying to
do more research to make a name for D.O.s,” he says. “That might
be true for some. I’m just doing it because I think this is what
being a medical professional is all about.”
Hurdle says the reason the D.O.
profession has not historically focused on research is due to
the nature of their practice.
“We practice primary care,” he
says. “Mainly specialty medicine leads the way in research, and
now as D.O.s branch out into more sub-specialty fields such as
dermatology, we are faced with the need to become more involved
in research.”
Ekokobe Fonkem, a second-year medical student, says research is gaining considerable
importance in the era of evidence-based medicine, particularly
in the D.O. profession.
“We want D.O.s to become a major
force in research direction and policy in the whole medical
profession,” Fonkem says. “As future D.O.s, we really have to
push our profession into the forefront of research.”
Fonkem is recruiting students to
join the Students of Osteopathic Research Association (SORA), a
group of medical students devoted to encouraging research in the
D.O. profession. Fonkem says the purpose of SORA is to encourage
research within the osteopathic profession, leading the way to
cutting-edge studies by D.O.s and osteopathic medical students.
Fonkem, who was part of a team
at the University of Wisconsin-Madison that helped design new
therapies to treat asthma patients, hopes to create an
atmosphere conducive to research, in which medical students can
work together in making D.O.s leaders in medical examination.
“When students graduate medical
school, learning doesn’t stop,” López says. “If anything, that’s
when you have to fasten your seat belt.”
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