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Alumnus returns to Athens as GOBA
director
Thomas Pommering, D.O., developed his
love of cycling as a medical student at
Ohio University
By
Anita Martin
June 25, 2010
It’s 8 a.m. on a balmy June morning in
Athens, and the roads are swarming with
cyclists riding the world’s largest
family-oriented bicycle tour. Near the
Athens Community Center, medical
volunteers have set up a make-shift
canopy tent to treat the inevitable
bumps, bruises, sprains—and hopefully
that’s the worst they’ll see.
Welcome to the 22nd
Great Ohio Bicycle Adventure, when
nearly 2,450 bike enthusiasts embark on
a 350-mile two-wheeled journey through
Southeastern Ohio. With this many
cyclists—of all ages—medical issues,
from dehydration to road rash to heart
palpitations, are sure to arise.
Luckily, Thomas L. Pommering, D.O.
(’91), is there to coordinate the
care they need.

Since 1993,
Pommering has served as medical director
for GOBA, recruiting and overseeing
teams of about 20 volunteer physicians,
nurses and paramedics who provide
twice-daily clinics, monitor the race
with first-aid kits and ham radios, and
prepare emergency response plans.
Paramedics with American Medical
Response also provide support.
“When GOBA first
started, 22 years ago, the medical
system was run out of the back of Dr.
Montalto’s car,” Pommering says,
referring to former medical director
Norman Montalto, D.O. “Now we have a
dedicated health van and twice-daily
clinics, complete with massage and
osteopathic manipulative
treatment—completely free of charge.”
Pommering took
over for Montalto, an osteopathic family
physician in West Virginia, in 1993,
after serving GOBA for two years as a
volunteer physician. He estimates that
the clinics see between 125 and 200
people during the week-long tour.
This GOBA year’s
participants ride approximately 50 miles
a day with overnight camping in Logan,
McConnelsville, Marietta, Athens and
McArthur.
“It’s been hillier
and more consistently hot than in most
years,” Pommering says, noting that
temperatures in Marietta crept into the
high 80s. “But so far, we’ve been lucky;
we’ve had a lot of hot riders, but not a
lot of sick riders.”
According to
Pommering, the most common bike event
injuries involve overuse: tendonitis,
strains, knee cap pain. Others, like
dehydration or abrasions, are
environmental.
“In my experience,
trauma-related injuries—when people
crash at high speed—are always the
worst,” Pommering says.
He emphasizes that
GOBA participants are required to wear
helmets, follow all traffic laws and
attend a safety session to prepare. “We
have a good preventive effort, but with
3,000 riders, ranging [in age] from
three to 89, someone’s bound to take a
spill or overheat or come in with chest
pain.”
And, of course,
the riders have to contend with the
elements.
“We’ve had at
least two tornado warnings during
previous GOBA tours,” Pommering says.
“Luckily none of them developed into
tornadoes, but we’ve got contingencies
and emergency action plans.”
Medical volunteers
ride along carrying local ham radios
(more reliable than cell phones on rural
roads), and nightly camps are equipped
with public address systems. Each
afternoon, cars with bicycle racks
(“sags,” as they’re called by the
medical staff) patrol the tour routes
looking for fatigued riders who could
use a lift to camp.
Along with
Co-Medical Director Diane Manos, M.D.,
and GOBA Director Julie Van Winkle,
Pommering coordinates with local
communities to alert local hospital
emergency departments about the event
and secure evacuation buses and other
provisions in case of emergency.
“We set the bar
really high for safety and support,”
Pommering says. “Riders who do other
long rides often tell us that this is
the best-supported week-long bike tour
they’ve done.”
Pommering,
division chief for sports medicine and
medical director for sports medicine at
Nationwide Children’s Hospital in
Columbus, discovered his love for
cycling in the rolling hills of Athens
as a medical student at OU-COM.
“The Athens area
is really the best place in Ohio to ride
your bike,” Pommering said, adding, “for
me, [GOBA] is a great opportunity to
have fun, serve the community and
provide medical education to medical
students and young physicians.”
Pommering is
riding GOBA-2010 with his oldest
daughter, Josephine, who has joined him
for the past seven years. She turned 14
Thursday, during GOBA’s layover day in
Athens. Pommering’s wife, Phyllis
Polas, D.O. (’95), and their other
two children, Emma and Nathaniel, drove
down from Columbus Thursday to celebrate
and visit their alma mater. Polas is a
pediatrician in Hilliard, Ohio.

In May, Pommering
was one of three physicians named Ohio
Athletic Trainers’ Association (OATA)
Team Physician of the Year for his
dedication to serving student athletics
among Columbus schools and communities.
Throughout the year, Pommering
volunteers his time and medical skills
to everything from high school football
teams to gymnastics tournaments to the
Radio City Rockettes.
In addition to his
practice and community service,
Pommering finds time to conduct medical
research and help train tomorrow’s
physicians. He co-authored his first
published research article as a family
medicine fellow at OU-COM, and he
maintains a regular byline in scholarly
journals related to pediatric and family
medicine. At national conferences,
Pommering is a respected lecturer on
topics ranging from shin pain to
shoulder atrophy to—surprise,
surprise—injury patterns during
long-distance bicycle tours.
As a medical
educator, Pommering holds the position
of assistant clinical professor of
family medicine at OU-COM. He is also a
preceptor at the OhioHealth Grant
Medical Center, The Ohio State
University College of Medicine and
Capital University in Columbus.
Immediately
following GOBA-2010, Pommering will
return to the Columbus area to serve as
a volunteer physician for the Tour de
Grandview, June 26-27, a professional
cycling race in Grandview, Ohio. |