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by Brooke Bunch
Reach the
end of your loan rope? Well now you can breathe a little easier
thanks to a new source of medical school loan funding.
With tuition
costs rising annually, many medical students reach the maximum
for total Stafford loans by their third or fourth year of
schooling, cutting them off from further institutional aid
before graduation.
“A lot of
students need even more loans than ever before,” says Pat
Burnett, Ph.D., director of student affairs.
Approximately 93 percent of OU-COM students depend on some kind
of financial aid to pay for school and graduate with an average
debt of more than $120,000 — in addition to their undergraduate
or other graduate school debt.
“With the
dramatic decrease in state subsidy to medical schools resulting
in much higher tuition, many OU-COM students are in critical
need of federal loans,” says Dean Jack Brose, D.O.
To aid
medical students in financial dilemmas, the Challenge Loan Match
Program was introduced, which matches dollars with the federal
Primary Care Loan and Disadvantaged Student Loan Fund.
OU-COM has long participated in the program, which provides
long-term, low interest rate, matching 9-to-1 loans to medical
students who plan to practice primary care.
Medical
students receiving a primary care loan must agree to enter and
complete residency training in primary care within four years
after graduation and practice in primary care for the life of
the loan.
Typically
the college has been eligible for about $460,000 through this
match program. But because of the college’s strong record in
training primary care physicians and disadvantaged students, the
federal government offered to increase the total money available
to OU-COM students to $2.6 million for 2004–05.
To secure
the increased match, OU-COM must raise $289,772 in its own
matching funds. In the past, the college has covered the lower
match threshold with reserve or discretionary dollars. Budget
constraints, however, make covering the considerably larger
amount virtually impossible.
The Ohio
Osteopathic Foundation has pledged to match donations to the
program up to $100,000. In October, OOF Chairman Jeffrey
Stanley, D.O. (’82), contacted all Ohio D.O.s and OU-COM
graduates to contribute the college’s effort to meet the federal
match threshold. Near year end, total contributions and pledges
had reached about $200,000.
“This is an
excellent partnership between OU-COM and the Ohio Osteopathic
Foundation,” says Susan Blanchard, assistant dean
for
development.
If the
campaign is successful, every dollar donated to the program will
yield $20 in federal loan match dollars. And because,
eventually, repaid loans will be
credited to the college’s loan fund, the money can be lent again
and again.
Anyone
wishing to donate to the Challenge Loan Match Program should
contact the Office of Development at (740) 593-2151.
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