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Two employees of the Ohio
University College of Osteopathic Medicine are being remembered
as gifted and dedicated educators and administrators in the
aftermath of the crash of Corporate Airlines Flight #5966 that
claimed their lives on Tuesday evening.
Bridget Wagner, D.O. (’94),
assistant dean for the college’s Northeast Ohio Centers for
Osteopathic Research and Education site, and Kathleen Gebard,
CORE administrator for the Southwest CORE site, were en route to
a conference on humanism in medicine when the airliner in which
they were passengers crashed on final approach in Kirksville,
Mo.
“It is terribly difficult to
lose two young people who were so important personally and
professionally to our college,” says Jack Brose, D.O.,
dean of the College of Osteopathic Medicine. “Bridget was a
dedicated student advocate and fighter for the medically
underserved in this country and abroad. She was a skilled
physician, loving mother and valued personal friend.”
In remembering Gebard, Brose
says, “Kathy was a truly unique individual who cannot be
replaced. She was a wonderful friend to students, faculty and
administration and was a dedicated wife and loving mother. She
had an uncanny ability to bring people together even when
dealing with difficult issues.”
Wagner was a 1994 graduate of
the college and joined the university in 2001. As CORE assistant
dean, she served as the academic officer for medical students in
their third and fourth years. In addition, she also was the
liaison for the CORE system and its affiliated hospitals and
colleges of osteopathic medicine.
Gebard joined Ohio University
in 1989 and as administrator in the Dayton area, she provided
advising and guidance for medical students in their third and
fourth years, monitored their progress and coordinated medical
training opportunities.
“Our thoughts and prayers are
with the families of Bridget and Kathy and to all those who lost
family and loved ones as a result of this tragedy,” says Ohio
University President Roderick McDavis, Ph.D. “I know that our
medical school faculty and staff are a very tight-knit family
and while that makes this loss so profoundly difficult, it will
also be a source of great strength in the days and weeks ahead.”
Plans for a memorial service
remain incomplete at this time, but the university will fly
flags at half-staff through the upcoming weekend in remembrance
of Wagner and Gebard.
The Centers
for Osteopathic Research and Education system is a medical
education consortium comprised of 11 Ohio osteopathic teaching
hospitals, the Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine
and three other osteopathic colleges – Kirksville College of
Osteopathic Medicine, Des Moines University – Osteopathic
Medical Center, and the University of Health Sciences College of
Osteopathic Medicine in Kansas City, Mo.
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