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Last year, 100 percent of the
Class of 2009 joined the Family Practice Club,
says Christopher Mcintosh, second-year student and vice
president of Student Government
.
“We want the same for the Class
of 2010.”
One hundred percent he says?
How does that come about?
It starts with OU-COM’s Student
Organizational
RUSH, the initial phase of which was held
for two consecutive days in the middle of September. The
presidents of the almost two dozen or so student organizations,
some national but most OU-COM chapter organizations, made
pitches for first- and second-year students to join them. Some
of the clubs were the Health Policy Club, Pediatrics Club,
Student Osteopathic Internal Medicine Association, Christian
Medical and Dental Association and the Student Osteopathic
Research Association.
“The club presidents gave
really great speeches about their organizations,” says Mcintosh.
“Their presentations were very well put together and used
PowerPoint.”
The next phase is Monday, Sept.
25, noon to 1 p.m., where set up in booths on the Bricks of
Irvine Hall will be those same organizations ready to sign up
interested students.
“The presidents from all the
organizations and probably one other officer will be there to
answer questions that first-year students have and to sign them
up. The first-years don’t even have to pay dues or make a firm
commitment to a club unless it’s a national club.”
National clubs require that
students who have signed up with them begin paying dues, but not
OU-COM chapter clubs.
During this phase of RUSH,
students can learn even more about the clubs by getting
involved, says Mcintosh.
This allows students the
opportunity to see what activities clubs sponsor and whether or
not the fits them well before they begin paying dues.
OU-COM’s student clubs provide
great community experiences and doorways into clinical
experiences that are sometimes difficult to have until after
medical school, he says.
The suture clinic is one such
valuable experience.
“It’s very popular with first-
and second-year students every year. The Emergency Medicine Club
and Sports Medicine/Surgery Club offer it. Clubs can really help
supplement your learning.”
Membership in the Family
Practice Club has at least two practical advantages, he says.
Its journal, which members receive, publishes excellent clinical
information and is very handy for use in case-based learning.
“I found it very useful by
helping me understand material I was learning in class. It was
ironic that many times the journal had in it things I happened
to be learning simultaneously in class.”
Second, if the Family Practice
Club has 100 percent enrollment, the American College of
Osteopathic Family Physicians provides supplemental funding
that, in part, goes towards fulfilling the club’s dues
requirement.
This year, Mcintosh says he
thought the American Medical Association, American Medical
Student Association and the Student Osteopathic Medical
Association also piqued the interests of his classmates.
“My best advice is to remember
that you are in medical school and not to sign up for too many
clubs,” says Mcintosh. “Clubs are time commitments, and you can
get spread too thinly between medical school and clubs. On the
flip side, make sure that you are involved in at least one
national club and one specialty club.
“Not too much, but not too
little.”
- 30 -
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