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Steven Brose on physical
medicine and rehabilitation
Spinal cord injury
physiatrist headlines Career Medical
Specialties Series
By Elizabeth
Boyle
Oct. 31, 2011
If you’re interested in improving
quality of life, Steven Brose, D.O.
(’05), told Ohio University Heritage
College of Osteopathic Medicine students
during his Friday, Oct. 21 visit,
physical medicine and rehabilitation is
one of the best fields to pursue. With
roots in World War II and the flux of
wounded veterans it created, the field
is defined as medical care for people
with disabilities.
“That’s a broad
description,” Brose said, “but it is in
fact a very broad field. It really
covers everything from musculoskeletal
to neurological disabilities, but they
overlap each other.”
Brose, who spoke for the Career Medical
Specialties Series, is
a
spinal cord injury physiatrist and
attending physician at the Louise Stokes
Cleveland Veterans Administration
Center. Demonstrating the breadth of his
field, he took attendees through a day
in the life of a spinal cord
rehabilitation specialist. Guiding
decisions on pain management, prevention
of pressure ulcers, ventilator
management, and rehabilitation for areas
such as gait, speech and swallowing are
all in a day’s work, he said.
As a result of its multidisciplinary
nature, the field requires physicians to
work as a team.
That’s not always easy, Brose added, but
it’s important for the patient.
“The case-based training that we get
here (at OU-HCOM) is really helpful,” he
explained. “It’s really good training
for something like rehab.”
Brose, whose own research has appeared
in publications such as the American
Journal of Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation and who has served as
a peer reviewer of multiple scientific
journals, also gave students an overview
of the field’s research opportunities
and emerging technologies.
“Just as this field is broad, the
opportunities for research are broad,”
he concluded.
As part of his visit, Brose also
participated in the “Grand
Rounds: An Adolescent with a Spinal Cord
Injury,”
a program held Thursday, Oct. 20,
designed to expose OU-HCOM and College
of Health Science and Professions
students to a team-based approach to
health care.
Additionally, before his Oct. 21 lecture
to OU-HCOM students, Brose sat down with
a member of the OU-HCOM Communication
Office to share the following thoughts
on his field.
When did you know you
wanted to be a doctor?
Toward the end of elementary school. I
switched back and forth a little bit―I
became interested in mathematics early
in college―but I made my final decision
early in college. Very early in my life
I was already feeling a calling toward
medicine. I found just the concept of
helping people to regain wellness again
to be a worthwhile pursuit.
What attracted you to
physical medicine and rehabilitation?
The goal of
physical medicine and rehabilitation
is to maximize independence and quality
of life. And that just seemed like a
very worthy goal, and in addition the
medical side of it is pretty broad. It
deals with every organ system and is
affected by many of these neurological
diseases, and it affects the whole body.
I found it to integrate well with the
philosophies of osteopathic medicine,
which teaches treating the body as a
whole and looking at it in that way
instead of a series of disconnected
parts. That’s hammered home in
physical medicine and rehabilitation
because the body really is a whole and
when you have a neurologic injury like a
spinal cord injury, it affects the whole
body. I found that to be an attractive
concept.
What’s it like to work with veterans who
have spinal cord injuries?Inspiring
is the word I would use because they’re
very strong, and they’re typically very
motivated people. They really want to
maximize their independence and
function. And they've been through a lot
of challenges in life. It's nice to be
able to serve them.
What advice do you have for students who
are considering
physical medicine and rehabilitation?
I would encourage students to get
exposure to a wide range of areas in
physical medicine and rehabilitation.
When I was a medical student rotating in
physical medicine and rehabilitation, I
thought I wanted to be musculoskeletal
focused until I rotated on a spinal cord
injury unit in Cleveland. I just felt
like this was my calling. I got this
huge impact when I saw how big a
difference you could make in the lives
of people with spinal cord injuries. I
just felt at home there and knew that's
what I wanted to do.
Why do you feel it’s important to make
time for research?
Contributing to ongoing advancement in
the field gives you more motivation for
your clinical work. Clinical work gives
you more motivation for your research
and teaching. They all work together,
and I find that when I have a good
balance of them―which was one of the
reasons that I was so excited to come
speak here―it gives you more inspiration
for the research, more inspiration for
the clinical work.
What was your most memorable OU-HCOM
experience?
I had a lot of them. I would say it was
going to my father’s lecture for the
first time, on EKGs. (Steven Brose’s
father, Jack Brose, D.O., has been
OU-HCOM dean since 2001.) It was just
really amazing. I'd seen him speak
before, and he's an amazing speaker. It
felt like kind of completing the circle
to be in class while he was lecturing.
It was very memorable. |