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Dr.
Calabrese on rheumatology
Leonard Calabrese, D.O., speaks about
his field for the Career
Medical Specialties Series
By Richard Heck
Nov. 24, 2008
Choosing
the right medical specialty requires
professional agility and self-awareness,
Leonard H. Calabrese, D.O. (HON ’07)
told students earlier this month during
a campus visit.
“Everyone’s career turns on a dime,”
Calabrese said during a lecture for the
OU-HCOM Career Medical Specialties
Series. He advised students to “keep an
open mind” while seeking a specialty
that they really love, “and it will all
work out in the end.”
Calabrese specializes in rheumatology
and immunology. Rheumatology, which
focuses on rheumatic conditions,
frequently overlaps with immunology, a
broader field that covers all conditions
related to the immune system.
When he
first went to the Cleveland Clinic,
Calabrese said he had no idea what
rheumatology was. Upon exploration,
Calabrese become enamored with the
field. “I fell in love with it.
Rheumatology brings the principals of
immunology to patient care each and
every day. The vast majority of diseases
that most interest us are
immunology-driven,” he said.
Rheumatology also touches on a variety
of other medical fields, such as
orthopedics, neurology and sports
medicine. “It is the one specialty where
you can bridge so many things. I don’t
think you see that in too many other
fields,” Calabrese said.
The
future of rheumatology is promising,
Calabrese said. More than 100
fellowships are available in allopathic
institutions, and three in osteopathic
institutions—“all very good programs,”
he said. Although fellowships are
competitive, they remain favorable to
students in osteopathic medicine,
according to Calabrese.
Interest in rheumatology has grown over
the past several years, partly because
of the lifestyle perks, Calabrese said.
The field is attractive to women because
it rarely requires physicians to be on
call, which can ease the scheduling
strains of motherhood. Between 50 and 60
percent of rheumatology fellowships are
filled by women, he said.
To
conclude, Calabrese offered thoughts on
how first- and second-year students can
“earn (their) place in the world” of
medicine.
“Medicine is the most human of all
professions. You are given these
incredible privileges and such
incredible trust. You have to be very
human, too,” said Calabrese, who noted
that physicians should never treat a
disease without considerable study into
that condition. |