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Training primary care
physicians to better treat diabetes
O’Bleness Memorial
Hospital/OU-HCOM partnership expands
fellowship
(ATHENS, Ohio)
The Ohio University Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine (OU-HCOM) and
O’Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens
are pleased to announce a new
partnership in a fellowship program that
will train primary care physicians to
meet the growing diabetes epidemic in
Ohio.
Through the Diabetes
Fellowship Program, physicians will
received the comprehensive training
necessary to address the diverse
treatment needs of diabetic patients,
especially in southeastern Ohio.
“The dynamic healthcare
environment and increasing incidence of
diabetes in our community and at a
national level requires us to develop
creative partnerships to better address
the immediate and future healthcare
needs of our communities,” said John C.
Yanes, president and CEO of O’Bleness.
“The new fellowship program solidifies
the medical training partnership between
OU-HCOM and O’Bleness Memorial Hospital
while delivering on our commitment to
improve access to quality health care
for the residents within our community.”
O’Bleness Memorial
Hospital has pledged $265,457 to OU-HCOM
during the next five years to support
the collaborative training. OU-HCOM will
provide matching funding and other
resources, including facilities in the
college’s new Osteopathic Heritage
Foundations and Charles R. and Marilyn
Y. Stuckey Academic and Research Center
(ARC). The college also will provide
faculty benefits, including liability
insurance; and registration and travel
to the American States Association
Scientific Sessions and the post
graduate course and a rotation at the
Joslin Diabetes Center at Harvard
University.
“Our college is very
grateful for both the generous funding
and the outstanding clinical experiences
provided by O’Bleness Memorial Hospital.
This expansion will greatly enhance the
quality of our diabetes fellowship
program,” said OU-HCOM Dean Jack
Brose, D.O. “This is just one more
of the many collaborative projects to
provide medical care to Ohio citizens,
especially in southeastern Ohio.”
The Diabetes Fellowship
Program is one of only two such programs
nationally to focus on training family
practitioners, nephrologists, internists
and pediatricians in clinical diabetes
care and research, and it is the only
program at an osteopathic medical
school. Since the program began in 2004,
all six of its fellows have gone on to
successful careers as diabetologists,
and all have published articles in
national peer review journals.
“Our goal is to take
primary care physicians and provide them
with a greater depth and breadth of
experience in diabetes care,” said
Jay Shubrook, D.O. (’96), the
director of the fellowship program.
“With the expansion of our program, our
fellows get the best research focus and
rural clinical training here at OU-HCOM.”
The program was founded
by Frank Schwartz, M.D., the J.O.
Watson Endowed Diabetes Research Chair,
and Shubrook in 2004. The Osteopathic
Heritage Foundations provided the
initial funding and support through
2010.
Richa Redhu Gehlaut,
M.D., started as the first fellow in
the newly expanded program this month.
Gehlaut earned a medical degree from the
Sardar Patel Medical College in
Rajasthan, India, in 2002, and held a
medical residency in internal medicine
at Wright State University in Fairborn,
Ohio. Most recently, Gehlaut was a
hospitalist at Good Samaritan Hospital
in Dayton.
“I take care of a lot of
patients with diabetes and related
comorbidities,” Gehlaut said. “There are
miles to go in this expanding field and
one can only strive hard to learn more
and achieve greater heights. I wish to
expand my knowledge of this disease and
become a specialist who will be at the
forefront of providing care to diabetic
patients.”
Schwartz explained that
this one-year program prepares primary
care physicians with extensive clinical
training in diabetes management and
research.
“These physicians train
and work alongside other
diabetes-related specialists including
endocrinologists, diabetologists,
cardiologists, podiatrists,
ophthalmologists and wound care
specialists,” said Schwartz, who is also
the director of the Appalachian Rural
Health Center. Under the supervision of
faculty, Schwartz explained that fellows
will devote more than half of their time
to diabetes patient care at either the
OU-HCOM Diabetes Center or at O’Bleness.
They also collaborate on diabetes
research projects at OU-HCOM.
“Primary care physicians
manage over 90% of patients with
diabetes,” said Jeffrey Benseler, D.O.,
director of medical education at
O’Bleness. “The understanding of
diabetes that our intern and resident
physicians receive through the Diabetes
Fellowship Program will elevate their
experience as medical providers to
better meet the needs of our patients
with diabetes.”
Startling statistics
drive the need for this program. Less
than eight percent of the 24 million
people with diabetes ever see a diabetes
expert, and this shortage is projected
to get even worse. National surveys
indicate that most patients with
diabetes are not optimally managed.
Costs associated with care for long-term
complications of diabetes are expected
to exceed $174 billion annually.
“One of our long range
goals is to develop a new, accredited
primary care sub-specialty called
diabetology,” Schwartz said. “It is
critical that we recognize that diabetes
care is a specialized and highly complex
disease requiring unique clinical and
research training to meet the crisis we
face as a nation. The diabetes
fellowship program can provide a model
to design sub-specialty training that is
both current and innovative.”
In addition to the
fellowship program, additional
expansions of the college’s diabetes
care, education and research programs
are being planned. As part of the
historic $105 million gift to OU-HCOM
earlier this year from the Osteopathic
Heritage Foundations, more than $32
million is earmarked to hire additional
diabetes researchers and build a new
diabetes/endocrine clinical treatment
and research center on the Athens campus
of Ohio University by 2016. |