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State of the College 2008
By
Richard Heck
October 7, 2008
The Ohio University Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine may be facing the
same financial issues as the rest of the
university, state and nation, but the
college is very well positioned to face
them, Jack Brose, D.O., dean of
the college, said Wednesday, Oct. 1,
during his annual State of the College
Address.
“It’s
been a really amazing year. We’ve had an
amazing number of accomplishments,”
Brose said. “We’ve got some challenges
ahead, but we’re going to get through
them just fine.”
Brose
highlighted some of the achievements and
honors of the past year:
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This year’s class of first-year
medical students is the largest,
top-performing and most diverse in
the college’s history. The 120
members of the Class of 2012 have a
combined grade point average 3.63
overall – 3.56 in science and 3.71
in non-science. Of the class, 26
percent are minority students and 55
percent are women.
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About 54 percent of the college’s
alumni practice in primary care
specialties, such as family
medicine, internal medicine and
pediatrics; and 44 percent of alumni
practice in communities with a
population of less than 50,000.
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During the past five years, OU-HCOM
researchers secured more than $35.8
million in federal, state and
private grants. According to a
report currently under development
for Ohio Board of Regents, during
that same time, college scholarly
activity – measured in
presentations, workshops, journal
articles, chapters and books – more
than doubled.
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Community Health Programs provided
an estimated excess of $1 million in
clinical, educational and other
community services last year. This
included 8,544 childhood vaccines,
327 breast and cervical cancer
screenings, and 4,015 childhood
vision screenings, among other
services. CHP now operates six free
clinic locations in some of the
region’s neediest areas.
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The
college received prestigious
professional recognition this year.
Brose named two examples:
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The college received an
outstanding accreditation
evaluation – including four
commendations – from the U.S.
Department of Education’s
Commission on Osteopathic
College Accreditation.
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American Osteopathic Foundation
named Keith Watson, D.O.,
associate dean of graduate
medical education, Educator of
the Year, their highest teaching
honor.
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Three new hospitals joined the
Centers for Osteopathic Research and
Education: Adena Regional Medical
Center, Marietta Memorial Hospital
and OhioHealth Riverside Methodist
Hospital. Mt. Carmel Health System
in Columbus, which joined as a
participating hospital last year,
welcomed its first new class this
past year.
Brose
reported that the Ohio Board of Regents
expects the state budget to continue its
downward turn, impacting funding for the
college. “The budget is going to get
worse and that is not a good sign for
us,” he said.
Last
month, the state cut 4.75 percent, about
$268,000, from the college’s clinical
teaching funding and four other state
budget lines for the college. Brose
warned that he expects additional state
funding cuts for the medical school as
soon as early 2009.
OU-HCOM
has followed a policy of fiscal
responsibility and plans to continue to
do so by maintaining a strong financial
reserve; preparing contingency budget
plans based on possible three-, five-
and 10-percent funding cuts from the
state; and taking a hard look at
expenses that may not be absolutely
critical in tough times, such as lunches
and outside consultants, the dean
explained. OU-HCOM will also be following
the university hiring freeze for new
employees.
College
administration will continue to work
with officials from other medical
schools to aggressively lobby the Board
of Regents, the legislature and the
governor’s office, Brose said.
“And if
all else fails, we’re going to apply for
a $700 billion bail out,” he joked,
referencing the proposed solution to the
current national banking crisis.
“It’s a
big cycle,” Brose said of current
economic challenges. “We have gotten
through it before, and we’re going to do
it again. We’re going to excel and
grow.”
A few
of the initiatives that Brose wants to
undertake in the upcoming year include
developing new scholarships for
students, curricular innovations that
make the most of new technologies and
addressing issues of professionalism for
students, faculty and administration.
Brose
said the most important issue facing the
college is the continually increasing
debt load that OU-HCOM students
accumulate upon graduation.
“The
average student at our college is
graduating with more than $150,000 in
debt, despite the fact that we are
almost the lowest tuition out of the six
medical schools in Ohio,” Brose said.
To help
ease the debt burden for medical
students, the dean wants to continue to
ramp up fundraising efforts for endowed
scholarships. “We are really going to
put forth every bit of energy we can to
raise money and increase our endowment
to provide scholarships for our
students,” he said.
The
dean also wants to implement more
technological innovations in the college
curricula to improve classroom
instruction, address the learning styles
of the millennial generation and
possibly recognize some cost savings in
the process. He referenced the
successful introduction of electronic
case studies. He said he looks forward
to putting more lectures online,
offering accompanying
question-and-answer teleconferences with
experts at our teaching hospitals across
the state, and he discussed the
possibility of electronic testing.
“(Our
students) are amazingly intelligent and
they have computer skills that
absolutely dwarf any of ours as a
faculty or administration,” Brose said.
“We need to use some of their skills,
and there are ways we can utilize those
in our instruction.”
Last
year the college began its Partners in
Professionalism program, in which
students directly interact with the Ohio
State Medical Board. OU-HCOM is the first
medical school in Ohio with such a
program, he said, and it has been very
successful.
“We
need to go a lot farther. I’ve asked
student government to take the lead in
developing professionalism in our
medical students. Our students are very
professional, and we’re proud of them,
but some run into problems. Some of it
is generational.”
Brose
finished the talk with the introduction
of the new design for the college
magazine, Ohio University Medicine.
“When
anyone on campus thinks of
‘professionalism,’ we want them to think
of our school, because the Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine is the only
professional school on campus.”
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