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OU-COM announces new Summa Foundation
scholarship
Medical school assistance intended to
support future Akron-area primary care
physicians
Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic
Medicine students from the
Akron area may be eligible for a new
scholarship, thanks to a $100,000 gift
from the Summa Foundation.
“By supporting students from our
community to pursue an education and
eventual practice in osteopathic
medicine, we continue our efforts to
have the best health care in our
community,” said Kathleen Rice,
president and chief operating officer of
Summa Western Reserve Hospital.
The hospital is a charter member of the
Centers of Osteopathic Research and
Education (CORE), OU-HCOM’s statewide
consortium of affiliated teaching
hospitals, though the relationship
between the hospital and the college
extends back more than 30 years, Rice
said.
“We are investing in osteopathic medical
education because Cuyahoga Falls was one
of the original founders of the CORE in
1995, and because it is part of our
mission,” Rice said. “Our physicians are
the guiding force behind our continued
support of OU-HCOM and osteopathic
medical education.”
The Summa Foundation Osteopathic Medical
Education Endowed Scholarship will be
given to an OU-HCOM student or students
who are permanent residents of Summit,
Portage or Medina Counties. Scholarship
recipients could receive up to $4,000 a
year for related medical school
expenses.
“Summa Western Reserve Hospital has
designed this scholarship with OU-HCOM to
give back to our community,” said Ronald
Russ, D.O., director of medical
education and director of the family
medicine residency program at Summa
Western Reserve Hospital.
“We
firmly believe that our success and
leadership in the Akron area health care
community has been tremendously enhanced
through our partnership with OU-HCOM.”
“We hope to ease some of the financial
burden on these individuals,” said Russ,
a 1998 alumnus of OU-HCOM. “We hope
these physicians will return to their
hometown to complete residency training
and establish future private practices.”
Jack Brose, D.O., dean of OU-HCOM, noted
that the Summa gift supports OU-HCOM’s
mission to produce primary care
physicians for Ohio.
“OU-HCOM prioritizes the training of
outstanding primary care physicians. We
are one of a dwindling number of medical
schools who maintain primary care as a
high priority,” Brose said. The dean
noted that more than 62 percent of the
medical college’s graduates remain in
Ohio to practice medicine.
To qualify for the scholarship, which
will be awarded in 2011, the OU-HCOM
student must be a resident of one of the
three counties and demonstrate that they
intend to pursue a primary care
residency after graduation.
“Ohio University is so very grateful for
partners like the Summa Foundation that
provide private resources to help our
students achieve their educational
goals,” says Howard R. Lipman, vice
president for University Advancement and
president and CEO of The Ohio University
Foundation. “This generous support not
only enhances the quality of the
educational experience, but it truly
changes lives. Helping doctors graduate
with less personal debt and to return
home to serve small Ohio communities,
that's what this kind of philanthropy
can accomplish.”
The gift to OU-HCOM was made in
recognition of the valued academic and
professional relationship between the
college and hospital, said Russ, who
also serves as a CORE assistant dean.
“When presented with a possibility to
contribute something back to our
educational partner, we could think of
no greater way than to assist those
osteopathic medical students who one day
might be on our house staff, or serve as
our personal physician,” Russ said. |