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Watson named Distinguished
Osteopathic Surgeon
OU-COM administrator recognized for
clinical and leadership skills
By
Richard Heck
Nov. 2,
2009
Keith Watson, D.O., received the
2009 Distinguished Osteopathic Surgeon
award from the American College of
Osteopathic Surgeons (ACOS) at the
organization’s Annual Clinical Assembly
held in Chicago Saturday, Nov. 1. Watson
is associate dean for graduate medical
education and associate professor of
surgery at the Ohio University Heritage College
of Osteopathic Medicine (OU-HCOM).
“I am honored and humbled by this
award,” Watson said. “A lot of people
have influenced what I have been able to
do, so we all stand on the shoulders of
those who come before us.”
The Distinguished Osteopathic Surgeon
Award is presented annually to an ACOS
member to recognize outstanding
accomplishments and leadership as a
surgeon, educator or researcher.
Kendall Reed, D.O., of the Des Moines
University, nominated Watson for the
award. “Dr. Watson is eminently
qualified, based on his longstanding
service to the osteopathic profession,”
Reed wrote in his nomination letter.
Reed is dean and professor of surgery at
the Des Moines University College of
Osteopathic Medicine.
“Although Dr. Watson’s academic
credentials are impeccable, this is not
what really defines him as a person. He
is (also) the kind of person that we all
strive to be in our own lives,” Reed
said.
According to
Jeffrey Stanley, D.O. (’82), “it
is hard enough to become a good
surgeon today, and many individuals work
their entire life just to achieve that
goal.” Stanley added that Watson,
meanwhile, excels as a surgeon, educator
and medical school administrator.
Stanley, chief of vascular
surgery, chief of staff, and director of
the vascular residency program at South
Pointe Hospital in Cleveland,
is a member of
the Ohio University Foundation Board of
Directors and the president of the OU-COM Society of Alumni and Friends.
During the past 20 years, Watson has
served as a leader in osteopathic
medical education, teaching surgery
first at the Oklahoma State University
College of Osteopathic Medicine, where
he served as chair of the Department of
Surgery, then at the Des Moines
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, where he was also associate
dean for clinical affairs and project
director of the college’s Standardized
Performance Assessment Laboratory.
“A couple of major concepts have driven
my work beyond the operating room
itself,” Watson said. “I feel a
professional responsibility to build
relationships with our allopathic
colleagues and raise the profile of
osteopathic medicine to more accurately
reflect the excellence of our surgical
profession. Above all, this effort is
strengthened by the quality of our
residents, interns and students. That’s
why I work to constantly improve
processes in graduate medical education.
They are our future.”
In addition to his positions at OU-HCOM,
Watson serves as chair of the American
Osteopathic Association (AOA) Council of
Osteopathic Postgraduate Training
Institutions. He is also the past chair
of the board of directors for the
Centers for Osteopathic Research and
Education (CORE), OU-HCOM’s consortium of
teaching hospitals throughout Ohio,
which he helped bring to a national
level of prominence.
“Dr. Watson is an outstanding educator,
both pre- and postdoctoral, and I am
proud that he is in
Ohio,”
said Alison Clarey, D.O. “He is fair,
systematic, dedicated to his profession
and has been a great mentor to me.”
Clarey has worked with Watson for years
through the American Osteopathic Board
of Surgery.
In addition to Watson’s award, he was
among several leaders in osteopathic
surgery to receive Presidential
Citations Saturday from Laurence H.
Belkoff, D.O., FACOS, president of the
ACOS Board of Officers and Governors.
These citations recognize excellence
efforts to promote osteopathic surgeons
on the national scale.
Watson’s and others’ meetings with
leading national allopathic surgery
organizations have resulted in greater
recognition of osteopathic surgeons.
Watson earned his D.O. degree at the
University of North Texas Health Science
Center—Texas College of Osteopathic
Medicine. He completed an internship and
general surgery residency at the Tulsa
Regional Medical Center, followed by a
surgical oncology fellowship at the
University of Texas System Cancer
Center—M.D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor
Institute in Houston.
“Dr. Watson was a trailblazer in our
profession when he did his surgical
oncology training in Texas, which was
one of the finest cancer hospitals at
the time,” said OU-HCOM Dean Jack
Brose, D.O. “He brought outstanding
guidance to those who train new
osteopathic surgeons.”
For his role in the development of the
General Surgery In-Service Examination,
Watson received an ACOS Presidential
Recognition Award in 1994. He has
earned many other honors, including an
AOA health policy fellowship in 1997 and
a fellowship from the Association of
Osteopathic Directors of Medical
Educators. The American Osteopathic
Foundation honored Watson with the AOA
Educator of the Year award in 2008.
ACOS is a national organization of
osteopathic surgeons dedicated to
improving the care of the surgical
patient and to safeguarding standards of
care in an optimal and ethical practice
environment. |