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OU-HCOM administrator
appointed to medical advisory board
November 5, 2010
(Athens, Ohio) U.S.
Health and Human Services Secretary
Kathleen Sebelius appointed D. Keith
Watson, D.O., F.A.C.O.S., senior
associate dean for academic affairs and
associate professor of surgery at the
Ohio University Heritage College of Osteopathic
Medicine, to serve on the 17-member
Council of Graduate Medical Education (COGME).
The
COGME provides services such as
assessing physician workforce trends,
training issues and finance policies,
and recommends appropriate federal and
private sector efforts to address
identified needs. The council also
advises and makes recommendations to the
Secretary of the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services, the Senate
Committee on Health, Education, Labor
and Pensions, and the U.S. House of
Representatives Committee on Commerce.
Watson
said he was honored to receive the
nomination and to serve on the council,
whose recommendations in the past have
had strong influences on congressional
action related to funding medical
residencies.
“This
is a critical time in medical education
for decisions that will impact
availability of residency training (and
ultimately how many physicians we train
for practice),” Watson said. “Medical
schools are rapidly expanding class
sizes to meet the physician shortages
predicted for 2015 and beyond. Current
federal funding for graduate medical
education does not provide enough
positions to accommodate all the coming
graduates or to address the physician
shortage. I am hopeful the COGME agenda
will take up this serious discussion to
provide sufficient residency positions
for graduating seniors. I am honored to
be part of that discussion.”
During
his career, Watson has devoted much of
his time to the advancement of
osteopathic medical education and is a
national leader in the profession. In
addition to his positions at OU-HCOM,
which he joined in 1999, he served as
chairman of the American Osteopathic
Association (AOA) Council of Osteopathic
Postgraduate Training Institutions. He
is also the past chairman of the board
of directors for the Centers for
Osteopathic Research and Education
(CORE), OU-HCOM’s consortium of
affiliated teaching hospitals throughout
Ohio, which he helped bring to national
prominence.
Watson
served as chairman of the 2006
Osteopathic Medical Education Summit,
the first national effort to gather
representatives of the undergraduate and
graduate medical education community
from across the country to discuss and
develop solutions for pressing medical
education issues.
For his
role in the development of the General
Surgery In-Service Examination, Watson
received an American College of
Osteopathic Surgeons (ACOS) Presidential
Recognition Award in 1994. He has
received many other honors, including an
AOA health policy fellowship in 1997 and
a fellowship in the Association of
Osteopathic Directors and Medical
Educators. The American Osteopathic
Foundation honored Watson with the AOA
Educator of the Year in 2008, and last
year he received the Distinguished
Osteopathic Surgeon award from ACOS.
Watson
is a 1975 graduate of 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 and a surgical oncology
fellowship at the University of Texas
System Cancer Center—M.D. Anderson
Hospital and Tumor Institute in Houston,
where he later served as faculty
associate.
He
first taught surgery at the Oklahoma
State University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, where he served as chairman of
the Department of Surgery from
1990-1994, then at the Des Moines
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, where he served as professor
of surgery, associate dean for clinical
affairs and project director for the
college’s Standardized Performance
Assessment Laboratory. |