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OU-HCOM alumni lead national exam scores
Classes of 2007 & 2008 earn top scores
on post-graduate examination

By Richard Heck
June 19, 2009
Graduates of the Ohio University
Heritage College
of Osteopathic Medicine
(OU-HCOM) Classes of 2007 and 2008
collectively earned both the highest
national mean score and the second
highest national first-time passage rate
in the most recent Comprehensive
Osteopathic Medical Licensing
Examination (COMLEX-USA) Level Three.
COMLEX-USA is a series of three
osteopathic medical licensing
examinations administered by the
National Board of Osteopathic Medical
Examiners and is the most common pathway
by which osteopathic physicians apply
for licensure. Osteopathic medical
students take the Level One examination
after their second year of medical
school, Level Two during their fourth
year, and Level Three during their first
year of post-graduate medical education
(internships or residency programs).
The 130 OU-HCOM graduates who took the
Level Three examination for the first
time between December 2007 and January
2009 achieved a mean score of 562.1,
ranking them the highest among the
nation’s osteopathic medical
schools.
“Scoring first in the country on Level
Three of the COMLEX exam is an important
milestone for OU-HCOM,” said Dean Jack
Brose, D.O. “This examination gives
a strong indication of the clinical
abilities of our graduates. I could not
be prouder of them.”
Among the recent OU-HCOM alumni, 96
percent passed on their first attempt,
ranking the college second highest among
the 22 osteopathic medical schools in
the report. Nationally, 91 percent of
the 3,798 new osteopathic physicians and
surgeons taking the examination for the
first time passed.
“We are very proud of the
accomplishments of our students during
this first phase of their careers,” said
Peter Dane, D.O., associate dean
for predoctoral education. “For our
post-graduate students entering their
first year of residency to be the top in
the nation is profound.”
Both the Level Two and Level Three
examinations require candidates to
demonstrate both accurate knowledge of
clinical concepts and sound medical
decision-making in eight areas,
including emergency medicine, family
medicine, internal medicine,
obstetrics/gynecology, osteopathic
principles, pediatrics, psychiatry and
surgery.
Both Dane and Brose attributed the
achievement to OU-HCOM’s faculty and the
college’s educational programs,
including Centers for Osteopathic
Research and Education (CORE), the
college’s statewide consortium of
teaching hospitals in which its third-
and fourth-year medical students conduct
their clinical rotations.
“A
large part of the credit belongs to our
CORE clinical faculty and our CORE
hospitals. I am profoundly indebted to
our hospitals and volunteer clinical
faculty for the tremendous teaching that
they provide to our students,” Brose
said. |