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OU-HCOM
sets record enrollment this year
Careful planning praised
for accomplishing 40 percent increase
(ATHENS, Ohio) More than
three years of planning culminates
Saturday with the formal induction of
the largest ever first-year class of the
Ohio University Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine (OU-HCOM) into the
osteopathic medical profession.
On Saturday at 2 p.m.,
140 aspiring physicians and surgeons
receive their short white coats during
OU-HCOM’s 36th Convocation at
Ohio University’s Templeton-Blackburn
Memorial Alumni Auditorium. The new
medical students are required to wear
the white coat when they are
accompanying physicians in a clinical
setting, which at OU-HCOM occurs during
the first year of medical school.
Selected from
3,821applicants, the students in the
Class of 2015 began orientation and
anatomy classes last month at OU-HCOM.
In early 2008, the
American Osteopathic Association
Commission on Osteopathic College
Accreditation (COCA) granted the college
approval for a class size increase from
100 students per class to 140. Beginning
that academic year, OU-HCOM began the
increase by admitting 120 students,
which continued during 2009-2010 and
last year.
Dean Jack Brose, D.O.,
said the college chose to slowly
implement the increase in class size in
order to adequately prepare for this
year’s 140 first year students, and
eventual subsequent classes of that
size. When giving approval for the class
size increase in 2008, COCA called
OU-HCOM’s plan for more students “a
model for how to effectively conduct a
class size increase.”
OU-HCOM was granted the
increase based on successfully meeting
three standards, including adequate
financial resources, sufficient
facilities and sufficient and
appropriately trained faculty. Brose
said that the college purposely waited
until now to admit the maximum 140
students to ensure those conditions were
met.
While the college
immediately began hiring additional
faculty, expanding and improving
facilities were undertaken to
accommodate the new class size, he said.
Two years ago, the
college renovated and enlarged its
anatomy laboratory, while last year
OU-HCOM completed renovations and opened
a larger state-of-the-art Heritage
Clinical Assessment and Training Center,
made possible by a $2.3 million gift
from the Osteopathic Heritage
Foundations. The latter provides a
training area for first and second year
students to enhance their skills in a
safe and supportive environment. Both
facilities are located in Grosvenor
Hall.
This summer, the college
is completing renovations on an expanded
micro-anatomy laboratory.
Besides being OU-HCOM’s
largest ever class, members of the Class
of 2015 set new records in college
history with the highest average MCAT
scores, and the highest combined
non-science grade point average (3.74).
“The Class of 2015 is the
largest Class in OU-HCOM history, but we
certainly have not compromised quality
for quantity,” said John Schriner,
Ph.D., director of admissions at OU-HCOM.
“The class is outstanding not only from
an academic stand point but from one of
diversity too. The class is a reflection
of our society and has positioned us to
continue to contribute to our college
and societal mission.”
Of the 140 news students,
86 percent hail from Ohio and 14 percent
from Ohio Appalachian counties.
Twenty-six percent of the students are
first generation college students, 22
percent are minorities and 45 percent
are women.
Pending COCA approval,
OU-HCOM plans to increase its enrollment
again to produce more primary care
physicians, especially for Ohio, Brose
said. As part of the historic $105
million gift to the college from the
Osteopathic Heritage Foundations, the
college plans to open an extension
campus in central Ohio by 2015 that can
accommodate an additional 50 students
per class.
Since its inception in
1975, OU-HCOM has specialized in the
recruitment, training and placement of
primary care physicians, which includes
family practice, general internal
medicine and pediatrics. More than half
of the college’s currently practicing
graduates serve as primary care
physicians and 60 percent stay in Ohio
to practice, making OU-HCOM one of the
most successful schools in Ohio and
among the top medical schools in the
country that graduate physicians who
practice primary care, particularly in
rural areas.
A highlight of this
year’s event is the annual presentation
of the Phillips Medals of Public
Service, the college’s highest honor
given to individuals who have made
outstanding contributions to health
care, education and/or public service.
Delivering the keynote
address, besides receiving a Phillips
Medal of Public Service, is Lois M.
Nora, M.D., J.D., M.B.A., interim
president and dean of The Commonwealth
Medical College. President Emeritus and
Dean of Medicine at Northeast Medical
University, formerly known as
Northeastern Ohio Universities Colleges
of Medicine and Pharmacy, she was the
first female neurologist chosen to be
dean and president of an American
medical school.
She is nationally
recognized leader in physician workforce
issues as well as for her research in
gender equity, health professions
education and academic medicine. Much of
Dr. Nora’s scholarly work is focused on
issues where law and medicine intersect
in medical education.
A board-certified
neurologist, Dr. Nora is fellowship
trained in electromyography and
neuromuscular disease and holds
certificates in clinical medical ethics
and medical management. She is a fellow
of the American Academy of Neurology and
American Association of Neuromuscular
and Electrodiagnostic Medicine and has
served as the latter organization’s
president.
The second recipient of
the Phillips Medal of Public Service is
Robert S. Juhasz, D.O., medical director
at the Cleveland Clinic’s Willoughby
Hills Family Health Center. He is an
associate clinical professor at OU-HCOM
and an assistant clinical professor of
medicine at the Cleveland Clinic Lerner
College of Medicine.
For the past five years,
Dr. Juhasz has served as the American
Osteopathic Association (AOA) Board of
Trustees liaison to OU-HCOM and has
enjoyed being a mentor to many students
and residents. In 2006, he was named an
honorary alumnus of OU-HCOM.
Dr. Juhasz serves on the
Board of Trustees for the AOA, and is
the chair of the AOA’s Education and
Procedure Review Committee III. Dr.
Juhasz’s counsel is often sought on
issues concerning the implementation of
electronic health records; in 2005, he
participated in a panel that was
interviewed by former President George
W. Bush about electronic health records.
He has served as a member of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services
Electronic Health Records Workgroup and
served as a member of what is now known
as the National eHealth Collaborative. |