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Convocation emphasizes
professionalism and physician
responsibility
Two
physicians honored with Phillips Medal
of
Public Service Awards

Donning the short white coat for the
first time on Saturday during the
Ohio University Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine 36th Annual
Convocation Ceremony, the 140 members of
the Class of 2015 learned that the
traditional doctor’s lab coat means more
than practicing medicine.
“This coat, which represents our
longstanding traditions and our medical
profession, is literally wrapped around
you ― you are helped into it by members
of the profession,” said keynote speaker
Lois M. Nora, M.D., J.D., M.B.A.,
referencing the fact that each student
was helped into his or her coat by one
of four OU-HCOM alumni. Nora is interim
president and dean of The Commonwealth
Medical College.
Receipt of the white coat marks the
entry of OU medical students into the
osteopathic medical profession, as
students are required to wear the coat
while accompanying physicians in
clinical settings. Unlike other medical
schools, OU-HCOM bestows the coat at the
beginning of the students’ medical
studies because they start patient
contact and clinical experiences as
early as their first weeks of medical
school. Nora told the new medical
students that the coat represents the
medical profession, which carries
special responsibilities that flow from
special knowledge, skills and privileges
bestowed by society.
“The coat can stand as a constant
reminder to you of the responsibilities
that you will grow into but also that
you now have,” Nora said.
“Responsibilities like listening your
patients’ confidences, treating
individuals regardless of their ability
to pay, and treating patients and their
families with respect. You mostly have
the responsibility to recognize that you
are here not to serve yourself, but as a
physician to serve others.”
Nora reminded the students that
although they may seem to be the center
of attention during the Saturday
ceremony, the most important people at
the event were the audience. Looking to
the audience that filled much of
Memorial Auditorium, she said they play
an important, symbolic role.
“You represent the patients, the
families and the communities that these
students will learn from and will serve
throughout their careers,” Nora said.
“You represent the babies not yet born,
the lives that will be saved, the people
that will be cared for, the families who
will be supported and the communities
that will be healthier because of this
OU-HCOM Class of 2015.”
Also addressing the audience about
professionalism and the power of the
white coat was second-year medical
student and OU-HCOM Student Government
President Valerie Van Ravenswaay.
In recalling her first experience
wearing the coat in a clinical setting,
she remembered the physician introducing
her to a patient as “Doctor Van
Ravenswaay.”
At the time, just weeks
into her first quarter in medical
school, Van Ravenswaay told the
audience, “I smiled and thought to
myself, ‘you really wouldn’t want me to
be your doctor.’”
She used this experience to illustrate
her point that once the students put on
their white coat, people will view them
differently. “In an instant, you go from
being a student to being a professional;
from being a student to being seen as a
physician, so even though you may not
feel like one, you need to have the
integrity of a physician,” she said.
“Very soon you will walk into a room
wearing your white coat, and patients
will pour out their hearts to you and
tell you things that they haven’t told
anyone before,” she said. “As patients
put their lives and trust in your hands,
embrace the opportunity to learn from
them ― let them teach you.”
Besides the white coat, Saturday’s
event served as the venue for presenting
OU-HCOM’s highest award, the
Phillips Medal of Public Service
Awards. Named for the late J. Wallace
Phillips and Jody Galbreath Phillips,
the award recognizes individuals for
their public service and contributions
to health care and education. This
year’s recipients were Dr. Nora and
Robert S. Juhasz, D.O., medical director
of the Cleveland Clinic Willoughby Hills
Family Medical Center and a trustee of
the American Osteopathic Association.
OU-HCOM Dean Jack A. Brose, D.O., said that Dr. Nora
was being honored for her “contributions
on a national level in areas where
issues of the law and medicine
intersect, for her efforts in addressing
the country’s physician workforce
shortage, and her leadership in
advancing ethics in medicine.”
Juhasz received the medal for his
“tireless advocacy for OU-HCOM and
osteopathic medicine, his national
leadership for the implementation of
electronic health records, and for his
advocacy for continued improvement in
all levels of osteopathic medical
education, Brose said.
In addition to Brose, Nora and Van
Ravenswaay, speakers included comments
from the following university leaders
and members of the osteopathic medical
community:
-
Roderick McDavis, Ph.D., Ohio
University president
-
Pamela Benoit, Ph.D., Ohio
University executive vice president
and provost
-
Robert S. Juhasz, D.O.
-
Albert M. Salomon, D.O., an internal
medicine physician in private
practice and 2011 president of the
Ohio Osteopathic Association
-
Jeffrey A. Stanley, D.O. (’82),
chief of vascular surgery and
director of the Vascular Surgery
Fellowship Program at Cleveland
Clinic South Pointe Hospital, and
president of the OU-HCOM Society of
Alumni and Friends
-
Keith Watson, D.O.,
senior associate dean for academic
affairs
In
speaking to the students, Brose noted
that the entering class represents
OU-HCOM’s largest ever ―
it includes 84 percent who hail from
Ohio, 14 percent from Ohio Appalachian
counties, 24 percent minorities and 45
percent women.
“Regardless of your background, each and
every one of you was selected because
you have the potential to be an
outstanding osteopathic physician,” he
said in closing. “We are expecting great
things of you!” |