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OU-HCOM graduates 31st
class of physicians
111 medical students to
participate in June 5 ceremony
The Ohio
University Heritage College of Osteopathic
Medicine hosts a noted orthopedic
surgeon and alumnus as the keynote
speaker at the college’s 31st
commencement ceremony Saturday, June 5,
in the Templeton-Blackburn Alumni
Memorial Auditorium.
Charles T. Mehlman, D.O.,
M.P.H., FAOAO, who will address the
graduates and guests at Saturday’s
ceremony, is a pediatric
orthopaedic surgeon and professor of
pediatric orthopaedic surgery
at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital
Medical Center in the Division of
Pediatric Orthopaedic Surgery. He also
serves the hospital as director
of musculoskeletal outcomes research and
director of pediatric
orthopaedic resident education. He is a
1989 graduate of OU-COM.
An accomplished scholar,
Mehlman has published more than 80 peer
reviewed publications and nearly the
same number of book chapters
and other scholarly works on a full
range of orthopedic diseases, deformity,
trauma and tumors in children. He also
has received
numerous honors and awards for his
research and scholarly publications,
including OU-HCOM’s Medal of Merit in
2006.
Through the Cincinnati
Children’s Hospital Medical Center’s
Healing the Children program, Dr.
Mehlman travels regularly to Shanghai,
China, to volunteer medical service.
Ohio University President
Roderick J. McDavis, Ph.D., will preside
over the ceremony, and OU-HCOM Dean Jack
Brose, D.O., FAAFP, will provide
remarks and
announce awards.
Robert S. Juhasz, D.O.,
FACOI, Trustee of the American
Osteopathic Association (AOA) and a 2006
Honorary OU-HCOM Alumnus, will bring
greetings from the AOA. Juhasz serves as
the medical director at the Cleveland
Clinic’s Willoughby Hills Family Health
Center and is an associate clinical
professor at OU-HCOM.
Christopher J. Loyke, D.O.,
FACOFP (’88), immediate past president
of the Ohio Osteopathic Association (OOA),
will bring greetings from the
organization. Loyke practices family
medicine in Northfield, Ohio, and is a
clinical associate professor of family
medicine at OU-COM.
Timothy J. Barreiro, D.O.,
FCCP, FACOI (’97), board secretary of
the OU-HCOM Society of Alumni and Friends
and 2006 recipient of the OU-COM Recent
Graduate Award, will extend greetings
from the college’s alumni. Barreiro
practices pulmonary critical care
medicine in Youngstown and is a clinical
assistant professor of critical care
medicine at OU-HCOM.
The graduates will join
the ranks of 2,565 alumni, of which 60
percent practice in Ohio, with some 44
percent working in rural and underserved
communities of fewer than 50,000
residents. Besides providing
health care,
the physicians also conduct research,
scholarship and community service.
Fifty-two percent of OU-HCOM alumni
practice in primary care fields.
In a study published in
April of this year, OU-HCOM was ranked as
number one in Ohio and one of the top
U.S. medical schools for graduating
physicians who choose to practice in
rural areas.
In the study, published
in the April issue of Academic
Medicine, OU-HCOM tied for 11th place
among all medical schools in the country
granting M.D. or D.O. degrees. The
greatest percentages of OU-COM alumni
practicing in rural areas graduated
between 1988 and 1997.
According to the study,
about 21 percent of OU-HCOM alumni were
providing medical services in rural
areas during 2005, the year the data was
collected.
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