
Visiting alum launches Career Medical Specialties
series
Guest John Walter, D.O. (’00), speaks about physical
medicine and rehabilitation

Sept. 26, 2008
By Richard Heck
Variety,
flexibility and a team-oriented approach make
physical medicine
and rehabilitation a rewarding specialty, according
to John Walter, D.O. (’00).
On Thursday, Sept.
25, Walter’s noon address to first- and second-year
students kicked off this year’s Career Medical
Specialties (CMS) series. Unlike last year, when the
entire series took place in the same week, this
year’s CMS lectures will spread out across the
academic year, said Jill Harman, M.Ed.,
director of alumni affairs.
Walter noted that
the relatively new specialty started after the end
of World War II to deal with multiple traumatic
injuries suffered by soldiers returned from battle.
Often, he said, veterans suffered from head and/or
spinal cord injuries, in addition to other ailments.
To deal with such compound conditions, doctors
needed a more comprehensive approach to treating the
patients, he said.
While the goal of
modern medicine is typically adding years to life,
physical medicine and rehabilitation “adds life to
years,” Walter said. “We make quality of life
significantly better. By treating our patients’
physical problems,
it helps their mental state as well.”
Walter said he
became interested in physical medicine and
rehabilitation for personal reasons. While attending
OU-HCOM, his sister sustained lumbar injuries in a
car accident. After observing the various therapies
she underwent, Walter began considering the field.
Walter described
the post-graduate training required for physical
medicine and rehabilitation, including traditional
rotating internships as well as specific physical
medicine and rehabilitation residencies. He did his
three-year residency at the Ohio State University
Hospital’s Department of Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation. For this residency, Walter practiced
at several different Columbus-area medical
facilities, including Nationwide Children’s
Hospital, Riverside Methodist Hospital and Grant
Hospital.
“It was nice to
move from one place to another to see how different
attending (physicians) do things,” he said.
He added that the
practice of physical medicine and rehabilitation
crosses into a number of other specialties,
including Hospice and palliative medicine,
neuromuscular medicine, pediatric rehabilitation and
sports medicine.
Walter advised
students interested in training in the field “to
learn to say ‘I don’t know.’”
“It was hard for
me during my third and fourth year because I felt
like I had to have the answer,” Walter said. “You
don’t always have the answer, so don’t be afraid to
say so. People will respect that.” |