Serving
families across the globe
Jaime Rehmann, D.O. (’09), emphasizes cultural
sensitivity, options in family planning
By Colleen Kiphart
July 8, 2009
Jaime Rehmann,
D.O. (’09)
considers the world her hometown.
For most of Rehmann’s life, her family traveled
the world to volunteer in underprivileged
communities. “I grew up abroad,” she says. “I
kind of consider myself a nomad.”
An
international experience helped her chose her
ob/gyn specialty, she says. “In college I went
to Mexico over spring break to do service. A
pregnant woman came into the office of the
doctor I worked with. He had me put my hands on
her belly and showed me how to feel for the
position of the baby,” Rehmann says. “Feeling
the baby move under my hands—it just blew me
away.”
Rehmann
deferred OU-HCOM enrollment a year to travel to
Ecuador, where among other things, she assisted
on surgeries with Doctors Without Borders and
researched non-pharmaceutical family-planning
techniques. “I am finishing a study about family
planning among Ecuadorian women. I did a survey
of their current methods and their attitudes
toward natural family planning.”
Her
socio-medical research and commitment to
underserved populations inspire her peers,
according to Rehmann’s mentor, Timothy
Barreiro, D.O. (’97), clinical
assistant professor of critical care medicine at
St. Joseph Health Center (Warren, Ohio). “Her
scholarly achievement and special dedication to
women’s health have been an example to other
osteopathic students.”
As a student,
Rehmann served as an ambassador for the
Christian Medical and Dental Association, as an
international liaison for the Student
Osteopathic Medical Association, and as
president and founder of Medical Students for
Life.
With her
research, Rehmann recognizes how cultural values
influence medical decisions and emphasizes
patient responsibility. “I want to help women
take their fertility into their own hands.”
Rehmann says, “Family planning is something that
they can discuss and work on with their
partner.”
Rehmann
recently completed a seven-month certification
program at the Pope Paul VI Institute for
Natural Family Planning in Omaha, Nebraska. “So
often we use chemicals like birth control as a
cure-all for gynecological problems,” Rehmann
says. “With natural family planning, women can
work with their doctors to better understand
their fertility and the roots of some medical
problems.”
During her year
in Ecuador, Rehmann became fluent in Spanish,
which eases her patients’ nerves, she says. “I
spent a month working in ob/gyn in St. Louis,
where they have a large Spanish-speaking
population. Once, with the attending physician
watching, I was able to work with a mother and
deliver her baby, talking directly to her in her
language. Afterward, the family said they wanted
a picture with the doctor who had delivered
their baby. I looked to Michelle, the attending
physician, and she said, ‘no, they mean you.’ It
was incredible.”
Michael Clark,
D.O.,
associate professor and chair of obstetrics and
gynecology, applauds Rehmann’s command of
Spanish. “Being fluent in Spanish brings instant
rapport to our migrant patients. Jaime is a
people-oriented person. We need more people like
her in the medical profession.”
Rehmann will
complete her ob/gyn residency in Buffalo, New
York. Although there isn’t a large Hispanic
population in Buffalo, she says, “I am really
excited to get to work.”