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Medical
agility: Amy Miyoshi, D.O.
Former competitive figure skater Amy Miyoshi
now dedicates her career to improving
women’s health
By Anita Martin
Not long after learning to walk, Amy
Miyoshi, D.O. ('08), hit the ice. She
started figure skating lessons at the tender
age of three, and competed in the National
Figure Skating Championships while earning
her bachelor’s at the University of
Michigan. On June 7 she will receive her
Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine degree.
Although Miyoshi had begun considering the
doctor’s path in the third grade, her
skating experiences prompted her to explore
osteopathic medicine. During her last year
at Michigan, she traveled to Dallas to watch
a friend compete in the U.S. Figure Skating
Championships.
“He’d been having chronic back pain forever,
and nothing seemed to help,” Miyoshi says.
“This was one of the first years that they
invited a D.O. to the national competition.
They treated him everyday with OMM
(osteopathic manipulative medicine), and he
said he’d never felt better in his life.”
Miyoshi followed her curiosity to OU-HCOM,
whose “learning-centered philosophy”
resonated with her. “One of the things I
really liked about OU-HCOM is that they try
hard not to make it a competitive
environment,” she said.
That may seem contradictory for a nationally
competitive figure skater, but Miyoshi’s
skating coach taught a similar philosophy.
“She wanted me to just perform better for
myself, so I was my own biggest competitor.
OU seemed like a good continuity to that.”
A natural scholar, Miyoshi took a year off
before medical school to conduct orthopedics
research at the National Institutes of
Health. She enrolled the following year at
OU-HCOM, craving the “human connection” of
patient care.
One such human connection diverted Miyoshi’s
path from orthopedics to her current
passion, obstetrics and gynecology. Halfway
through her third year of medical school,
Miyoshi worked at the Community Action
Organization of Scioto County, Inc., which
provides care to local patients without
insurance or Medicaid eligibility.
“I treated a woman there who had one child
and another on the way, and she was begging
for food,” Miyoshi says. “I talked to her
about different options she has to help her
… I realized that with ob/gyn, I get a lot
of patient interaction, I can do both
primary care and surgery, and I can offer
women more than they think they have.”
Miyoshi will began her obstetrics and
gynecology residency this year at the
Vanderbilt University Medical Center in
Nashville, Tenn. She’s hung up her figure
skates for the time being, but she plans to
eventually reconnect to the sport as a
coach, judge and OMM practitioner.
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Hometown:
North Olmstead, Ohio
On her mentors:
Robert Hikida, Ph.D.,
distinguished professor emeritus,
biomedical sciences
“I admired his attention to detail
and teaching style. I hope to do
academic medicine eventually, and I
admired his rapport with students.”
Nicole Wadsworth, D.O.,
assistant professor, family
medicine, CORE assistant dean
“She’s a great person to look up to.
She has a great knowledge base and a
real passion for patient care.”
Yong Song, M.D., CORE
clinical professor, obstetrics and
gynecology, Southern Ohio Medical
Center in Portsmouth, Ohio
“I don’t know a better ob/gyn. He
has the warmest heart, and he’s a
tremendous patient advocate.”
On her most memorable OU-HCOM
experience
“Meeting my fiancé! I just got
engaged (in late April, 2008). He is
currently a family practice fellow,
Dave Valent (OMS IV). He is the best
thing that has happened to me in my
life, and I am so excited to spend
the rest of my life with him. We met
during our first year of medical
school, and it has been wonderful
ever since.” |
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