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From left: Jeanne
Hunter, OMS I (Air
Force); Steve Davis,
Ph.D. (Air Force
Retired); Sam Sigoloff,
OMS I (Army); Ryan
Burkhart, OMS I (Army);
Jayme Morrison, OMS I
(Army); Dominique
Crosby, OMS I (Army);
Erika Wager, OMS I
(Army), Jenna Zerkle,
OMS I (Army); Candace
Moore, OMS I (Army);
Cameron Brown, OMS II
(Army); Kenneth Willaert,
OMS I (Navy); Andrew
Little, OMS I (Army
Guard); and Scott Hahn
OMS I (Army). Not shown:
Justin Gusching, OMS I
(Army Guard); Emily
Heckendorn, OMS I
(Army); and Starla
Lyles, OMS II (Navy). |
By Colleen Kiphart
March 5, 2009
This is
a record-breaking year at OU-HCOM for
future military doctors. Thirteen
members—more than ten percent—of the
OU-HCOM class of 2012 have committed to
practicing medicine for the United
States armed forces after they complete
medical school. Considering that recent
years have seen just two or three annual
military medicine recruits, this
represents a massive leap.
But why
now? Former military man Stephen
Davis, Ph.D., director of faculty
development, offers a few insights.
“This year we are offering a $20,000
signing bonus. It definitely gets their
attention and is a big help to
students.” Davis, a retired major,
served 10 years in the Navy and 14 in
the Air Force.
That,
Davis says, sweetened an already
benefit-rich deal. “Students who have
committed to four years of service get
free medical school tuition, plus free
books and equipment—and a $2,000 monthly
stipend.”
Considering the average medical school
debt of $137,517, as reported by the
American Medical Association, those
scholarships look very tempting. Davis
adds that the program also benefits the
medical community because “with the
elimination of all that debt, it makes
it possible to keep more doctors in
family practice medicine,” which he
describes as a high-demand field with
declining physician numbers, due in part
to its relatively lower salary figures.
But,
it’s not all about the money. “The
military gives these students continuous
training, job variety and the chance to
work with a young, diverse population,”
says Davis, who also advises the OU-HCOM
chapter of the Association of Military
Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons (AMOPS).
Army
recruit Emily Heckerdorn, OMS I,
agrees. “(Military medicine) offers so
many opportunities to travel and serve
people of all racial and economic
backgrounds.”
Plus,
the sense of community that grows among
medical students only intensifies in a
military setting, Davis says. “The armed
forces mean instantaneous bonding. You
make friends as soon as you come to a
base, and those friendships are solid,”
Davis says.
Jaymee
Morrison, OMS I,
a self-described “military brat”
entering the Army, explains why she
chose to commit: “I love my country, and
I love the military lifestyle.”
Love of
county is a familiar theme with these
students. Many have family in the armed
forces—siblings, parents,
grandparents—and have seen firsthand the
opportunities and challenges facing
families of those who serve.
Jenna
Zerkle,
OMS I, who also is entering the
Army, became interested in the military
in high school. She made up her mind to
pursue a military career after talking
to a recruiter during her undergraduate
studies at the University of Rio Grande.
Despite
Zerkle’s confident resolve, her family
was not immediately behind the decision.
“I told them that I was doing it. My dad
wasn’t supportive at first; he was
scared for me. But, they are all
supportive now.”
That
happens often, says Davis. “The job is
risk apparent. It seems like it’s very
dangerous, but it really isn’t. Most of
the time, you’re well out of harm’s way.
The military wants to make sure that
nothing happens to their medical
personnel.”
Worry
about war seems far from these students’
minds. Andrew Little, OMS I, who
is entering the Ohio Army National
Guard, has joined up because, he says,
“I feel that I can be of service to
those who defend our country.”
“I
think that these are some of the most
selfless people I know,” Davis says of
the recruits. “Not only have they chosen
to enter a field where they are serving
others directly every day in medicine,
but they have decided to commit to
serving their country, as well.”
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