
Convocation
Ceremony welcomes 117 new OU-HCOM student doctors
Keynote speaker
Anne Pope of the Appalachian Regional Commission
addressed the class of 2012, the largest in OU-HCOM
history
The Ohio University
Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine welcomed the
class of 2012—the largest and among the most
accomplished in the college’s history—during the
college’s 33rd Convocation Ceremony,
Sat., Aug. 16.
Anne Pope, federal
co-chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission,
delivered the keynote address at the ceremony, which
began at 11 a.m. in the Templeton-Blackburn
Alumni Memorial Auditorium.
“This event
welcomes new students into the osteopathic medical
profession,” said OU-HCOM Dean Jack Brose, D.O.
“It also allows us to honor individuals who have
made exceptional contributions to our college, to
the medical profession, or to the citizens in our
region.”
Event highlights
included both the college’s White Coat Ceremony, in
which students receive their short white coats—the
mantle of the medical profession; as well as the
presentation of the Phillips Medal of Public Service
to individuals who have made outstanding
contributions to health care, education and/or
public service. The Phillips Medals are the highest
honor the college awards.
A total of 117
members make up the entering class of 2012, making
the class the largest in the college’s history as
well as the top-performing.
“I am extremely
proud of this year’s class, which has both the
highest grade point averages and the best medical
college admission test scores in our college’s
history,” Brose said. “This is a result of our
college’s growing reputation for academic and
research excellence, and the exceptional work of our
admissions office.”
Of the 117 new
students, 85 percent are Ohio residents, with 10
percent hailing from Southeastern Ohio or
Appalachian Ohio counties. The class is 56 percent
female and 44 percent male, with minority students
making up 27 percent.
During this year’s
ceremony, a Phillips Medal of Public Service went
to keynote speaker Pope as well as to Michael Opipari, D.O., and Levente Batizy, D.O. The award is
named for the late J. Wallace and Jody Galbreath
Phillips, both longtime friends of Ohio University.
Mrs. Phillips died earlier this year.
Pope
is the 10th federal co-chair of the
Appalachian Regional Commission, a federal-state
partnership that works with the people of
Appalachia to
create opportunities for self-sustaining
economic
development and improved quality of life.
Pope’s nomination
received unanimous confirmation from the U.S.
Senate, and she was sworn into office Feb. 3, 2003.
She has been a firm proponent of funding and
supporting regional health care programs, such as
the Appalachian Rural Health Institute Diabetes
Center.
Opipari, attending
physician emeritus of oncology and hematology at the
Detroit Osteopathic Hospital, has been a national
leader in raising the standards of osteopathic
medical education for more than 35 years. He is
chairperson of the Council on Postdoctoral Training
of the American Osteopathic Association.
In July,
2008, he was named among 37 “Great Pioneers” of
osteopathic medicine by the American Osteopathic
Association House of Delegates.
Batizy is director
of medical education at Cleveland Clinic-South
Pointe Hospital in Warrensville Heights. He is
credited with developing the first osteopathic
emergency medicine residency program in Ohio. South
Pointe Hospital honored him as the 2007 Physician of
the Year, and the American Osteopathic Foundation
named him 2006 Educator of the Year.
The short white
coats presented to medical students during the
Convocation Ceremony are gifts from the Ohio
Osteopathic Foundation, and must be worn by student
doctors during clinical assignments. Upon
graduation, students receive their long white coats,
which symbolize their official instatement as
physicians.
Ohio University
Executive Vice President and Provost Kathy Krendl,
Ph.D., offered greetings from the university, as
will representatives from various professional
organizations, including:
-
Robert Juhasz,
D.O., Board of Trustees,
American
Osteopathic Association;
-
Barbara
Bennett, D.O.
(’84),
President,
Ohio
Osteopathic Association; and
-
Jeffrey
Stanley, D.O.
(’82), President,
OU-COM
Society of Alumni & Friends.
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