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May 2009, Week 3

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From:
"L.Wood-Hill" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
L.Wood-Hill
Date:
Thu, 21 May 2009 15:46:17 -0400
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Thought you would all benefit from reading abou DO's and their relationship
to US healthcare.  Enjoy the long weekend! 

 

Dear Advising Colleagues,

 

You have probably read or heard about the health care crisis facing the
United States regarding a shortage of Primary Care physicians.  This issue
was raised at the regional NAAHP meetings.  At the Update Sessions, I shared
with you what osteopathic medical education was doing to address this issue.
Yesterday, The American Academy of Family Physicians, published an article
which I share with you below.  The URL link for you to share with your
students is:
http://www.aafp.org/online/en/home/publications/news/news-now/professional-i
ssues/20090519dos-prim-care.html

 

I hope that you find this article valuable when advising your applicants and
students interested in going to medical school and how the role of an
Osteopathic Physician is playing a critical part in addressing the primary
care shortage. 

 

Best regards,

Gina

___________________
Gina M. Moses, M.Ed.
Associate Director of Application Services
American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine
5550 Friendship Blvd., Suite 310
Chevy Chase, MD 20815-7231 

Tel: (301) 968-4184
Fax: (301) 968-4101
E-mail:  <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
http://www.aacom.org

 


 


D.O.s Could Play Key Role in Bolstering Primary Care Workforce, Say Academy
Leaders 


By Barbara Bein <mailto:[log in to unmask]>  
5/19/2009 

Like many students graduating from the nation's colleges of osteopathic
medicine, Richard Gray has chosen family medicine as his specialty. In fact,
Gray, an AAFP student member from Fort Worth, Texas, and other soon-to-be
doctors of osteopathic medicine, are an important part of the primary care
workforce, says an Academy physician workforce expert. 

Stock photo of four health care professionals

"Traditionally, the osteopathic medical schools have attracted a larger
proportion of young people interested in family medicine," Perry Pugno,
M.D., M.P.H., director of the AAFP Division of Medical Education, told AAFP
News Now.


Osteopathic School Enrollment Sees Steady Rise


For the past several years, enrollment at the 25 member colleges of the
American
<http://publish.aacom.org/about/fastfacts/Documents/FF-Enrollment-NationCOMs
.pdf>  Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine, (2-page PDF; About
PDFs
<http://www.aafp.org/online/en/home/aboutus/theaafp/about/helpcenter/pdf.htm
l> ) or AACOM, has been growing steadily. 

Last fall, first-time enrollment among osteopathic medical students reached
4,768, an increase of 360 students, or about 8 percent, compared with the
enrolling class of fall 2007, according to Tom Levitan, AACOM's vice
president for research and applicant services. 

Most of the increase stemmed from the opening of two new osteopathic medical
colleges in Yakima, Wash., and Parker, Colo. AACOM is expecting even more
students to enroll this fall, with the opening of three new satellite
campuses in Pennsylvania and Michigan. 

The first-year enrollment growth in the osteopathic medical colleges
parallels that in U.S. allopathic medical schools, which enrolled a historic
high of 18,036 students last fall, according to the Association of American
<http://www.aamc.org/newsroom/pressrel/2008/enrollmentdata2008.pdf>  Medical
Colleges (6-page PDF; About PDFs
<http://www.aafp.org/online/en/home/aboutus/theaafp/about/helpcenter/pdf.htm
l> ) 


Primary Care Remains Choice of Many Osteopathic Grads


D.O.s have a long history of choosing primary care specialties, including
family medicine, general internal medicine and general pediatrics, Levitan
said. Even so, he noted, the results of annual AACOM surveys of graduating
osteopathic medical students have shown a decline in self-reported interest
in primary care from 40 percent of osteopathic graduates in 1999 to slightly
less than 28 percent in 2007. 

Interestingly, Levitan said, more osteopathic medical students opt for
primary care specialties at the time they graduate than the number who said
they planned to go into primary care when they entered school. For example,
nearly 22 percent of students entering the nation's colleges of osteopathic
medicine in 2004 said they were interested in primary care. When those
students graduated in 2008, slightly more than 29 percent chose primary care
specialties. 

According to the National Resident Matching Program, 45.1 percent of overall
Match participants in 2008 chose residencies in family medicine, internal
medicine (categorical) or pediatrics (categorical). By comparison, 55.3
percent of osteopathic medical students who participated in the 2008 Match
chose one of those primary care specialties.

Levitan said he believes that osteopathic medical schools may provide a
model for ways to produce more students interested in primary care careers. 

Pugno agreed. For one thing, faculty at the osteopathic medical colleges who
serve on admissions committees seem to seek students with characteristics
that make them more likely to choose family medicine and primary care, such
as coming from a rural background, he said. He noted that admissions
policies are one component of the Academy's overall strategy for attracting
students interested in family medicine.


Exposure to Primary Care Can Guide Specialty Choice


Gray became a newly minted D.O. when he graduated May 16 from the Texas
College of Osteopathic Medicine, or TCOM. In a few weeks, he will start his
training in the St. Louis University/Scott Air Force Base family medicine
residency in Belleville, Ill. 

Gray said he learned about osteopathic principles as a physical therapy
student at East Carolina University in Greenville, N.C. He worked full time
as a physical therapist for eight years before entering TCOM in 2005. 

During his first two years at TCOM, Gray said he was exposed to primary care
repeatedly in the classroom, the clinic and the hospital. He did a
preceptorship with a family physician in Fort Worth who still delivers
babies. He also did a rural rotation with a group of four family physicians
-- three M.D.s and one D.O. -- in the town of Littlefield in West Texas
where he observed them practicing the full spectrum of family medicine.

"Excellent experiences with good family medicine preceptors throughout my
four years at TCOM sparked my interest in the specialty. I believe that a
family medicine residency will help me become the kind of physician I have
always wanted to be," Gray said. About 45 percent of the 128 students in his
graduating class plan to go into primary care, he added.

Jason Dees, D.O., of New Albany, Miss., the new physician member of the AAFP
Board of Directors, graduated from the West Virginia School of Osteopathic
Medicine, or WVSOM, in Lewisburg and did his family medicine residency at
The Medical Center in Columbus, Ga. 

Dees said he considered becoming a surgeon, but chose family medicine as his
career after his third year of medical school. 

"WVSOM required every third-year student to do community-based family
medicine as our first rotation," he said. "As I saw the relationships that
developed between doctor and patient, I was hooked. The focus on
whole-person care was also very appealing to me."

Pugno said both allopathic and osteopathic physicians are needed to meet the
demand for more primary care health professionals in the coming years. ''We
are partners with the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians and
other osteopathic physicians' groups in our endeavors to make a difference
in American health care," he said.

 


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