PCOM SOUTH GEORGIA: Med students explain why they chose osteopathic medicine

Published 2:55 pm Saturday, April 18, 2020

Will Brewster and Kathy Nguyen participate in a simulation at the Philadephia College of Osteopathic Medicine’s South Georgia Campus in Moultrie. By and large osteopathy students must undergo the same training as students seeking an MD degree.

Since August 2019, first-year medical students at PCOM South Georgia have been learning “the DO difference.”

Nestled among the pines in Moultrie, Southwest Georgia’s only four-year medical school educates students in the Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine program.  But what exactly is osteopathic medicine?

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DO vs MD: Similarities    and Differences

The simple answer is that, like an MD (doctor of medicine), a DO (doctor of osteopathic medicine), is a fully-qualified physician licensed to practice medicine in the United States. Both MDs and DOs typically attend medical school for four years; the first two years focus on classroom learning, while the last two years are spent in the field practicing with clinical faculty members. That said, there are some differences between the two professions.

Whole-Person Health Care

Most notably, there is a difference in approach. DOs practice a whole-person approach to health care — one that sees past the illness or disease to consider the health impact of other factors such as lifestyle and community, and work to address and remove barriers that may impede a healthy life. DOs consider their patients as partners on this journey, not just through injury and disease prevention, but also through health education.

First-year DO student Chizoba Akuwanne (DO ‘23) said she chose to pursue a degree in osteopathic medicine because it’s the most inclusive approach to health care.

“Treating the body with touch can be very advantageous,” Akuwanee said. “Through osteopathic manipulative treatment (OMT), I can use my hands to both diagnose and treat illness and injury which can encourage the body’s natural tendency to heal itself. With OMT in combination with all the other medical options we learn about, I believe an osteopathic physician can offer the most comprehensive medical care today.”

Focus on Prevention

The American Osteopathic Association (AOA), the professional organization for more than 145,000 DOs and DO students in the US, defines the osteopathic approach to medicine as one that “focuses on prevention and helping to promote the body’s natural tendency toward health and self-healing.” Additionally, through the use of standardized and simulated patients, DO students have the chance to practice their all-important communication skills with a wide variety of individuals.

Xavia Taylor (DO ‘23), a first-year DO student, believes truly knowing the patient makes a difference.

“To fully treat a patient, one must know who that patient truly is,” she said. “While I physically know how to treat an illness, I’ll also be given the chance to connect with my patient based on their personalized vision of self. It’s important to teach our communities how to construct ideal environments that nourish and stimulate their bodies and minds. I believe that’s as perfect as the profession can get.”

Hands-On Evaluation      and Treatment

As fully licensed physicians, DOs are able to prescribe medicine, conduct surgery and use cutting-edge technology to diagnose disease and assess injury just as MDs do, but they have an additional tool in their toolbox: osteopathic manipulative medicine (OMM), through which DO students are taught to use their hands to diagnose and treat illness and injury.

DO students take approximately 200 additional hours of training in OMM. These techniques teach that form influences function, and through the hands-on manipulation of muscles and tissues, students learn how to alleviate pain and restore motion and natural function to the body, as well as help the body function more efficiently.

DO Profession Growth

What’s more, osteopathic medicine continues to grow exponentially; in 2018, the AOA reported an 85 percent increase in DO students over the previous 10 years, and a report released in early 2019 from the American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine (AACOM) found that for the first time ever, DO students accounted for more than one out of every four medical students in the US. That same report showed an almost seven percent increase in total enrollment year-over-year at the nation’s 38 colleges of osteopathic medicine—to a total of nearly 31,000.

Primary Care in Underserved Areas

DOs can be found practicing in rural and urban settings, in the military and civilian world, and in all of the same specialties as their MD counterparts. AACOM reports more than 30 percent of DO graduates choose to practice in primary care fields such as family medicine, pediatrics, OB/GYN and internal medicine, and that many indicate they plan to practice in rural or underserved areas.

H. William Craver, III, DO, FACOS, dean and chief academic officer of PCOM South Georgia, has a firsthand understanding of the struggle to find physicians to practice in Southwest Georgia. He worked as a physician in rural communities, once where he was the only surgeon in a county practicing in a hospital with just 25 beds.

“It’s hard to recruit physicians that are willing to work in rural areas,” Dr. Craver said. “A lot of people don’t have an understanding of these rural, underserved communities, but I enjoyed it immensely,” he said of his surgical background. “Our presence in Moultrie is PCOM taking a stand and demonstrating what osteopathic medicine is all about – community medicine, primary care and serving the underserved.”

In fact, it is a rural community – Kirksville, Missouri – that is known as the birthplace of osteopathic medicine. In the late 19th century, Andrew Taylor Still, MD, DO, realized that his era’s medical practices often caused more harm than good. The system of medicine he would develop promoted the body’s ability to self-heal. He called this process osteopathy, which is what is now known as osteopathic medicine.

Will Brewster (DO ‘23), a student at PCOM South Georgia said his fellow students and the faculty of PCOM South Georgia have already made an impact in his life.

“I’m so thankful to be surrounded by such an amazing group of faculty and classmates that constantly push me to be the best medical student I can be, and that’s going to translate into me being an even better physician,” he said. “I want to be able to say that I left a positive impact on the lives of others.”

With the healthcare field shifting towards a focus on patient-centered care and wellness, osteopathic medicine is poised to meet these changes head-on, as this focus has been a basic tenet of the profession since its founding. And with a more than 120 year tradition of training highly competent and caring health practitioners, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine and its newest location, PCOM South Georgia, are well-suited to help meet the healthcare needs of the region.

For more information, visit pcom.edu.