- Joined
- Apr 25, 2006
- Messages
- 575
- Reaction score
- 59
Most osteopathic students or graduates share the same frustrations with the AOA regarding many important issues facing our profession today. These issues include but are not limited to: the opening of the first for-profit medical school, the development of a combined residency match, promoting public awareness of the equality of our training to that of our allopathic counterparts rather than our rapidly disappearing differences, and the issue of the degree title and its implications for public recognition and international practice rights. The wishes and viewpoints of osteopathic students and physicians that I've observed in public forums are resounding in their near unanimity regarding these issues, yet the AOA and COCA take little notice and indicate limited interest in addressing these issues.
It appears that the AOA represents a small minority of our classmates and colleagues. The vast majority of us are left with no professional organization to represent our views on many important topics. Our only other advocate is the AMA, yet our membership in that organization does nothing to help address many of the unique issues we face as osteopathic students and physicians.
Left with no representation, one option would be to create a new professional organization.
Here is a thread in which to brainstorm about such an endeavor, speculate, and otherwise sound-off. Ideas? Comments?
It appears that the AOA represents a small minority of our classmates and colleagues. The vast majority of us are left with no professional organization to represent our views on many important topics. Our only other advocate is the AMA, yet our membership in that organization does nothing to help address many of the unique issues we face as osteopathic students and physicians.
Left with no representation, one option would be to create a new professional organization.
Here is a thread in which to brainstorm about such an endeavor, speculate, and otherwise sound-off. Ideas? Comments?