Does anyone know what is the purpose and benefit in completing this program? Would you be able to compete for a residency in dermatology and specialize in podiatric dermatology with this program?
Does anyone know what is the purpose and benefit in completing this program? Would you be able to compete for a residency in dermatology and specialize in podiatric dermatology with this program?
Nova does quite a few of these seemingly pointless dual programs, but, like someone else pointed out, the school places a huge emphasis on primary care, and the goal of these programs is to train one-stop-shop practitioners for rural/underserved communities. Same thing with their DO/DMD program. Unless you are planning on practicing as kind of like the "town doctor" who can literally do it all in an underserved community ... I don't think I'd recommend it. That's a LOT of school (and money).
No, it's a lie. This primary care emphasis is a lie. No one becomes a physician and a dentist to serve both medical and dental needs in a community. It's a ****ing joke and a lie. The school is fabricating these programs for selfish reasons.
Shrug? I don't attend the school, nor have I gone through any of their programs. I'm just stating what I was told on the day I interviewed for the DO program. You could very easily be right.
My point wasn't to call you out. Just the programs.
For sure. Are you at an osteo program (just curious).
The only benefit I see from this is it allows DPMs to harvest tissue that would be outside the normal scope of podiatrists such as bone grafts from the hip and skin grafts from the upper leg. Is it worth the 4 extra years??? I don't think so.
That is not true actually - how are you going to harvest the graft if you have no training in that procedure? We practice in a very litigious medical system so even if you have the DO degree, without any formal training in harvesting iliac grafts then you have no business attempting that procedure - which is far from "benign" for the record.
I'm curious, how does it work in the real world if DPMs can't harvest from these places? Does the General Surgeon do it then leaves as the DPM applies the graft? Would it be possible for a DPM-DO to assist the General Surgeon and train in this procedure? Would a hospital still not allow a DPM-DO to get these privileges?
If a General Surgeon trains a DPM-DO to do the procedure like you hypothetically presented, then would that hold up as formal training? Absolutely not. If complications present from this procedure - which as I mentioned earlier, is far from benign - would your crash course with the General Surgeon hold up? Absolutely not.
An alumnus from our school and who teaches pathology and dermatology did a DPM degree then a DO degree. He has a company that is doing quite well and who has helped further the research of pathology and dermatology in podiatry. You will have to research where he did his residencies and fellowship. He donates back generously and is a great leader in our profession. Dr. Bakotic has been successful doing the DPM/DO route. I don't know anyone else who has done that route, but 100% of the people I know have benefited greatly.
EDIT: I thought Dr. Brad Bakotic had done the Barry/NOVA DPM-DO program but in fact he received his DPM from Barry but then did his DO overseas. Which is interesting because a DO outside the US has a very different scope then in the states if I recall correctly.
His facebook profile says University of New England in Armidale, New South Wales
http://www.facebook.com/people/Bradley-Bakotic/1570716341
It really doesn't matter. He is board certified and having been taught by him for our dermatology class the guy def knows his stuff.