
"Osteopathic doctors are in every state, and colleges of osteopathic medicine have sprouted up in all regions, some in collaboration with public universities," Ollove writes. "According to the American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine, more than 20 percent of medical students now train in osteopathic medicine."
That wasn't always the case. The profession has grown from 13,022 osteopathic practitioners in the U.S. in 1970 to more than 82,000 today, compared to 790,000 medical doctors, Ollove writes. "Most Americans are probably unaware that two tracks of medical training exist, both of them producing fully licensed physicians. Although osteopathic medical graduates can and do go on to all the medical specialties when they become residents, osteopathic medical colleges discourage early specialization and emphasize general medicine."
Clif Knight, an M.D., and vice president for education at the American Academy of Family Physicians, "said that while some allopathic medical schools are strong in family medicine, others are not, perhaps to the point of not even having departments of family medicine," Ollove writes. Knight told him, “Osteopathic medicine has a much more consistent focus on primary care" and gives students early exposure to patients to emphasize the importance of forging strong relationships with them. (Read more)
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