A life in medicine In Memoriam: April 29, 2020 View the names of recently deceased osteopathic physicians. April 29, 2020Wednesday The DO Staff Contact The DO Staff Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Topics In Memoriam The following list of recently deceased osteopathic physicians includes links to obituaries and online memorials if they’re available. Readers can notify the AOA of their deceased colleagues by sending an email to [email protected]. View a list of past In Memoriam columns here. Cheryl A. Branon, DO, 61 (DMU-COM 1988), of Brookhaven, Pennsylvania, died April 15. Visit Dr. Branon’s online guest book. Kenneth Conte, DO, 75 (KCU-COM 1970), of Garfield, New Jersey, died April 23. Frank P. Fiermonte, DO, 99 (Massachusetts College of Osteopathy 1944), of South Burlington, Vermont, died April 21. Visit Dr. Fiermonte’s online guest book. Michael G. Giuliano, DO, 64 (PCOM 1981), of Nutley, New Jersey, died April 18. Visit Dr. Giuliano’s online guest book. Paul R. Munson, DO, 80 (ATSU-KCOM 1967), of Salem, Oregon, died March 31. Visit Dr. Munson’s online guest book. E. Paul Rock, DO, 83 (PCOM 1967), of West Chester, Pennsylvania, died April 13. Darrel T. Stock, DO, 52 (KCU-COM 1998), of Las Vegas died March 17. More in Profession In Memoriam: December 2024 View the names of recently deceased osteopathic physicians. The DiMe Seal: A new benchmark for trust in digital health technology The abundance of new digital health software products calls for a trusted gauge of reliability. The DiMe Seal recognizes digital health products that excel across four key areas: security, usability, clinical evidence and equity. Previous articleSeeking nominations for AOA Distinguished Service Award Next articleCOVID-19 resources for DOs and students: Discounted PPE, loan comparison tool for docs, CMS & HHS updates
The DiMe Seal: A new benchmark for trust in digital health technology The abundance of new digital health software products calls for a trusted gauge of reliability. The DiMe Seal recognizes digital health products that excel across four key areas: security, usability, clinical evidence and equity.