A life in medicine In Memoriam: Nov. 1, 2022 View the names of recently deceased osteopathic physicians. Nov. 1, 2022TuesdayNovember 2022 issue 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. Murray Harvey Cohen, DO, 90 (PCOM 1958), of Phoenix died Aug. 27. Brent T. Furomoto, DO, 33 (KCU-COM 2016), of Eagan, Minnesota, died Sept. 14. Amy E. Kelleman, DO, 50 (PCOM 1997), of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, died Oct. 8. Murry E. Levyn, DO, 99 (PCOM 1946), of Philadelphia, died Sept. 20. Kari Rollins, DO, 68 (UNTHSC/TCOM 1979), of Fort Worth, Texas, died Sept. 12. John Otto Taxis IV, DO, 80 (KCU-COM 1972), of Sugar Land, Texas, died Sept. 26. Editor’s note: If you’d like to honor a colleague with a memorial contribution to the American Osteopathic Foundation, you can do so here. More in Profession Mentorship, the single greatest solution AOA Trustee Joshua Lenchus, DO, shares his story of how mentorship changed his life. Early on in his journey in medicine, he met osteopathic physicians who saw potential where he saw uncertainty. Workplace violence in healthcare 2026: Medscape survey findings Over 60% of physicians working in medical practice offices told Medscape that physical security at work is a more pressing issue for them than it was three years ago. Previous articleOMED22 conference program now available Next article5 unique electives for residents
Mentorship, the single greatest solution AOA Trustee Joshua Lenchus, DO, shares his story of how mentorship changed his life. Early on in his journey in medicine, he met osteopathic physicians who saw potential where he saw uncertainty.
Workplace violence in healthcare 2026: Medscape survey findings Over 60% of physicians working in medical practice offices told Medscape that physical security at work is a more pressing issue for them than it was three years ago.