A life in medicine In Memoriam: December 2024 View the names of recently deceased osteopathic physicians. Dec. 17, 2024TuesdayDecember 2024 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]. You may also view a list of past In Memoriam columns. Douglas C. Foster, DO, 75 (OSU-COM 1986), of Tulsa died Nov. 3. Gary K. Goforth, DO, 88 (KCU-COM 1962), of Tulsa died Sept. 25. John J. Karrat, DO, 82 (MWU/CCOM 1968), of Chicago died Nov. 11. Adam P. Lauer, DO, 51 (UNECOM 2000), of Bangor, Maine, died Oct. 29. Chris E. Manschreck, DO, MPH, 75 (OSU-COM 1978), of Krebs, Oklahoma, died May 17. Tom K. Pence, DO, 84 (MWU/CCOM 1968), of Colorado Springs, Colorado, died Oct. 15. Editor’s note: If you’d like to honor a colleague with a memorial contribution to the American Osteopathic Foundation, you can do so online. More in Profession 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. DOs receive unwanted robocalls from company urging them to consider an MD degree “There is no need for a DO graduate to get a secondary MD degree,” says Carolyn W. Quist, DO, chair of the Bureau of Osteopathic Specialists. “… Most large medical groups are happy to accept DOs into their fold as they know we are trained well.” Previous articleThe DiMe Seal: A new benchmark for trust in digital health technology
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.
DOs receive unwanted robocalls from company urging them to consider an MD degree “There is no need for a DO graduate to get a secondary MD degree,” says Carolyn W. Quist, DO, chair of the Bureau of Osteopathic Specialists. “… Most large medical groups are happy to accept DOs into their fold as they know we are trained well.”