A life in medicine In Memoriam: May 2026 View the names of recently deceased osteopathic physicians. May 15, 2026FridayMay 2026 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. John J. Bowler, DO, 55 (DMU-COM 1995), of Salt Lake City died Jan. 13, 2025. Pat C. DiTommaso, DO, 76 (PCOM 1980), of Hermitage, Pennsylvania, died April 15, 2026. James S. Seebass, DO, 86 (MWU/CCOM 1967), of Tulsa, Oklahoma, died May 5, 2026. Angelo Stoyanovich, DO, 74 (MSUCOM 1975), of Warren, Michigan, died July 1, 2025. Christ S. Stoyanovich, DO, 79 (MSUCOM 1980), of Shelby Township, Michigan, died May 1, 2026. 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 OMED26 registration now open The world’s largest gathering of osteopathic physicians, residents and medical students takes place Oct. 22-25 in Las Vegas. The DO schools on U.S. News’ best medical schools list for 2026 The lists of the best medical schools for research and primary care each included 12 DO schools. Also, the lists of the medical schools producing the most graduates practicing in primary care, rural areas and underserved areas included many osteopathic medical schools. Previous articleOne of the biggest challenges in medical school—and how it gets a head start Next articlePaging Dr. Fran: How one osteopathic OB-GYN is reshaping women’s health advocacy
OMED26 registration now open The world’s largest gathering of osteopathic physicians, residents and medical students takes place Oct. 22-25 in Las Vegas.
The DO schools on U.S. News’ best medical schools list for 2026 The lists of the best medical schools for research and primary care each included 12 DO schools. Also, the lists of the medical schools producing the most graduates practicing in primary care, rural areas and underserved areas included many osteopathic medical schools.