Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine Students Participate in DO Day on the Hill

Students Lobby Politicians for Better Healthcare Laws and Improved Policies Affecting Osteopathic Education

June 18, 2013
Kurien Matthews, Dr Robert Goldberg, Mike Erickson, Rosemarie Neilson, Brett Schupack, Evan Green and Benyamin Steinman
Kurien Matthews, Dr Robert Goldberg, Mike Erickson, Rosemarie Neilson, Brett Schupack, Evan Green and Benyamin Steinman

Forty-three students from the Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine (TouroCOM) in Harlem joined with over a thousand DOs and osteopathic medical students on March 14 to visit with elected officials about key health policy issues that affect osteopathic medicine.

The group’s primary focus was additional funding for graduate medical education – specifically additional residency spots nationwide. Currently legislation is pending that would increase the number of residency spots that teaching hospitals can offer residents by 15,000 positions. Pictured, from left to right, are TouroCOM students Rosemarie Neilson, Evan Green, Benyamin Steinman, Brett Schupack, Mike Erickson, Kurien Matthews, and Dean Robert Goldberg, DO. The group met briefly with Congressman Charles Rangel, who represents TouroCOM’s district; Congressman Joseph Crowley, a sponsor of pending legislation; and aides for Senators Kirsten Gillibrand, Charles Schumer, and other elected officials representing New York State. Since its founding in 2007, TouroCOM has dedicated itself to encouraging minorities to enter medicine and to increasing the number of primary care physicians. The number of underrepresented minorities graduating TouroCOM is twice the average number for colleges of osteopathic medicine.