VCOM Institutional Policy and Procedure Manual
VCOM Policy and Procedure
Policy #S012
Technical Requirements for Admission and Successful Completion of the Osteopathic Program and Accommodations for Students with Disabilities Policy Page 5 of 16 environments, produce visually distracting and noisy environments. Examples of emergent situations in which students must perform include, but are not limited to, cardiopulmonary compromise, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, obstetrical and neonatal emergencies, trauma presentations, poisonings and toxic exposures, shock, and hemorrhage. surgical and emergency care. Examples of the use of motor function are cardiopulmonary resuscitation, administration of intravenous fluids and intravenous medications, management of an obstructed airway, hemorrhage control, closure by suturing of wounds, and obstetrical deliveries and the delivery of osteopathic manipulation. This requires the use of extremities in palpation, positioning, and carrying out maneuvers of manipulation and resuscitation. These actions require fine and gross motor and sensory function. Students must be able to perform these maneuvers. Physical strength and stamina is required in the medical training environment. Applicants who have conditions that do not allow physically taxing workloads must consider the long hours of study, the hours required in the classroom and laboratories, the physical strength to perform osteopathic examination and treatment and to stand and walk for long hours in the clinical setting during clinical training (as well as residency and practice) when applying. VCOM seeks to provide reasonable accommodations for students with motor and physical disabilities. As an example, prior VCOM students have been accommodated who required wheelchair assistance and who have had limited use of one upper extremity. IV. Intellectual Students must have the ability to reason, calculate, analyze, measure, and synthesize information in order to critically evaluate the patient; and access, synthesize, and utilize the most recent evidence-based information for treatment. Students must be able to comprehend, memorize, synthesize, and recall a large amount of information without assistance to successfully complete the curriculum and to safely and successfully practice osteopathic medicine. Students must be able to comprehend three-dimensional relationships and to understand spatial relationships as it pertains to body chemicals and microscopic functions to anatomical functions in order to succeed in college and to administer safe medical care. In order to pass all requirements of medical school and to complete residency training, students and graduates will be required to perform pattern identification, immediate recall of memorized material, identification and discrimination to elicit important information, problem solving, and decision-making as to emergent diagnosis and treatment of patients in urgent and emergent clinical settings without accommodation. This type of demonstrated intellectual ability must be performed in a rapid and time-efficient manner so as not to place patients with emergent conditions at risk. Emergent situations, as well as busy clinical
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