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Student Doctor Network (SDN) is a nonprofit educational organization founded in 1999 for prehealth and health professional students in the United States and Canada. [4] It focuses on nine core healthcare professions: medical, dental, optometry, pharmacy, physical therapy, podiatry, psychology, rehabilitation medicine, and veterinary medicine.
In 1995, Burnett founded the website Osteopathic.com. [6] Originally known as "The Osteopathic Source," the website eventually became Student Doctor Network, [6] which was launched in 1999. [7] In 2017, Burnett was appointed to position of colonel in the US Army. [8] [9] From 2018-2019, Burnett commanded the 115th Field Hospital.
ATSU SOMA Main Building. The medical program operates out of a 100,000-square-foot (9,300 m 2) building on the 22-acre (89,000 m 2) campus of A.T.Still University in Mesa. The campus is the anchor of the Arizona Health & Technology Park, a 132-acre (0.53 km 2) education, healthcare, and technology triangle owned by ATSU and Vanguard Health System
The student body has close to 600 medical students, 650 resident and fellow physicians, 200 associated medical science students, and 50 physician assistant students. Also, 5,000 undergraduate students are enrolled in science classes at the school. The school has between 900 [3] and 1,000 [4] faculty members and more than 3,000 staff members.
The National Resident Matching Program (NRMP), also called The Match, [1] is a United States–based private non-profit non-governmental organization created in 1952 to place U.S. medical school students into residency training programs located in United States teaching hospitals.
Lee Burnett, osteopathic physician, U.S. Army colonel, and founder of Student Doctor Network [109] Gordon Conway, former president of the Royal Geographical Society [110] Edward DeLong, marine microbiologist [111] Renee Dufault, biologist [citation needed]
In 2003 Melinek was appointed to the Santa Clara County Office of the Medical Examiner. She moved to the Office of the Chief medical examiner in San Francisco in 2004. Her first book, Working Stiff, is a memoir of her medical training in New York City. [6]
The college opened in 1977, as the first osteopathic medical school in the state of New York, offering the Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine degree (D.O.). The college was established through the efforts of W. Kenneth Riland , an osteopathic physician (D.O.), and New York State Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller and members of the Rockefeller family.