Ä¢¹½tv and Indiana Regional Medical Center (IRMC) signed a clinical training affiliation agreement on September 10, 2024, for students in Ä¢¹½tv’s proposed college of osteopathic medicine.

Signers, from left: Richard Neff, IRMC chief medical officer; IRMC CEO and President Steve Wolfe; Ä¢¹½tv President Michael Driscoll; Ä¢¹½tv proposed college of osteopathic medicine founding dean Miko Rose
Ä¢¹½tv’s Council of Trustees endorsed the exploration of a possible development of a college of osteopathic medicine at Ä¢¹½tv in December 2022. Ä¢¹½tv has formally initiated steps towards accreditation of its proposed college of osteopathic medicine from the American Osteopathic Association’s Commission on Osteopathic College Accreditation, a three- to five-year process that includes submission of self-studies and a feasibility study, along with site visits.
Securing clinical training sites for students is part of the successful accreditation process. Typically, students in colleges of osteopathic medicine spend the first two years of their education in the classroom; during the third and fourth years, students are based in the community at clinical sites.
“Ä¢¹½tv takes great pride in its many relationships and partnerships with IRMC,” Ä¢¹½tv Council of Trustees Chairman Sam Smith said. “This region continues to be very fortunate that Ä¢¹½tv and IRMC have forged a foundation and relationship going back many years and in many different arenas,” he said. “Today’s agreement builds on that strong foundation.”

Senator Joe Pittman
“Ä¢¹½tv and IRMC are building a strong partnership that is serving as a catalyst for change and will have tremendous positive impact on rural healthcare not just locally, but for Pennsylvania and beyond,” Senator Joe Pittman, Senate Majority Leader, said.
“From the commonwealth’s perspective, I will continue to stand ready to assist this endeavor in any way possible.”
“The partnership between Ä¢¹½tv’s college of osteopathic medicine and Indiana Regional Medical Center will connect our students with a practical education and a network for employment,” Representative Jim Struzzi said. “I look forward to seeing this partnership bloom and the benefit it brings to Ä¢¹½tv students and IRMC. As the partnership grows, we hope to see Ä¢¹½tv’s program grow, bringing more students to the area to help grow the economy, and keeping those students in the area post-graduation as health care providers with IRMC—creating more jobs, boosting the economy, and continually increasing the capability and quality of rural healthcare.”

Representative Jim Struzzi
“Ä¢¹½tv and IRMC are united in a shared commitment to advancing the health and wellness of the community,” Ä¢¹½tv President Michael Driscoll said.
“Establishing a college of osteopathic medicine at Ä¢¹½tv—as a university with deep roots in education and nationally recognized for its research expertise—in a community with an outstanding rural hospital like IRMC with a commitment to serving as a teaching hospital, is a perfect fit.
“IRMC President and CEO Steve Wolfe is one of our community’s strongest leaders and advocates,” Driscoll said. “He was a critical part of the earliest discussions about the possibility of a college of osteopathic medicine at Ä¢¹½tv and has continued to champion the proposed college and our ongoing partnerships and collaborations that make both of our organizations stronger and benefit the community in countless ways.

Ä¢¹½tv President Michael Driscoll
“The synergy of our work together continues to make me proud and grateful, and I look forward to our students have the opportunity to learn from the best of the best at IRMC, without having to leave Indiana,” he said.
Ä¢¹½tv has a number of clinical experience agreements with IRMC, offering students in both undergraduate and graduate programs real-life experiences with a number of IRMC departments and programs ranging from dietetics to counseling, including with IRMC’s Cardiac Rehabilitation Department.
The first five students in IRMC’s medical technology program, begun in fall 2024, come from Ä¢¹½tv. Ä¢¹½tv students have gained valuable experience that has helped them to meet requirements for medical school admission through the IRMC pre-med undergraduate summer internship program.
Ä¢¹½tv faculty have been part of IRMC’s work in COVID-19 testing, and workshops for physicians and nurses through Ä¢¹½tv’s “The Performance of Caring” course, and nutrition faculty provided a specialized lifestyle nutrition course for IRMC residents. Ä¢¹½tv students are part of IRMC’s Department of Volunteer Services Hospitality Ambassadors Program, providing valuable real-life experience to students and services to IRMC visitors.

From left: Rep. Jim Struzzi; Richard Neff, IRMC chief medical officer; Nathan Kovalchick, president, IRMC Board of Directors; Laurie Kuzneski, vice chair, Ä¢¹½tv Council of Trustees and member, IRMC Board of Directors; IRMC CEO and President Steve Wolfe; Ä¢¹½tv President Michael Driscoll; Senator Joe Pittman; Miko Rose, founding dean, Ä¢¹½tv proposed college of osteopathic medicine; Anne White, treasurer, Ä¢¹½tv Council of Trustees; Tim Cejka, Ä¢¹½tv Council of Trustees member; Ryan Smith, founding associate dean for clinical affairs, Ä¢¹½tv proposed college of osteopathic medicine
The Ä¢¹½tv-IRMC Health and Wellness Collaborative annually organizes Ä¢¹½tv Day at IRMC and IRMC Day at Ä¢¹½tv as part of Ä¢¹½tv’s Research Appreciation Week to recognize collaborations and partnerships and opportunities for students. Ä¢¹½tv and IRMC jointly present the annual Pennsylvania Mountains Rural Health Conference in celebration of National Rural Health Day; this year’s conference is planned for November 21 at Ä¢¹½tv. Ä¢¹½tv and IRMC experts are featured on the , now in its second season, discussing important issues related to rural health.

IRMC CEO and President Steve Wolfe
“All of this work reflects Ä¢¹½tv’s and IRMC’s commitment to jointly and collaboratively support this community and its health care needs,” Driscoll said. “With today’s agreement, we’re building on that foundation for a health care rural center of excellence.”
“The vitality of community hospitals like IRMC remains a top priority,” said IRMC President and CEO Steve Wolfe. “We must educate and inspire individuals passionate about rural health and wellness. We deeply value our partnership with Ä¢¹½tv, and, although our day-to-day missions may differ, our shared goal of advancing community health and nurturing the next generation of leaders and healthcare professionals unites us.”
Miko Rose was hired as the founding dean of the proposed college of osteopathic medicine in November 2023; the hiring of a founding dean is one of the first steps to establishing the college.
“IRMC has always been our home team, and an incredibly important partner,” Rose said. “IRMC is well positioned to become a true center for rural medicine and a beacon for medical training, and we are very, very pleased that they have agreed to welcome our students through this clinical training agreement,” she said.

Miko Rose, founding dean, Ä¢¹½tv proposed college of osteopathic medicine
In July, Ryan Smith joined the team as the founding associate dean of clinical affairs, responsible for overseeing the clinical curricular areas of the doctor of osteopathic medicine program, including developing clinical training agreements. In August, Luke H. Mortensen was hired as associate dean of preclinical affairs, responsible for overseeing the pre-clinical curricular areas of the program.
Ä¢¹½tv signed its first clinical training affiliation agreement with Punxsutawney Area Hospital in June. IRMC and Punxsutawney Area Hospital are members of the Pennsylvania Mountains Healthcare Alliance, a collaborative network of 17 independent community hospitals and health care centers.
Ä¢¹½tv chose to explore a proposed college of osteopathic medicine based on several factors, including the critical need for rural health care: there are not enough trained physicians to provide care to Pennsylvania’s citizens: the ratio of patients to available primary care physicians is 1,367 to 1, according to the United Health Foundation.
There are only three colleges of osteopathic medicine in Pennsylvania, all at private universities; Ä¢¹½tv’s proposed college of osteopathic medicine would be the only college of osteopathic medicine at a public university. National studies show that graduates from programs of osteopathic medicine are more likely to pursue primary care in rural and underserved areas—57 percent of all doctors of osteopathic medicine practice as general practitioners, and more than 20 percent of DO graduates practice in rural areas. Demand is high for osteopathic medicine training: in 2021, 22,708 applicants competed for 8,280 seats at schools of osteopathic medicine.
Ä¢¹½tv’s proposed college of osteopathic medicine continues to draw support from individual donors, foundations, and legislators:
- In July, Ä¢¹½tv graduates Tim and Debra Phillips Cejka gifted $2 million;
- In June, the Foundation for Ä¢¹½tv committed $20 million;
- In May, Congressman Guy Reschenthaler included $2 million for Ä¢¹½tv’s project among his FY25 requested community projects, and Senator John Fetterman included $2 million for Ä¢¹½tv’s proposed college of osteopathic medicine project on his list to advance in the FY25 Community Project Funding process.
- Ä¢¹½tv received a $150,000 allocation for the project in the federal Consolidated Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2024, which was sponsored by Congressman Reschenthaler and Senator Fetterman and signed into law by President Joe Biden on March 9;
- In January, Ä¢¹½tv’s Alumni Association Board of Directors authorized a donation of $500,000;
- In December 2023, Senator Joe Pittman announced that as part of the 2023–24 state budget, $2 million was set aside for Ä¢¹½tv’s new college of osteopathic medicine. These new dollars are an investment above and beyond what Ä¢¹½tv receives in the budget and will be used largely to support the operations at the start of the medical school;
- In July 2023, Ä¢¹½tv graduates Nick Jacobs and Mary Ann Hoysan Jacobs donated $40,000 to advance the project. Nick Jacobs is a 2005 Distinguished Alumni Award recipient who has a 1969 bachelor’s degree in education and a 1972 master’s degree in music education; Mary Ann Jacobs has a 1968 bachelor’s degree in music education and a 1993 master’s degree in adult and community education; and
- In May 2023, Rich Caruso, a 1983 accounting graduate from Meadow Lands, 2023 Distinguished Alumni Award recipient and former president of the Foundation for Ä¢¹½tv Board of Directors and current board member, announced a pledge of $1 million for the project.