One of the benefits of traveling across the state to promote WVSOM is the opportunity to visit our Statewide Campus offices.
On a recent trip to the Northern Panhandle, I stopped at the Northern Regional office in Wheeling to visit with Regional Assistant Dean Jane Daugherty-Luck, D.O.; Director Mary Beth Fitch and administrative Assistant Savannah Scott.
The office is located on 20th Street in the Maxwell Centre. It's a beautiful building and very near the Wheeling Fish Market, where we had lunch.
At the market, we met a couple who said their doctor was a graduate of WVSOM: Doug Midcap, D.O., who has a family medicine practice in the Wheeling area.
When traveling around West Virginia, you find so many WVSOM graduates and patients thankful for osteopathic medicine.
On a recent trip to the Northern Panhandle, I stopped at the Northern Regional office in Wheeling to visit with Regional Assistant Dean Jane Daugherty-Luck, D.O.; Director Mary Beth Fitch and administrative Assistant Savannah Scott.
The office is located on 20th Street in the Maxwell Centre. It's a beautiful building and very near the Wheeling Fish Market, where we had lunch.
At the market, we met a couple who said their doctor was a graduate of WVSOM: Doug Midcap, D.O., who has a family medicine practice in the Wheeling area.
When traveling around West Virginia, you find so many WVSOM graduates and patients thankful for osteopathic medicine.
One of the benefits of traveling across the state to promote WVSOM is the opportunity to visit our Statewide Campus offices.
On a recent trip to the Northern Panhandle, I stopped at the Northern Regional office in Wheeling to visit with Regional Assistant Dean Jane Daugherty-Luck, D.O.; Director Mary Beth Fitch and administrative Assistant Savannah Scott.
The office is located on 20th Street in the Maxwell Centre. It's a beautiful building and very near the Wheeling Fish Market, where we had lunch.
At the market, we met a couple who said their doctor was a graduate of WVSOM: Doug Midcap, D.O., who has a family medicine practice in the Wheeling area.
When traveling around West Virginia, you find so many WVSOM graduates and patients thankful for osteopathic medicine.
On a recent trip to the Northern Panhandle, I stopped at the Northern Regional office in Wheeling to visit with Regional Assistant Dean Jane Daugherty-Luck, D.O.; Director Mary Beth Fitch and administrative Assistant Savannah Scott.
The office is located on 20th Street in the Maxwell Centre. It's a beautiful building and very near the Wheeling Fish Market, where we had lunch.
At the market, we met a couple who said their doctor was a graduate of WVSOM: Doug Midcap, D.O., who has a family medicine practice in the Wheeling area.
When traveling around West Virginia, you find so many WVSOM graduates and patients thankful for osteopathic medicine.
One of the benefits of traveling across the state to promote WVSOM is the opportunity to visit our Statewide Campus offices.
On a recent trip to the Northern Panhandle, I stopped at the Northern Regional office in Wheeling to visit with Regional Assistant Dean Jane Daugherty-Luck, D.O.; Director Mary Beth Fitch and administrative Assistant Savannah Scott.
The office is located on 20th Street in the Maxwell Centre. It's a beautiful building and very near the Wheeling Fish Market, where we had lunch.
At the market, we met a couple who said their doctor was a graduate of WVSOM: Doug Midcap, D.O., who has a family medicine practice in the Wheeling area.
When traveling around West Virginia, you find so many WVSOM graduates and patients thankful for osteopathic medicine.
On a recent trip to the Northern Panhandle, I stopped at the Northern Regional office in Wheeling to visit with Regional Assistant Dean Jane Daugherty-Luck, D.O.; Director Mary Beth Fitch and administrative Assistant Savannah Scott.
The office is located on 20th Street in the Maxwell Centre. It's a beautiful building and very near the Wheeling Fish Market, where we had lunch.
At the market, we met a couple who said their doctor was a graduate of WVSOM: Doug Midcap, D.O., who has a family medicine practice in the Wheeling area.
When traveling around West Virginia, you find so many WVSOM graduates and patients thankful for osteopathic medicine.
One of the benefits of traveling across the state to promote WVSOM is the opportunity to visit our Statewide Campus offices.
On a recent trip to the Northern Panhandle, I stopped at the Northern Regional office in Wheeling to visit with Regional Assistant Dean Jane Daugherty-Luck, D.O.; Director Mary Beth Fitch and administrative Assistant Savannah Scott.
The office is located on 20th Street in the Maxwell Centre. It's a beautiful building and very near the Wheeling Fish Market, where we had lunch.
At the market, we met a couple who said their doctor was a graduate of WVSOM: Doug Midcap, D.O., who has a family medicine practice in the Wheeling area.
When traveling around West Virginia, you find so many WVSOM graduates and patients thankful for osteopathic medicine.
On a recent trip to the Northern Panhandle, I stopped at the Northern Regional office in Wheeling to visit with Regional Assistant Dean Jane Daugherty-Luck, D.O.; Director Mary Beth Fitch and administrative Assistant Savannah Scott.
The office is located on 20th Street in the Maxwell Centre. It's a beautiful building and very near the Wheeling Fish Market, where we had lunch.
At the market, we met a couple who said their doctor was a graduate of WVSOM: Doug Midcap, D.O., who has a family medicine practice in the Wheeling area.
When traveling around West Virginia, you find so many WVSOM graduates and patients thankful for osteopathic medicine.
Representatives of WVSOM and The Health Plan gathers July 19 at THP headquarters to Wheeling to announce that THP has opened its medical scholarship program to students at the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine (WVSOM).
Since 2009, The Health Plan Scholarship program has provided over $3 million in scholarships to more than 50 medical and nursing students who intend to stay and practice in the state of West Virginia.
On July 19, Jeff Knight, president and CEO of THP, and James W. Nemitz, Ph.D., president of WVSOM, celebrated the osteopathic medical school’s inclusion in the need-based scholarship program, which is also available to medical and nursing students at West Virginia University and Marshall University.
Knight said including WVSOM builds on THP’s efforts to support West Virginia medical community.
“The health care staffing shortage continues to be a significant issue in West Virginia. The Health Plan is committed to supporting our state’s health care workforce, and we’re thrilled to team up with WVSOM to offer our scholarship program to its students. WVSOM does amazing work in both educating our future providers and advocating for health care initiatives important to all West Virginians. We’re proud to be partners,” Knight said.
Nemitz thanked Knight and The Health Plan for offering the scholarship program at WVSOM, which educates an average of nearly 800 medical students each year. According to the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, the school is No. 1 in producing physicians who practice in West Virginia, with 40% of the state’s physicians being WVSOM graduates.
“WVSOM is appreciative that The Health Plan has included osteopathic medical students in its scholarship program. Medical school is not inexpensive. This scholarship, by financially assisting recipients who want to stay in West Virginia, benefits not only our students but the state. The Health Plan shows its commitment to the health and well-being of the communities it serves through its products and services and by supporting health care professionals, medical education and healthy-living initiatives. The program is a tremendous opportunity for WVSOM students,” Nemitz said.
With this new opportunity, WVSOM students were able to apply in the final month of the 2024-25 scholarship cycle and will be eligible for the full 2025-26 period. The scholarship pays for tuition and fees at the school’s in-state rate and can be renewed for up to four years.
Since 2009, The Health Plan Scholarship program has provided over $3 million in scholarships to more than 50 medical and nursing students who intend to stay and practice in the state of West Virginia.
On July 19, Jeff Knight, president and CEO of THP, and James W. Nemitz, Ph.D., president of WVSOM, celebrated the osteopathic medical school’s inclusion in the need-based scholarship program, which is also available to medical and nursing students at West Virginia University and Marshall University.
Knight said including WVSOM builds on THP’s efforts to support West Virginia medical community.
“The health care staffing shortage continues to be a significant issue in West Virginia. The Health Plan is committed to supporting our state’s health care workforce, and we’re thrilled to team up with WVSOM to offer our scholarship program to its students. WVSOM does amazing work in both educating our future providers and advocating for health care initiatives important to all West Virginians. We’re proud to be partners,” Knight said.
Nemitz thanked Knight and The Health Plan for offering the scholarship program at WVSOM, which educates an average of nearly 800 medical students each year. According to the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, the school is No. 1 in producing physicians who practice in West Virginia, with 40% of the state’s physicians being WVSOM graduates.
“WVSOM is appreciative that The Health Plan has included osteopathic medical students in its scholarship program. Medical school is not inexpensive. This scholarship, by financially assisting recipients who want to stay in West Virginia, benefits not only our students but the state. The Health Plan shows its commitment to the health and well-being of the communities it serves through its products and services and by supporting health care professionals, medical education and healthy-living initiatives. The program is a tremendous opportunity for WVSOM students,” Nemitz said.
With this new opportunity, WVSOM students were able to apply in the final month of the 2024-25 scholarship cycle and will be eligible for the full 2025-26 period. The scholarship pays for tuition and fees at the school’s in-state rate and can be renewed for up to four years.
Representatives of WVSOM and The Health Plan gathers July 19 at THP headquarters to Wheeling to announce that THP has opened its medical scholarship program to students at the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine (WVSOM).
Since 2009, The Health Plan Scholarship program has provided over $3 million in scholarships to more than 50 medical and nursing students who intend to stay and practice in the state of West Virginia.
On July 19, Jeff Knight, president and CEO of THP, and James W. Nemitz, Ph.D., president of WVSOM, celebrated the osteopathic medical school’s inclusion in the need-based scholarship program, which is also available to medical and nursing students at West Virginia University and Marshall University.
Knight said including WVSOM builds on THP’s efforts to support West Virginia medical community.
“The health care staffing shortage continues to be a significant issue in West Virginia. The Health Plan is committed to supporting our state’s health care workforce, and we’re thrilled to team up with WVSOM to offer our scholarship program to its students. WVSOM does amazing work in both educating our future providers and advocating for health care initiatives important to all West Virginians. We’re proud to be partners,” Knight said.
Nemitz thanked Knight and The Health Plan for offering the scholarship program at WVSOM, which educates an average of nearly 800 medical students each year. According to the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, the school is No. 1 in producing physicians who practice in West Virginia, with 40% of the state’s physicians being WVSOM graduates.
“WVSOM is appreciative that The Health Plan has included osteopathic medical students in its scholarship program. Medical school is not inexpensive. This scholarship, by financially assisting recipients who want to stay in West Virginia, benefits not only our students but the state. The Health Plan shows its commitment to the health and well-being of the communities it serves through its products and services and by supporting health care professionals, medical education and healthy-living initiatives. The program is a tremendous opportunity for WVSOM students,” Nemitz said.
With this new opportunity, WVSOM students were able to apply in the final month of the 2024-25 scholarship cycle and will be eligible for the full 2025-26 period. The scholarship pays for tuition and fees at the school’s in-state rate and can be renewed for up to four years.
Since 2009, The Health Plan Scholarship program has provided over $3 million in scholarships to more than 50 medical and nursing students who intend to stay and practice in the state of West Virginia.
On July 19, Jeff Knight, president and CEO of THP, and James W. Nemitz, Ph.D., president of WVSOM, celebrated the osteopathic medical school’s inclusion in the need-based scholarship program, which is also available to medical and nursing students at West Virginia University and Marshall University.
Knight said including WVSOM builds on THP’s efforts to support West Virginia medical community.
“The health care staffing shortage continues to be a significant issue in West Virginia. The Health Plan is committed to supporting our state’s health care workforce, and we’re thrilled to team up with WVSOM to offer our scholarship program to its students. WVSOM does amazing work in both educating our future providers and advocating for health care initiatives important to all West Virginians. We’re proud to be partners,” Knight said.
Nemitz thanked Knight and The Health Plan for offering the scholarship program at WVSOM, which educates an average of nearly 800 medical students each year. According to the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, the school is No. 1 in producing physicians who practice in West Virginia, with 40% of the state’s physicians being WVSOM graduates.
“WVSOM is appreciative that The Health Plan has included osteopathic medical students in its scholarship program. Medical school is not inexpensive. This scholarship, by financially assisting recipients who want to stay in West Virginia, benefits not only our students but the state. The Health Plan shows its commitment to the health and well-being of the communities it serves through its products and services and by supporting health care professionals, medical education and healthy-living initiatives. The program is a tremendous opportunity for WVSOM students,” Nemitz said.
With this new opportunity, WVSOM students were able to apply in the final month of the 2024-25 scholarship cycle and will be eligible for the full 2025-26 period. The scholarship pays for tuition and fees at the school’s in-state rate and can be renewed for up to four years.
Representatives of WVSOM and The Health Plan gathers July 19 at THP headquarters to Wheeling to announce that THP has opened its medical scholarship program to students at the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine (WVSOM).
Since 2009, The Health Plan Scholarship program has provided over $3 million in scholarships to more than 50 medical and nursing students who intend to stay and practice in the state of West Virginia.
On July 19, Jeff Knight, president and CEO of THP, and James W. Nemitz, Ph.D., president of WVSOM, celebrated the osteopathic medical school’s inclusion in the need-based scholarship program, which is also available to medical and nursing students at West Virginia University and Marshall University.
Knight said including WVSOM builds on THP’s efforts to support West Virginia medical community.
“The health care staffing shortage continues to be a significant issue in West Virginia. The Health Plan is committed to supporting our state’s health care workforce, and we’re thrilled to team up with WVSOM to offer our scholarship program to its students. WVSOM does amazing work in both educating our future providers and advocating for health care initiatives important to all West Virginians. We’re proud to be partners,” Knight said.
Nemitz thanked Knight and The Health Plan for offering the scholarship program at WVSOM, which educates an average of nearly 800 medical students each year. According to the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, the school is No. 1 in producing physicians who practice in West Virginia, with 40% of the state’s physicians being WVSOM graduates.
“WVSOM is appreciative that The Health Plan has included osteopathic medical students in its scholarship program. Medical school is not inexpensive. This scholarship, by financially assisting recipients who want to stay in West Virginia, benefits not only our students but the state. The Health Plan shows its commitment to the health and well-being of the communities it serves through its products and services and by supporting health care professionals, medical education and healthy-living initiatives. The program is a tremendous opportunity for WVSOM students,” Nemitz said.
With this new opportunity, WVSOM students were able to apply in the final month of the 2024-25 scholarship cycle and will be eligible for the full 2025-26 period. The scholarship pays for tuition and fees at the school’s in-state rate and can be renewed for up to four years.
Since 2009, The Health Plan Scholarship program has provided over $3 million in scholarships to more than 50 medical and nursing students who intend to stay and practice in the state of West Virginia.
On July 19, Jeff Knight, president and CEO of THP, and James W. Nemitz, Ph.D., president of WVSOM, celebrated the osteopathic medical school’s inclusion in the need-based scholarship program, which is also available to medical and nursing students at West Virginia University and Marshall University.
Knight said including WVSOM builds on THP’s efforts to support West Virginia medical community.
“The health care staffing shortage continues to be a significant issue in West Virginia. The Health Plan is committed to supporting our state’s health care workforce, and we’re thrilled to team up with WVSOM to offer our scholarship program to its students. WVSOM does amazing work in both educating our future providers and advocating for health care initiatives important to all West Virginians. We’re proud to be partners,” Knight said.
Nemitz thanked Knight and The Health Plan for offering the scholarship program at WVSOM, which educates an average of nearly 800 medical students each year. According to the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, the school is No. 1 in producing physicians who practice in West Virginia, with 40% of the state’s physicians being WVSOM graduates.
“WVSOM is appreciative that The Health Plan has included osteopathic medical students in its scholarship program. Medical school is not inexpensive. This scholarship, by financially assisting recipients who want to stay in West Virginia, benefits not only our students but the state. The Health Plan shows its commitment to the health and well-being of the communities it serves through its products and services and by supporting health care professionals, medical education and healthy-living initiatives. The program is a tremendous opportunity for WVSOM students,” Nemitz said.
With this new opportunity, WVSOM students were able to apply in the final month of the 2024-25 scholarship cycle and will be eligible for the full 2025-26 period. The scholarship pays for tuition and fees at the school’s in-state rate and can be renewed for up to four years.
Representatives of WVSOM and The Health Plan gathers July 19 at THP headquarters to Wheeling to celebrate that THP has opened its medical scholarship program to students at the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine (WVSOM).
Since 2009, The Health Plan Scholarship program has provided over $3 million in scholarships to more than 50 medical and nursing students who intend to stay and practice in the state of West Virginia.
On July 19, Jeff Knight, president and CEO of THP, and James W. Nemitz, Ph.D., president of WVSOM, celebrated the osteopathic medical school’s inclusion in the need-based scholarship program, which is also available to medical and nursing students at West Virginia University and Marshall University.
Knight said including WVSOM builds on THP’s efforts to support West Virginia medical community.
“The health care staffing shortage continues to be a significant issue in West Virginia. The Health Plan is committed to supporting our state’s health care workforce, and we’re thrilled to team up with WVSOM to offer our scholarship program to its students. WVSOM does amazing work in both educating our future providers and advocating for health care initiatives important to all West Virginians. We’re proud to be partners,” Knight said.
Nemitz thanked Knight and The Health Plan for offering the scholarship program at WVSOM, which educates an average of nearly 800 medical students each year. According to the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, the school is No. 1 in producing physicians who practice in West Virginia, with 40% of the state’s physicians being WVSOM graduates.
“WVSOM is appreciative that The Health Plan has included osteopathic medical students in its scholarship program. Medical school is not inexpensive. This scholarship, by financially assisting recipients who want to stay in West Virginia, benefits not only our students but the state. The Health Plan shows its commitment to the health and well-being of the communities it serves through its products and services and by supporting health care professionals, medical education and healthy-living initiatives. The program is a tremendous opportunity for WVSOM students,” Nemitz said.
With this new opportunity, WVSOM students were able to apply in the final month of the 2024-25 scholarship cycle and will be eligible for the full 2025-26 period. The scholarship pays for tuition and fees at the school’s in-state rate and can be renewed for up to four years.
Since 2009, The Health Plan Scholarship program has provided over $3 million in scholarships to more than 50 medical and nursing students who intend to stay and practice in the state of West Virginia.
On July 19, Jeff Knight, president and CEO of THP, and James W. Nemitz, Ph.D., president of WVSOM, celebrated the osteopathic medical school’s inclusion in the need-based scholarship program, which is also available to medical and nursing students at West Virginia University and Marshall University.
Knight said including WVSOM builds on THP’s efforts to support West Virginia medical community.
“The health care staffing shortage continues to be a significant issue in West Virginia. The Health Plan is committed to supporting our state’s health care workforce, and we’re thrilled to team up with WVSOM to offer our scholarship program to its students. WVSOM does amazing work in both educating our future providers and advocating for health care initiatives important to all West Virginians. We’re proud to be partners,” Knight said.
Nemitz thanked Knight and The Health Plan for offering the scholarship program at WVSOM, which educates an average of nearly 800 medical students each year. According to the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission, the school is No. 1 in producing physicians who practice in West Virginia, with 40% of the state’s physicians being WVSOM graduates.
“WVSOM is appreciative that The Health Plan has included osteopathic medical students in its scholarship program. Medical school is not inexpensive. This scholarship, by financially assisting recipients who want to stay in West Virginia, benefits not only our students but the state. The Health Plan shows its commitment to the health and well-being of the communities it serves through its products and services and by supporting health care professionals, medical education and healthy-living initiatives. The program is a tremendous opportunity for WVSOM students,” Nemitz said.
With this new opportunity, WVSOM students were able to apply in the final month of the 2024-25 scholarship cycle and will be eligible for the full 2025-26 period. The scholarship pays for tuition and fees at the school’s in-state rate and can be renewed for up to four years.
Community and campus members gathered on June 25 for WVSOM's open house for its new 26,756- square-foot Testing Center. Held in conjunction with the Greater Greenbrier Chamber of Commerce as a Business After Hours event, dozens of visitors toured the facility and enjoyed healthy snacks.
WVSOM President James W. Nemitz, Ph.D., and GGVCC Executive Director Erin Hurst cohosted the evening, which attracted chamber members, public officials, current and former WVSOM faculty and staff, and interested guests.
The first new construction on the school’s campus since the WVSOM Student Center opened in 2016, the Testing Center will serve as a central location for first- and second-year medical students to take course quizzes and exams and practice for national board exams.
The centerpiece of the building, which connects the existing Center for Technology and Rural Medicine to the Clinical Evaluation Center, is a 234-seat testing hall filled with partitioned, three-feet-wide carrels designed to give students privacy and to ensure the integrity of the examination process.
WVSOM President James W. Nemitz, Ph.D., and GGVCC Executive Director Erin Hurst cohosted the evening, which attracted chamber members, public officials, current and former WVSOM faculty and staff, and interested guests.
The first new construction on the school’s campus since the WVSOM Student Center opened in 2016, the Testing Center will serve as a central location for first- and second-year medical students to take course quizzes and exams and practice for national board exams.
The centerpiece of the building, which connects the existing Center for Technology and Rural Medicine to the Clinical Evaluation Center, is a 234-seat testing hall filled with partitioned, three-feet-wide carrels designed to give students privacy and to ensure the integrity of the examination process.