Online Degrees Online Programs Online Courses Online Colleges Campus Programs eLearners Advisor Student Resources Blogs & Forums
Welcome to Online Education and Distance Learning Discussion Forums & Blogs Sign in | Join | Help
College search for 1000+ online degrees, online colleges & online universities

Online Education Blogs

Distance Learning Discussion Forums

Search Blogs & Forums

My A.T. Still University Experience

The Founding of A.T. Still University

“I have no desire to be a cat, which walks so lightly that it never creates a disturbance.” — Andrew Taylor Still

A.T. Still University was founded in 1892 by a physician named Andrew Taylor Still who had lost three children to disease and dedicated the rest of his life to finding alternatives to the medical science of his era. Dr. Still founded an alternative medical approach called osteopathy. This approach focused on the wellness of the whole patient rather than just treating the symptoms of disease, and its centerpiece was a set of techniques called Osteopathic manipulative medicine that involved manually moving patients' bodies to help the body overcome musculo-skeletal problems, which Still saw as the primary cause of ailment.

Or at least that's how I understand it. But I have to admit that I don't know much about it. ATSU may have started out as the first osteopathic medical school, but 117 years later they're a large diverse institution whose programs also include dentistry, audiology, health sciences, physician assistant, physical therapy, and even my program of health education. I only knew a little about the difference between osteopathic physicians, who earn a DO degree, and “normal” physicians who earn an MD.

What I do know is that while Dr. Still's theories were kind of kooky, that was a long time ago, and since the second world war DOs have become mainstream, learning all the same evidence-based medicine that MDs do. While DOs still also take a course or two on Still's theories for tradition's sake, in surveys most say they don't ever use them. DOs practice medicine alongside MDs in every U.S. state, compete for the same residencies, and so forth. Meanwhile, physicians from MD programs have come around on what was originally an osteopathic idea of looking at the wellness of the whole patient rather than just looking at symptoms as diagnostic puzzles to solve on their own. So to me, they've pretty much met in the middle.

Anyway, when I first looked at ATSU I read a bit about this because I wanted to make sure that there wasn't anything kooky about it, that I wasn't going to a school with medical theories that aren't supported by scientific evidence. But at the same time I was attracted to the holistic approach that osteopathy emphasizes. If anything, I wish my program could find a place for a course on a holistic approach to wellness and health education!

Next up, my wife explores her distance learning options for law school.

Add to:                     
Published Wednesday, June 03, 2009 12:49 PM by SteveFoerster

Comments

No Comments
Anonymous comments are disabled

About SteveFoerster

I'm an educational technologist and administrator who loves distance learning. I completed my Bachelor's in Information Systems by distance, and went on to do a Master's in Educational Technology almost entirely online.

Now it's time for doctoral study, and I've decided to stick with eLearning for many reasons, chief among them that the Doctor of Health Education program that interested me wasn't available from a local university. Also, I'm married with four school-age kids, so I definitely need the flexibility that online learning can provide. This program at A.T. Still University met my needs.

My other interests include veganism, developing world issues, open educational resources and free culture, and individual liberty.

A.T. Still University


A.T. Still University instills in students the knowledge, integrity, compassion, and experience needed to address the needs of the whole person.

Read More Get Info!

SteveFoerster

I'm an educational technologist and administrator who loves distance learning. I completed my Bachelor's in Information Systems by distance, and went on to do a Master's in Educational Technology almost entirely online.

Now it's time for doctoral study, and I've decided to stick with eLearning for many reasons, chief among them that the Doctor of Health Education program that interested me wasn't available from a local university. Also, I'm married with four school-age kids, so I definitely need the flexibility that online learning can provide. This program at A.T. Still University met my needs.

My other interests include veganism, developing world issues, open educational resources and free culture, and individual liberty.

This Blog

Post Calendar

<June 2009>
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
31123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
2829301234
567891011

Syndication