51Æ·²èCollege of Osteopathic Medicine alum receives American Academy of Osteopathy’s highest honor
George J. Pasquarello, D.O., FAAO, member of the 51Æ·²è College of Osteopathic Medicine Class of 1993 and adjunct faculty member at 51Æ·²èCOM, received the American Academy of Osteopathy’s (AAO) highest honor on March 25, 2017 during its convocation in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Named the Andrew Taylor Still Medallion of Honor, the award is given to AAO members who have exhibited an exceptional understanding and application of osteopathic principles and concepts and for outstanding accomplishments in scientific or professional affairs. The award is named after Andrew Taylor Still, M.D., D.O., the founder of osteopathic medicine.
Pasquarello specializes in neuromusculoskeletal medicine and osteopathic manipulative medicine (NMM/OMM), prolotherapy and platelet rich plasma injections. He practices at University Orthopedics, Inc., in East Greenwich, Rhode Island. He is board certified in NMM/OMM, and he holds a certificate of added qualifications in pain medicine.
In addition to being a 51Æ·²èCOM alum, Pasquarello served as a program director for 51Æ·²èCOM’s NMM/OMM residency and combined NMM and family medicine residency. He was section chief at Mercy Hospital in Portland, Maine for osteopathic manipulative medicine from 1998 to 2002. He has also served as faculty for the OMM Department at 51Æ·²èCOM for 10 years, and he continues to host student and resident rotations in his practice including family medicine, internal medicine, physical medicine and rehabilitation, sports medicine and pain medicine.
In addition, Pasquarello has been vitally active in all levels of the osteopathic profession. He was the 2009-10 president of the AAO, and he currently serves on the AAO’s Board of Governors. He also has served on the Academy’s Education Committee and the Postdoctoral Standards and Evaluation Committee, which he chaired from 2000 to 2007.
The founding president of the Foundation for Osteopathic Research and Continuous Education (FORCE), he led the foundation through its early development. Pasquarello is a former president of the Rhode Island Society of Osteopathic Physicians, and he continues to serve on its board of trustees. He regularly represents Rhode Island at the American Osteopathic Association’s House of Delegates.
Pasquarello also has served on the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education as a member of the Osteopathic Principles Committee. He served on the American Osteopathic Board of Neuromusculoskeletal Medicine for two terms, and he was on the National Board of Osteopathic Medical Examiners’ Standard Setting Committee Level III in 2000.
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