Preventive medicine has an indispensable place in modern health care. When preventive medicine is approached through an osteopathic lens, its impact becomes even more far-reaching. It brings together rigorous population-health science with the osteopathic philosophy of practicing medicine, which centers on seeing the patient as an integrated whole. As a DO who is completing preventive medicine residency training, I have witnessed firsthand how these two frameworks naturally reinforce one another.

From early on in training, osteopathic physicians learn to connect a patient’s physiology, environment, behaviors and emotions; health is never reduced to a single laboratory value. Preventive medicine formalizes this philosophy into a specialty. Through the specialty of preventive medicine, physicians can intervene “upstream,” long before disease becomes entrenched. In other words, osteopathic medicine supplies the mindset, and the specialty of preventive medicine supplies the toolbox.

Both disciplines emphasize root-cause thinking. A patient presenting with hypertension, for example, is not merely an elevated blood-pressure reading, but a person whose stressors, diet, neighborhood walkability and access to fresh food all contribute to the numbers on the sphygmomanometer. When a preventive medicine physician steps back to examine those wider determinants, the osteopathic habit of viewing the body as a unit helps to address all the population-level drivers of disease.

Versatile training

Preventive medicine residencies are unique in their integration of a Master of Public Health (MPH) curriculum. Preventive medicine resident physicians are provided with training in epidemiology, biostatistics, health-systems management and policy analysis. In sum, it is a wonderful blend of public health and clinical training. The result is a versatile clinician who can treat an individual, analyze a data set and brief a legislator.

A preventive medicine physician might be a health officer for a multistate health system, lead predictive-analytics projects that identify patients at highest risk for avoidable hospitalization and design community partnerships to address food insecurity. Another preventive medicine physician might be the director of occupational health in a corporation, using the principles of preventive medicine to craft wellness programs that lower rates of work-related injury. In a single week, the same clinician might refine clinic workflows to boost colorectal cancer screening rates, brief a state senate committee on the public health impact of flavored tobacco sales and analyze county‑level overdose data to guide naloxone distribution.

Public health, policy & patient care

Many preventive medicine physicians serve as chief quality or population health officers in integrated health systems, medical directors in state and local health departments, or advisors to corporate wellness programs. Our medical training is used to shape regulations, payment models and community interventions. The grounding in epidemiology and health‑systems science allows us to translate real‑time data into actionable guidance, while our hands‑on clinical experience ensures those policies remain rooted in patient reality. These examples illustrate the flexibility of preventive medicine physicians. The osteopathic tradition of strong physician-patient rapport only further amplifies these efforts.

In my preventive medicine residency training at UMass Chan Medical School, I was fortunate to receive a solid foundation in community health, built in tandem by public health training and clinical rotations. My pursuit of an MPH allowed me to hone my skills in data analysis, program design and cross‑sector collaboration. My clinical rotations (ranging from family medicine to addiction medicine, from public health to nutrition) allowed me to recognize and apply preventive principles in diverse contexts.

The training I received in residency has taught me how to identify individual-level social determinants of health (SDOH) and design targeted interventions. Looking ahead, I plan to pursue board certification in addiction medicine. Ultimately, I hope to participate in an integrated model of addiction medicine which includes both prevention and treatment, addressing the upstream determinants of health and policy advocacy alongside clinical care.

Professional resources

The American Osteopathic College of Occupational and Preventive Medicine (AOCOPM) offers excellent preventive medicine programming focused on musculoskeletal health, occupational safety and hands‑on preventive‑osteopathic techniques. Osteopathic physicians move easily between discussions of high‑sensitivity CRP levels and neighborhood walkability indices.

The American College of Preventive Medicine (ACPM) also has great programming. At annual meetings, clinical updates on cardiovascular risk stratification sit alongside workshops on community organizing and health-equity audits.

Both societies maintain robust mentorship networks that connect trainees with physicians who model an integrated practice style, ensuring that new graduates carry forward a dual commitment to science and person-centered care.

The osteopathic habit of viewing health in context dovetails naturally with the foremost mandate of preventive medicine: to act on upstream drivers of disease.

In truth, both osteopathic medicine and preventive medicine require this flexibility. Because osteopathic medicine stresses structure-function relationships, DOs are comfortable thinking in systems. This approach becomes invaluable when tackling community health challenges. Where one specialty might concentrate on controlling a patient’s asthma symptoms, a preventive medicine physician is just as likely to ask how housing quality, air pollution or access to primary care contribute to regional exacerbation patterns. The osteopathic habit of viewing health in context dovetails naturally with the foremost mandate of preventive medicine: to act on upstream drivers of disease.

At its core, preventive medicine gives osteopathic physicians a platform with which to apply our whole-person ethos at scale, moving beyond individual encounters to redesign the structures that shape health. In turn, osteopathic medicine grounds the practice of preventive medicine in empathy and human connection, reminding us that statistics represent real lives.

As the United States grapples with epidemics of chronic disease, shifts in demographics and the financial strain of late-stage interventions, the preventive medicine approach will only grow in relevance. Health systems are realizing that reactive treatment and care are not sustainable. We need clinicians who can parse data, engage communities and innovate policies, all while keeping their patients’ lived experience front and center. Preventive medicine and osteopathic care not only align but also strengthen each other in practice. That’s what drew me to this field, and it’s what keeps me energized every day.

Advice for future preventive medicine physicians

I recommend that medical students begin preparing for a career in preventive medicine as early as possible. Early preparation and strategic engagement will set you apart! To become board‑certified, you must complete an ACGME‑accredited preventive medicine residency. There are three possible pathways to completion:

  1. Finish a transitional PGY-1 year, then enter a preventive medicine residency program.
  2. Enroll in a combined family medicine/preventive medicine or internal medicine/preventive medicine residency.
  3. Complete residency and board certification in another specialty, and afterward apply to a preventive medicine residency.

Joining the AOCOPM and the ACPM will allow you access to webinars, mentorship opportunities and national conferences. Conferences are excellent opportunities to network with program directors, current residents and early‑career preventive medicine physicians.

I would also recommend gaining hands-on public health experience by working with a local health department or a non-governmental organization. Although these opportunities may not be labeled “preventive medicine electives,” they often include activities such as vaccination campaigns, health screenings and HIV/AIDS clinics, all providing invaluable exposure to core public health practices.

Editor’s note: The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily represent the views of The DO or the AOA.

Related reading:

Understanding the looming crisis in elderly care

Illuminating the path: Maternal-fetal medicine in Alaska and the dance of the aurora borealis