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TRANSFORMATIVE EDUCATION Ohio is in the grip of a terrible and worsening opioid crisis, with our state leading the nation in the number of deaths by opioid overdose. We have taken a leading role in understanding and combatting the problem through community outreach programs and enhanced efforts to prepare our students to deal with opioid misuse as practicing physicians. In February 2017 our fourth annual Health Policy Day focused on this serious problem and what osteopathic physicians can do to alleviate it. TACKLING THE OPIOID EPIDEMIC During the event, all first-year Heritage College students heard about the history of the problem and how it is likely to affect their practices when they become physicians. Topics included handling “drug-seeking” patients and non-opioid alternatives for pain management. State agency representatives and health care providers, including State Medical Board President Amol Soin, M.D., and Justin Trevino, M.D., assistant medical director of the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services, spoke about state legislative and regulatory intitatives to combat the problem. As Executive Dean Ken Johnson noted as he opened the event, the opioid epidemic is “something that we have been working on consistently and deeply for years.” The college was among the first medical schools in the nation to answer a 2016 call from the White House requiring students to undergo prescriber education aligned with Centers for Disease Control guidelines before they can graduate.