Breadcrumbs
- News
- News Archive
- Love of the Games
A love of sports led Dr. Anthony DeGiacomo ’04 to , and later a love of sports led him to fellowship in sports medicine at the famed Kerlan Jobe Orthopedic Clinic.
Not only did Anthony, now an orthopedic surgeon in Boston, gain an in-depth experience in surgery for sports related injuries, he also was able to serve as assistant team physician to many college and professional teams in the Los Angeles area, including the Los Angeles Dodgers, Los Angeles Kings, USC Football Team, Anaheim Ducks and the Los Angeles Sparks of the Women’s National Basketball Association.
DeGiacomo was recruited to play basketball at in the .
“The opportunity to play basketball in college, coupled with the environment of small study body and location within California, won me over,” he recalls.
However an injury during his freshmen year turned his focus from basketball to science.
Luckily, an influential faculty mentor, former science chair Dr. Sibdas Ghosh in the School of Health and Natural Sciences, helped him with the answer.
“He introduced me to undergraduate research and to summer research programs, DeGiacomo recalls. “He confirmed my goal of going to medical school and becoming a doctor.”
His work in the lab at helped DeGiacomo secure several summer research programs – the Minority Medical Education Program at Case Western Reserve, the Stanford Summer Research Program, and the Harvard Summer Honors Undergraduate Research Program.
After graduating from , and while applying for medical school, he conducted a year in the research lab of Dr. Nicholas Denko in the Department of Radiation Oncology at Stanford University.
DeGiacomo attended medical school at the University of California, San Francisco. During medical school, he completed a combined program with the UC Berkeley School of Public Health to obtain a Master's Degree of Health and Medical Sciences. After medical school, he attended Boston University for residency in Orthopedic Surgery. During this residency program, he completed an additional year as a research fellow performing basic science studies on bone healing and remodeling.
That helped pave the way for DeGiacomo to earn the fellowship to the Kerlan Jobe Orthopedic Clinic, a preeminent center for research and education in orthopedics and sports medicine. The clinic has gained national and international recognition as pioneers in the field of sports medicine and has had a profound effect on the training and exercise routines of professional athletes in every sport.
DeGiacomo is one of a number of former students who graduated in the mid-2000s now either practicing medicine or involved in medical research.