Ashland, Ringtown doc named Humanitarian of the Year by county chamber

PHOTO COURTESY / ST. LUKE'S - Dr. Gregory Dobash.

ASHLAND – A doctor who practices in Ashland and Ringtown is the first-ever Humanitarian of the Year, as named by the Schuylkill Chamber of Commerce.

Dr. Gregory Dobash, of St. Luke’s, was announced as the awards recipient on May 3 and will receive the award at an awards breakfast on June 12.

Dobash practices family medicine, obesity medicine, and addiction medicine at St. Luke’s Ashland Family Practice and Rural Health Centers in Ringtown and Hometown.

The Humanitarian of the Year award, St. Luke’s says, recognizes Dr. Dobash for his work leading the St. Luke’s Rural Residency Team in providing care, wellness services and education to the homeless, people suffering from mental illness or the disease of addiction, the economically challenged and other chronically sick and neglected who often live on the outer edge of the society.

Jeanette Triano Sinn, executive director of Servant to All and My Father’s House homeless shelter in Pottsville, originally nominated Dr. Dobash for the Chamber’s Business Man of the Year award.

“Dr. Dobash and the St. Luke’s Rural Medicine Residency team are a blessing to the homeless, unsheltered and at-risk people they provide care to, addressing medical needs that would otherwise go unmet,” said Triano Sinn. “We are grateful for his vision, dedication and passion in partnering with our organization to serve the community, and we congratulate him on this award and thank him for his leadership in service to others!”

However, in reviewing Triano Sinn’s nomination, “the Awards Committee became acutely aware of some significant ‘servant leadership’ and humanitarian contributions being made to several nonprofit organizations by Dr. Greg Dobash,” explained Robert S. Carl, Jr., president and CEO of the Chamber.

“While his work was viewed ‘competitively’ in some of our award categories, the depth and breadth of his ‘servant leadership’ and humanitarian work seemed far reaching,” Carl continued. “As such, the Schuylkill Chamber of Commerce Awards Committee decided to award Dr. Greg Dobash a special Humanitarian of the Year award in 2024, to recognize his great work and significant time commitment in the service to others in need.”

Dr. Dobash lives in Mountain Top with his wife, Stacey, and their dog, Romeo.  The couple has a daughter at Union College in NY, and a son who attends the Keswick School in Virginia.  

After joining St. Luke’s in 2012, Dr. Dobash helped found the Rural Medicine Residency Program with Thomas McGinley, MD, in 2018, the first of its kind in Pennsylvania. He is board certified in Family Medicine, Addiction Medicine and Obesity Medicine and is a Wilderness Medicine Fellow.

In 2022, he began the street medicine walk-in clinic at Servants to All homeless shelter, then integrated psychiatric services and telemedicine at the clinic. He has hosted fundraisers to benefit the homeless and initiated public health efforts to increase vaccination rates among the minority population in Schuylkill County. He has assisted Servants to All and the Hope Center in Schuylkill County to initiate harm reduction, reduce domestic violence and prevent and reduce substance use disorder/opiate use disorder, also providing naloxone and anti-vaping education in schools.

Dr. Dobash works with the county’s Sexual Assault Resource & Counseling Center to prevent abuse and treat victims of sexual violence and human trafficking.

Through the Rural Residency, he prepares the next generation of physicians to continue this work, which includes directing the St.  Luke’s Addiction Medicine Fellowship Program.  Through collaboration with Miners Emergency Department, Community Health and Rural Medicine, the volume of overdose victims presenting at St. Luke’s Miners Campus has decreased by 57 % since 2016.

“Dr. Dobash is a superb physician, teacher and person!” said Thomas McGinley, MD. “His dedication to serving his patients and communities is exemplary, as is his teaching of residents and medical students. His advocacy for marginalized populations serves as a role model for others. He is respected by his peers, patients and colleagues. It is an honor to work with him.”

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