Salus alum receives the university’s 2024 Albert Fitch Alumnus of the Year Award

Brian Mahoney, OD ‘85, Resident ‘86, has been named the recipient of Salus University’s 2024 Albert Fitch Alumnus of the Year Award.

Dr. Mahoney, along with six other recipients, was presented with the Fitch Award at the university’s annual recognition reception on June 2 at Pinecrest Country Club in Lansdale.

While attending the Pennsylvania College of Optometry (PCO) prior to his career, Jeffrey Nyman, OD, FAAO, director of Emergency Services at The Eye Institute (TEI) at Salus, was Dr. Mahoney’s residency coordinator and mentor.

“You don’t forget somebody who believed in you when you were a work in progress. I think Jeff epitomizes that,” said Dr. Mahoney. “He has a mix of intensity and laid-back components to his teaching style. It was so impressive that I adapted much of what my approach in clinic is to what I primarily observed from Jeff. That is something you can’t teach well in terms of methodology. For whatever reason, his style affected me profoundly. I hope I was successful at leaving my residents and students with a similar feeling when reflecting on their experiences while under my clinical mentorship.”

After completing his residency, Dr. Mahoney accepted a job at the Veterans Administration in Wilmington, Delaware, a position which he held for 32 years. During that time he established a student program with PCO in 1988 as well as a residency program affiliated with PCO in 1990.

Brian Mahoney and family


“Being able to integrate an optometric education program in a medical setting that had free access to both primary medical care, specialty medical care, ophthalmology, and surgery, that’s why I think it was a fertile ground for an optometric educational program,” said Dr. Mahoney.

He started the program offering one paid residency slot when he first started to three paid residency slots by the time he retired from full-time work at the VA in 2018.

In addition, he estimates he was involved with educating 75 residents over the years and in the ballpark of 150 students that came through the VA program during his tenure, many of them PCO students.

“And some of the staff that I hired at the VA were some of my former students or residents,” said Dr. Mahoney. “Not from a nepotistic viewpoint but certainly I was fully aware of their level of clinical acumen and achievement and their drive for blending that with a goal for academic participation. It was just was the right combination to create the staff I needed there.”

Nowadays, he works two days a week in clinic. One of his former students, Sarah Foster, OD ‘89, Resident ‘90, is the head of that clinic.

“She’s the one who enticed me to go there after I finished my full-time work at the VA hospital. It’s quite interesting how things do come full circle, that one of my former trainees ended up being my boss,” he said.

For all the latest news, follow us on Facebook or sign up for Glenside Local’s “Daily Buzz” newsletter here.

Photos: Salus University