Medical training and practice habituates physicians to a culture that narrows the possibilities we see for finding joy and meaning in our work. We often become efficient task completers, stuck in routines, and prone to burnout. Saul and Stefan discuss a set of questions that challenge physicians to look at their work and themselves in fresh ways, can be used for mentoring or teaching purposes, as prompts for reflective writing exercises, or to engage thoughtful colleagues (perhaps over a beer).
10 Questions (selected from On Becoming a Healer: The Journey from Patient Care to Caring about Your Patients)
Saul J. Weiner, MD; sweiner@uic.edu
Contextualizing Care in a Nutshell (and a New Study)
Medical Gaslighting: Why Are We A--holes?
Urine Drug Screening: How it can traumatize patients and undermine the physician-patient relationship without helping anyone
Pursuing a Medical Career While Black: What it Takes and Why it Matters
Rescuing medical professionalism: Could “cup-of-coffee conversations” do more good than committees and letters-to-the-file?
Why Residents Unionize
Opioids and the physician-patient relationship: What are we getting wrong?
False Positives Traumatize Patients...If Clinicians Aren't Careful
Healing Interactions: What are they made of?
Kind People on Airplanes
When an attending yells at a resident
When your patient has a Swastika tattoo
About me being racist: A conversation that follows an apology
The Dartmouth Debacle: Why the culture of medical education needs to change
Vaccine Hesitancy and the Doctor-Patient Relationship
Engagement and Boundary Clarity:
Judgementalism
Contextualizing Care: What it means and why it matters
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