WIHI - A Podcast from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement
Health & Fitness:Medicine
Date: September 23, 2010
Featuring:
It’s not easy to turn medical training upside down to better fit the needs of today’s patients and health care system. Consider that the last major reform occurred some 100 years ago and many, many institutions and individuals would say they’ve done just fine with the basics and, besides, some of the new content areas like “humanism” would be nice to know, but they’re hardly essential. I’m going to be a surgeon, after all!
Well, don’t try that out on the Deans of some 20 new medical schools. The attitude also might not wash with a new breed of curriculum architects who pair students with patients in low-income neighborhoods from day one, who insist on the mastery of good communication skills, and who have begun to weave the science and the tools of quality improvement and patient safety in and out of all science and clinical coursework. This is the new reality for future doctors and a lot of the changes are occurring at the grassroots, school by school, with educational leaders and governing bodies just now harnessing the best that’s out there to create a new blueprint for medical training, overall.
Dr. Lawrence Smith is serious about change. At his brand new medical school, Hofstra/North Shore–LIJ, first-year students will, among other things, get certified as EMTs and learn firsthand about teamwork and what patients and families need in crisis situations. At the Wertheim College of Medicine–Florida International University, Dean John Rock is sending medical students into diverse and complex communities so they’ll immediately appreciate medical realities within the context of social and economic realities. The AAMC’s Brownie Anderson, who’s in regular contact with all the new Dean innovators, joins WIHI fresh off a conference highlighting a vast amount of change occurring at all the nation’s medical schools. Whether it’s the IHI Open School or the virtual MyCaseSpace pioneered by the University of Central Florida, change is in the air and on the ground.
WIHI: Success at the Right Speed: Learning from Toyota
WIHI: The Meaningful Methodology of Patient- and Family-Centered Care
WIHI: Momentum for Maternity of the Safest Kind
WIHI: The Next Wave of Reform for Medical Education
WIHI: The Health Care Tune-Up Show! Leading with Logic and Emotion
WIHI: Message to Managers: Crises Happen. Plan Ahead!
WIHI: Tipping the Scales: Fresh Ideas to Combat Obesity
WIHI: Adverse Events and Their Aftermath: SOS from Clinicians
WIHI: Gimme Housing, Not the ED: A New Campaign for Housing the Homeless
WIHI: Patient Safety Officer: One Person’s Title, Everyone’s Responsibility
WIHI: OpenNotes and the Electronic Medical Record
WIHI: All Hospitals in Favor of Saving Money: Say “Patient Flow!”
WIHI: Getting Down to Business…and Health Care Reform
WIHI: New Ways to Reduce Diagnosis Errors
WIHI: The Future of Nursing
WIHI: Quality Care During Advanced Illness: What Do Patients Want That Works?
WIHI: Run, Don’t Walk! The Urgent Need for Patient Safety
WIHI: Reducing Avoidable Visits to the Emergency Department
WIHI: The Medical Home
WIHI: Next Waves of Health Care Reform
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