Transforming practice organizations to foster lifelong learning and commitment to medical professionalism

被引:55
作者
Frankford, DM
Patterson, MA
Konrad, TR
机构
[1] Rutgers State Univ, Sch Law Camden, Camden, NJ 08102 USA
[2] Rutgers State Univ, Ctr State Hlth Policy, Camden, NJ 08102 USA
[3] Rutgers State Univ, Inst Hlth Hlth Care Policy & Aging Res, New Brunswick, NJ 08903 USA
[4] Rutgers State Univ, Dept Geog, New Brunswick, NJ 08903 USA
[5] Univ N Carolina, Program Hlth Profess & Primary Care, Cecil G Sheps Ctr Hlth Serv Res, Chapel Hill, NC USA
关键词
D O I
10.1097/00001888-200007000-00012
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Practice organizations will increasingly engage in activities that are the functional equivalents of continuing medical education. The authors maintain that if these activities are properly structured within practice organizations, they can become powerful engines of socialization to enhance physicians' lifelong learning and commitment to medical professionalism. They propose that this prom ise can be realized if new or reformed practice organizations combine education and service delivery and institutionalize processes of individual and collective reflection. The resulting "institutions of reflective practice" would be ones of collegial, experiential, reflective lifelong learning concerning the technical and normative aspects of medical work. They would extend recent methods of medical education such as problem-based learning into the practice setting and draw on extant methods used in complex organizations to maximize the advantages and minimize the disadvantages that practice organizations typically present for adult learning. As such, these institutions would balance the potentially conflicting organizational needs for, on the one hand, (1) self-direction risk taking, and creativity; (2) specialization; and (3) collegiality; and, on the other hand, (4) organizational structure, (5) coordination of division of labor, and (6) hierarchy. Overall, this institutionalization of reflective practice would enrich practice with education and education with practice, and accomplish the ideals of what the authors call "responsive medical professionalism." The medical profession would both con tribute and be responsive to social values, and medical work would be valued intrinsically and as central to practitioners' self-identity and as a contribution to the public good.
引用
收藏
页码:708 / 717
页数:10
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