Literature DB >> 11010074

Physician views on practicing professionalism in the corporate age.

B Castellani1, D Wear.   

Abstract

Arnold Relman argues that medical education does not prepare students and residents to practice their profession in today's corporate health care system. Corporate health care administrators agree: Physicians enter the workforce unskilled in contract negotiation, evidence-based medicine, navigating bureaucratic systems, and so forth. What about practicing physicians? Do they agree as well? According to this study, they do. Feeling like decentered double agents and unprepared, physicians find themselves professionally lost, struggling to balance issues of cost and care and expressing lots of negativity toward the cultures of medicine and managed care. However, physicians are resilient. A group of physicians, who may be called proactive, are meeting the professional demands of corporate health care by becoming sophisticated about its bureaucratic organization and the ways in which their professional and personal commitments fit within the system. Following the lead of proactive physicians, the authors support Relman's thesis and education for both students and physicians requires a major overhaul.

Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 11010074     DOI: 10.1177/104973200129118598

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Qual Health Res        ISSN: 1049-7323


  1 in total

1.  General practitioner health and well-being: from Brisbane to Los Angeles.

Authors:  P T Dowling
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  2001-01
  1 in total

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