Literature DB >> 27438156

Lessons From Rocket Science: Reframing the Concept of the Physician Health Advocate.

Maria M Hubinette1, Glenn Regehr, Sayra Cristancho.   

Abstract

Health advocacy is a prominent component of health professionals' training internationally and is frequently discussed in the medical education literature. Despite this, it continues to be a problematic and challenging topic for medical educators, health professionals, and trainees alike. Borrowing from the field of systems engineering, the authors suggest a need to reconceptualize health advocacy using a systems mind-set rather than a physician-centric perspective. Conceptualizing health advocacy as a systemic, collective effort requires educators, practitioners, and trainees to challenge the assumption that the role of a competent physician health advocate can be fully defined without regard to the larger system or collective within which physicians function. Further, this implies a substantially more dynamic understanding of physicians' and other participants' parts in the collective activity.Of course, this new way of conceptualizing physicians' practices is not limited to health advocacy. The current education paradigm trains physicians for individual competency but expects them to practice collectively. Defining physician competen cies, or the competencies of any health care provider, in isolation from the particular system of which that individual is an integral part implicitly places that health care provider as the central focus of that system. Thus, academic medicine needs to move its educational and research efforts forward in a manner that recognizes that a systems engineering approach to health improvement will allow the various players to maximize their individual efforts to more effectively support the collective activity.

Entities:  

Year:  2016        PMID: 27438156     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000001299

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  8 in total

1.  Integrating social justice advocacy into a family health team: Successes and lessons learned.

Authors:  Rami Shoucri; Kathryn Dorman; Samantha Green; Gary Bloch; Alyssa Swartz
Journal:  Can Fam Physician       Date:  2021-12       Impact factor: 3.275

2.  The role of patient and physician advocacy in reducing wait times for cancer care: a qualitative analysis.

Authors:  Maria Mathews; Donna Bulman; Dana Ryan
Journal:  CMAJ Open       Date:  2017-10-17

3.  Acting as Change Agents: Insight Into Québec Occupational Therapists' Current Practice: Actions menées à titre d'agents de changement : aperçu des pratiques actuelles parmi les ergothérapeutes du Québec.

Authors:  Annie Carrier; Alexandra Éthier; Michaël Beaudoin; Anne Hudon; Denis Bédard; Emmanuelle Jasmin; France Verville
Journal:  Can J Occup Ther       Date:  2021-03-08       Impact factor: 1.614

Review 4.  The essential role of physician as advocate: how and why we pass it on.

Authors:  LeeAnne M Luft
Journal:  Can Med Educ J       Date:  2017-06-30

5.  Are we preparing for collaboration, advocacy and leadership? Targeted multi-site analysis of collaborative intrinsic roles implementation in medical undergraduate curricula.

Authors:  Jan Griewatz; Amir Yousef; Miriam Rothdiener; Maria Lammerding-Koeppel
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2020-02-04       Impact factor: 2.463

6.  Indira's story.

Authors:  Russell Dawe
Journal:  Can Med Educ J       Date:  2017-04-20

Review 7.  Can adaptive expertise, reflective practice, and activity theory help achieve systems-based practice and collective competence?

Authors:  Angela Orsino; Stella Ng
Journal:  Can Med Educ J       Date:  2019-07-24

8.  Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on rural obstetrics practices in New Mexico.

Authors:  Colleen E Sells; Aurora M Maes; Rachel A Fleddermann; Eliana L Otero-Bell; Rebecca S Hartley
Journal:  J Family Med Prim Care       Date:  2021-04-08
  8 in total

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