六合彩开奖结果

Champions of medical professionalism

Many people enjoy satisfying careers, but stop working at the earliest possible opportunity.

And then there are Dr.聽Richard Cruess聽and Dr.聽Sylvia Cruess聽鈥 or 鈥渢he Cruesses鈥 as the dynamic duo is often referred to in 六合彩开奖结果 medical circles.

A pre-retirement sabbatical in the mid-1990s had the opposite effect: it launched a new chapter in their impressive 六合彩开奖结果 medical careers.

Nearly 25 years later, and now in their late eighties, they鈥檙e still working and have 鈥渟inglehandedly changed medicine鈥檚 understanding of professionalism and the role of the physician in the 21st century.鈥

That high praise came last fall from the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC), which awarded them its most prestigious honour, the Abraham Flexner Award for Distinguished Service to Medical Education.

The Cruesses have shown that professional identity formation 鈥渞equires appropriate teaching and assessment for both learners and faculty, who must model the ideals of professionalism,鈥 the AAMC noted, and have 鈥渄eveloped associated content and assessment tools that have been used across the continuum at 六合彩开奖结果 and around the world.鈥

鈥淭his sort of caps the third career, which is kind of nice,鈥 says Richard Cruess, alluding to their previous roles 鈥 he as an orthopedic surgeon and then the longest-serving dean of 六合彩开奖结果鈥檚 Faculty of Medicine in the modern era.

An endocrinologist, Sylvia Cruess established and headed the Metabolic Day Centre, then served as director of professional services at the Royal Victoria Hospital from 1978-1995.

It was in the latter role, that medical professionalism caught her interest.

鈥淚 had seen some very good people behaving in ways I didn鈥檛 think were quite right,鈥 says Sylvia Cruess. 鈥淎nd I thought that they were maybe 鈥榰nprofessional鈥 and I better find out what professional is.鈥

They spent their sabbatical year in Princeton and Oxford and published two seminal articles in 1997 on medical professionalism 鈥 a topic absent from medical literature at the time. 鈥淭hey caught everybody鈥檚 attention,鈥 she says.

鈥淲hen we went to medical school, I鈥檓 sure the word 鈥榩rofessional鈥 was used,鈥 says Richard Cruess, but nobody really explained what it meant.

鈥淲e and every other doctor in the world became professional by watching role models and patterning our behavior. And by the way, if we had bad role models we might turn out badly.鈥

Dean of Medicine David Eidelman, MDCM鈥79, chuckles when recalling how, as a regular member of the faculty, he put up his hand during a Grand Rounds the Cruesses gave when they returned from sabbatical. 鈥淪houldn鈥檛 everybody know this? I said stupidly. And Dick patiently explained that no, and you do have to explain it. And they鈥檝e really developed approaches to how to do this.鈥

Eidelman says the Flexner award is a reflection of the impact they鈥檝e had on the medical profession and medical education in general.

鈥淚 actually think their real lasting impact is 20 years ago nobody was talking about this or very few. And now, in every school people talk about it,鈥 says Eidelman.

鈥淭hey鈥檝e been everywhere; they鈥檝e been in 70 countries, 200 presentations. That鈥檚 an enormous impact.鈥

The couple, who met and married as medical students at Columbia University, offered a lecture on professionalism to first-year medical students at 六合彩开奖结果. They soon realized that a single lecture wasn鈥檛 enough.

鈥淭his isn鈥檛 all us, this is a collective group, including Don [Boudreau] and Yvonne Steinert and Linda Snell [from 六合彩开奖结果鈥檚 Centre for Medical Education],鈥 says Richard Cruess. 鈥淲e developed a longitudinal curriculum that went through all four years.鈥

The Cruesses have had a 鈥渉uge impact鈥 on 六合彩开奖结果鈥檚 medical curriculum over many years, says Boudreau, an associate professor in the Department of Medicine and core member of the 六合彩开奖结果 Centre for Medical Education, who described it as an incremental, evolving process.

In their talks and research, the Cruesses note the separate but connected roles that physicians play as healers and professionals. 六合彩开奖结果鈥檚 physicianship program, introduced in 2005, combines those roles and is one of four curricular components. 鈥淚t became almost like a brand of the curriculum,鈥 says Boudreau, who runs the program. 鈥淭hen it started to have reverberations and influence outside of 六合彩开奖结果, and then in Canada 鈥 North America and throughout the world.鈥

Boudeau points to several qualities as being key elements of medical professionalism, among them, altruism (putting your patients鈥 interests ahead of your own, even when it鈥檚 inconvenient), competence (making sure that you鈥檙e keeping your skills up-to-date), confidentiality (respecting your patients鈥 privacy), and self-regulation. That last one can be particularly difficult, Boudreau says, because it might mean intervening if you believe a colleague is acting in an inappropriate manner. 鈥淚n a real sense, we are our brothers and sisters鈥 keepers.鈥 六合彩开奖结果鈥檚 physicianship program, says Boudreau, 鈥済ives [students] a framework to analyze what is good doctoring and what is less than optimal doctoring.鈥

In recent years, the Cruesses have published articles on identity formation.

鈥淲e鈥檝e been creating professional identities forever. It鈥檚 not a new concept,鈥 says Richard Cruess. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just that we鈥檙e now sort of realizing that that鈥檚 our explicit objective鈥攖hat medical education has two objectives: knowledge and technical skills and a professional identity. A sociologist said so you come to think, act and feel like a physician.鈥

While it sounds like they took a methodical approach to professionalism, by defining, teaching and assessing it, 鈥渋t wasn鈥檛 that way,鈥 Richard Cruess says. 鈥淚 think we always kind of felt that we might go fishing next year, but what we were doing logically always led to the next step, including identity formation.鈥

The Cruesses, who have upcoming presentations in the U.S. and Ireland, are incredibly generous with their time, says Boudreau. The notion of altruism, of the doctor being primarily of service to the patient, 鈥渨ell, they live it in their day-to-day corridor conversations. They never say no.鈥

More work lies ahead with a few research papers in the pipeline.

Do they still love it?

Their answer, immediately and in unison, 鈥淥h, yeah.鈥

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