Monday, January 23, 2023

There is No Success Alone

From the 1/20/2023 issue of the Transformational Times


There is No Success Alone 



By Cassie Ferguson, MD – Associate Director of the Kern Institute 


 

 

"Talent wins games, but teamwork and intelligence win championships." 

-Michael Jordan 


The depth and breadth of our collective success in the Section of Pediatric Emergency Medicine is staggering. And the pride and reverence with which each of us holds these successes, regardless of the role we played in them, is a testament to the love we have for our patients and for one another.  

It also is a testament to our leader, Dr. David Brousseau.  

Our section begins 2023 with a goodbye to our chief of eleven years, whom we affectionately call D-bro. Dr. Brousseau is leaving for Delaware after 23 years of service to MCW, and I couldn't let him leave without trying my best to explain how much he has meant to me and to all of us – to our team. 

The Section of Pediatric Emergency Medicine is working to address food insecurity among our patient's families, improve patient health literacy and numeracy, strengthen the coordination between the Emergency Department (ED) and our EMS colleagues, decrease sexually transmitted infections in our adolescent patients, share our experience in pediatric sedation medicine with colleagues in under-resourced countries, sharpen our section’s bedside ultrasound skills, ensure all patients have access to life-saving flu vaccines, and give kids who have been victims of interpersonal violence a chance to go to summer camp. Among other things. 

Our team is committed to this challenging work. We also like to win. We are especially proud of wins that showcase our team’s ability to work together creativity – even when it has nothing to do with emergency medicine, and everything to do with teamwork. Even if it’s just for fun. 

For six of the seven years that the Children’s Specialty Group has held a Halloween costume contest at Children’s Wisconsin, the Section of Pediatric Emergency Medicine has either won first place or been in the top three (we don't count the year we were allegedly disqualified). This success is not by accident. Every year, months in advance, we vote on a theme and then each of us—faculty and staff—works on putting together our individual costume such that it fits into the theme. As an often overlooked and perhaps maligned department of the hospital (hey— we don’t like to call you to consult at 0300 either), winning this contest has become a source of pride, primarily because we do it together.  

All hail the Section of Pediatric Emergency Medicine’s Halloween Costume Dynasty. 


“How lucky I am to have something that makes saying goodbye so hard.” 

-A.A. Milne 


I admit this Associate Director's Corner is less an article than a love letter to my pediatric emergency medicine colleagues and to Dr. Brousseau. 

Twelve years ago, I was a new attending physician and had just moved back to Milwaukee with my husband, our three-year old son, and a newborn. I felt so lost. I remember wanting desperately to contribute and to feel useful, yet not knowing how. Within three years, I was co-directing the Quality Improvement and Patient Safety Scholarly Pathway for the medical school, was selected to participate in MCW’s Docere II teaching course and had begun an advanced improvement methods course at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital.  

I acknowledge this required a certain amount of work on my part, but I also know that none of it would have happened without Dr. Brousseau and those foundational opportunities that were key to me building what has become an incredibly fulfilling career. 

Even more meaningfully, for the past 12 years Dr. Brousseau has consistently reminded me what I am capable of and what I contribute, empowering me to take risks and to step into roles I thought were too big for me. 

As I look around at my section colleagues, and at what they have achieved, Dr. Brousseau’s legacy becomes very clear: His leadership has enabled us all to thrive. We are purpose-driven and optimistic; we are continuously learning and pushing for change; we know how we can contribute to the greater good of the section and our community at large and we are given the space to do so. Even in our section's darkest hours, instead of fear and uncertainty and anger tearing us apart, we rose together, becoming closer and more determined to navigate the darkness together. 


"The good leader is he who the people revere. The great leader is he who the people say, we did it ourselves."

-Lao Tzu 


In this country, we like to think of good leadership as big, bold and brash. Crashing through obstacles, pushing past limits. Loudly declaring itself. All-knowing. Strength of conviction is often more apparent than strength of character in the leaders we choose and in those chosen for us. 

Dr. Brousseau, however, has shown me leadership that enables thriving is quiet. It takes mindful, careful steps as if feeling the earth beneath its feet as it walks. This kind of leadership is inclusive. It widens our field of attention and helps us be aware of when we are being called to be more loving, more compassionate, more open hearted. It engenders trust -- not through convincing, but through presence. And it doesn’t get frustrated when it must explain how to calculate positive predictive value for the 1000th time during journal club. 


“Goodbye always makes my throat hurt.” 

-Charlie Brown 


Whenever I sat down with Dr. Brousseau in his office for my annual faculty review, he always began our conversation by asking, "What is your favorite part of your job?"  

If I had that question to answer one more time, knowing that it would be our final faculty review and the last time I would have the chance to share my answer with him, I would say this: 

There are too many favorite parts to name them all. I love showing up to the ED and getting a hug from the person I’m getting sign-out from. I love that when I want to switch a shift so that I can see my kid’s baseball game, someone will instantly volunteer to help. I love that our section meetings never end on time because we are all so excited to see and talk to each other.

Perhaps most of all, I love that I have the freedom to do what I love to do with people I love, and the support and encouragement to keep doing it better.  

Thank you, Dr. Brousseau, for pushing us, for fighting for us, for holding us all together. For helping us to thrive.  


Cassie Ferguson is an Associate Professor in the Department of Pediatrics, Section of Emergency Medicine at MCW. She is the Associate Director of the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Institute for the Transformation of Medical Education.  

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