Thursday, May 6, 2021

Practical Wisdom in Medical Education: A Student Perspective

 From the 4/23/2021 newsletter


Perspective/Opinion

 

Practical Wisdom in Medical Education: A Student Perspective

 

Clara Bosco – MCW-Milwaukee Class of 2022

 

Ms. Bosco explains how reframing the role of the medical student from “observer” to “an apprentice acquiring practical wisdom” can shift the relationships between faculty and learners in a meaningful, growth-centered way …

 


In the case of the virtues…we acquire them as a result of prior activities; and this is like the case of the arts, for that which we are to perform by art after learning, we first learn by performing, e.g., we become builders by building and lyre-players by playing the lyre. Similarly, we become just by doing what is just, temperate by doing what is temperate, and brave by doing brave deeds. (Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, 1103a 31-1103b 25).

 

 

 “You really should be coming into every room,” scolded my attending. Ugh, day one on internal medicine service and I’m already in trouble. “...all I mean is that there are important, sometimes difficult, conversations you should witness, even if they’re not technically your patient,” she concluded. I didn’t realize the importance of this aspect of clinical training until experiencing a later conversation, my very first family meeting at the VA.

This Monday morning meeting included our primary team, palliative care, social work, and the wife and daughters of our patient. The meeting was intended to convince the family of the gravity of the patient’s condition, a medical reality they had been resistant to thus far. The palliative care physician, due to her expertise in goals of care conversations, led the call with such decorum and grace. I was struck by her collected interaction with the distraught family, who parroted cosigned phrases like, “but he’s not like everyone else,” and “he’s a fighter” in response to the news that their loved one had only around six months to live. To these retorts, the palliative care physician recited a phrase I will never forget: “We have patients who surprise us on both ends of the spectrum, some living shorter or a lot longer.” Oddly enough, this admittance of uncertainty consoled the family, who now felt comfortable with our team’s recommendation for hospice care. The family agreed, the call ended, and arrangements were made; the patient was discharged on Wednesday and died on Sunday morning.

In light of the above anecdote, what is the significance of bearing witness as an apprentice? As a medical student, oftentimes, it entails feelings of floundering, imposing, and space-wasting, as we unreflectively trail in and out of patient rooms on the heels of actually useful attendings and residents. But, for Aristotle, apprenticeship is a cardinal experience since it is the vehicle to become practically wise in a field like medicine where “practical wisdom” is defined as “the art of deliberating well, to make the appropriate choice and to establish the right means through a specific action in order to achieve a particular moral end.” It is through witness of expert physicians interacting with patients that we, as trainees, can move beyond our pre-clinical, theoretical understanding of the human body to a patient-centric, bio-pyscho-socially driven medical practice.

To further elucidate the role of practical wisdom in clinical medicine, consider how an oncologist might deliberate whether to pursue chemotherapy vs. surgery to treat a patient’s cancer. Theoretical wisdom, i.e., knowledge of cellular mechanisms, surgical technique, etc., is certainly necessary to best treat a disease. However, theoretical considerations alone may not be sufficient to best treat a particular patient’s illness. For example, does the patient have certain comorbidities that exclude them from surgery? Do they have health insurance? Do they have reliable means of transport for serial chemotherapy sessions? Are they able to take off work for surgery and do they have some to care for them? These considerations illuminate the numerous extra-scientific dimensions that must be weighed, via practical wisdom, to achieve the best treatment plan for a particular patient.

From an educational standpoint, integrating foundational concepts like practical wisdom into medical school could prove to be useful for both trainers, and, especially, trainees. For educators, practical wisdom could provide the foundation for effective role-modeling and mentorship. For students, introducing practical wisdom early and often in medical school could provide a much-needed conceptual framework for students to better understand their role as an apprentice. The long hours at the hospital, the feelings of “shadowing,” and uselessness to the team are stressful realities of medical students that certainly contribute to burnout. However, if these challenging experiences were reframed as formative to developing one’s own practical wisdom surrounding clinical reasoning and patient care, a new sense of purpose and ownership of the apprentice role may be encouraged among medical students.

 

 

Clara Bosco is a third-year medical student at MCW-Milwaukee. She is interested in the philosophy of medicine, bioethics, and artificial intelligence and works with Fabrice Jotterand, Ph.D. Director of the Philosophies of Medical Education Transformation Laboratory (P-METaL) in the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Institute for the Transformation of Medical Education.


Tuesday, May 4, 2021

Three Questions for Jose Franco, MD: Perspectives on the Transformation of Medical Education

From the 4/30/2021 newsletter


Three Questions for Jose Franco, MD



Perspectives on the Transformation of Medical Education


The Kern Institute celebrates the appointment of our colleague, Jose Franco, MD to his new role as MCW’s Interim Senior Associate Dean for Academic Affairs. Dr. Franco has been part of the Kern Institute since its inception and has held major leadership roles. As he assumes his new position, he is stepping away from his Kern responsibilities. In this interview, he describes his journey with Kern and his hopes as MCW enters a time of curriculum redesign … 




Transformational Times: Tell us about your journey with the Kern Institute. 

Dr. Franco: Dr. Cheryl Maurana, the institute’s inaugural director, asked me to be the associate director of the Kern Institute at its inception after MCW received the Kern Foundation grant in 2017. During the first year, we were busy with planning and defining the role of the institute. When the four “pillars” were created (students, faculty, curriculum, culture), we developed the “cross-pillar” team that would focus on areas that were important but which none of the pillars owned; areas like wellness, character, and caring. Under Ryan Spellecy’s leadership, for example, we ran focus groups and developed scholarship around “character” in medical education.

When Dr. Adina Kalet became the institute director in 2019, she saw a need to connect more intentionally within the institution and with our urban community, so the cross-pillar activities evolved into community and institutional engagement roles in ways that focused on education. I took on a more active role with event planning, recruiting speakers and panelists, and hosting Grand Rounds, Kern Connection Cafes, and Journal Clubs. It has all been a virtual-reality challenge over the past year.

While this has been going on, I have retained my clinical identity in hepatology and continued to engage with students at all levels. I still look forward to my days in clinic working with our entire group of physicians, students, trainees, PAs, and NPs. They are a great team! I enjoy teaching M1 gastrointestinal physiology, hepatology in the M2 GI nutrition unit and clinical hepatology to the M3 students rotating on internal medicine. I often work with M4 students on electives. I spend time on the wards and in clinic with internal medicine and general surgery residents and fellows. I am fortunate to work with medical students and trainees along every point of the training spectrum. I enjoy that.


Transformational Times: What do you see as your most urgent tasks as you move into your new role as Senior Associate Dean?


Dr. Franco: First of all, we have to define who constitutes our customers in Academic Affairs. Our customers are the students and the faculty. 


For students:

Academic Affairs focuses on curriculum. We must ask ourselves: Is our curriculum really preparing the students for the next phase of their careers? We do a great job covering the basic and clinical sciences but could do a better job with the social sciences. For example, students must leave MCW with a robust understanding and engagement with issues surrounding social determinants of health, and the wellbeing of marginalized populations. Those educational and experiential areas need attention. 

As an educational institution, we must do a better job fostering an inclusive, diverse environment. We are fortunate to have students who identify as being from underrepresented in medicine groups. We must ensure that they feel welcome, included, and empowered. There are, of course, great people at MCW doing this already and I hope Academic Affairs will enhance these efforts. Diversity makes us all better. 

Focusing our efforts on student wellness and wellbeing will be critical. The gaps here constitute a national crisis. When students and young physicians are in crisis, they will “fall out of love” with medicine. Too often, physicians end up seeing medicine as a “job” and not a “calling.” We must explore how we can prepare students and residents to be fully engaged and resilient for their entire careers. I would love to play a part helping students optimize their physical, mental, and spiritual health as human beings. 


For faculty:

I sense that faculty often see the Office of Academic Affairs as a “black hole.” I believe that the Kern Institute has worked to inform the faculty what it does through regular engagement and communication. In much the same way, Academic Affairs needs to let the faculty know what it does. 

The office has many resources that can help the faculty perform their roles as teachers and mentors. We have expertise in instructional design and educational technology, for example. We need to let the faculty know what is available, who to talk to, and how they can be the best educators possible. 


Transformational Times: How do you see the current status of the curriculum redesign?

Dr. Franco: The answer to that changes from week-to-week. MCW’s faculty are well aware that there is no perfect curriculum and that there is always room to make improvements. That said, we have been through change before and, even though we know there is a need to make adjustments, these processes always cause anxiety. The process will always feel like a curveball.

First of all, I am certain that we will be given the resources to do the curriculum redesign correctly. Senior leadership is onboard, responsive, and wants this to succeed.

What is our goal? Let’s start by saying that our goal is to work together to deliver a quality product. We could, of course, put out something tomorrow, but would it be quality? 

I sense that there are two major faculty concerns as the process moves forward:


The first major area of concern revolves around faculty development and preparation for the redesign. 

MCW’s preclinical curriculum has often relied heavily on the traditional fifty-minute lecture format with few interactive opportunities. If we plan to institute a flipped-classroom, case-based teaching approach, we must have a fully engaged and prepared faculty. We must better understand how long it will take to bring everyone up to speed. 

We need to engage the clinicians who will be expected to take on new teaching responsibilities. Clinicians will be increasingly integrated into the process and the proposals will require different approaches that will expand their teaching approaches and challenge their skill sets. 


The second major area of concern is the timeline. 

Is the timeline for deploying the newly redesigned curriculum in August 2022 realistic and optimal? Although it is over a year away, we have a much shorter time to make a decision, since we will begin interviewing the entering class of students late this summer. They are the “customers,” as it were, of the new curriculum. They are the ones who will have to decide if they want to come and experience what we will be offering. We need to be clear with them as to what the curriculum will look like. 

I know that many of the faculty have expressed strong opinions. We must work together and make certain we are all ready and onboard. 

The curriculum belongs to the faculty and the Curriculum and Evaluation Committee (CEC) has the critical role here. I had the good fortune to be chair of the CEC when the pilot integrated curriculum was approved. A few years later, I brought proposals for curricular change to the CEC. I have been on both sides of the table. As a result, I hope I will be in a good position to listen to peoples’ concerns. What excites them? What worries them?


I am excited to take on this role at this important time for our students and our faculty. 



Jose Franco, MD is the Interim Senior Associate Dean for Academic Affairs. He is a Professor in the Department of Medicine (Gastroenterology and Hepatology) at MCW. He previously held leadership roles in the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Institute for the Transformation of Medical Education. 

Friday, April 30, 2021

The Kern Institute Hosts a Conference - A Year Late but a Lot More Wise

 From the 4/30/2021 newsletter


Director’s Corner

 

The Kern Institute Hosts a Conference - A Year Late but a Lot More Wise

 

Adina Kalet, MD MPH

 

Today, the Kern Institute hosts the “Understanding Medical Professional Identity and Character Formation,” a conference originally scheduled for April 16, 2020 but postponed by the pandemic. Dr. Kalet reflects on how the havoc wreaked by COVID-19 has sharpened our focus on what matters and provides both challenges and opportunities for the work at hand …

 

 


In the run-up to April 2020, attendees and speakers were readying to fly into Milwaukee from across the country and around the world for a two-day conference on medical professional identity and character formation. The plenary was to be given by Dr. Muriel Bebeau, a moral psychologist and a scholar of professional identity formation. Workshops and poster presentations were firming up. Hotel rooms were booked. Conference rooms were reserved, food had been ordered, and Institute staff were finalizing details like an army prepares for tactical maneuvers. We planned an evening symposium where, over a fine dinner in the Alumni Center, attendees would discuss what they had learned and ponder how this field of study and practice could transform medical education. I was stoked. This was going to be fabulous! 

Planning such an event has much in common with preparing for a wedding or bar mitzvah - both of which I have some experience with and for which I claim no special skills - but without the music and ceremonial component. Working to remain calm, I attended to many details. This would be the Institute’s first large conference and the first of many to come.

 

That was, as we say now, in the “before times.”

 

Then COVID-19 started spreading. Asian and European attendees cancelled their trips as borders closed. Not wanting Dr. Bebeau to fly (after all, she is a “senior” statewoman), colleagues planned to drive her from Minneapolis to Milwaukee.

As the full force of COVID-19 bore down, our excitement turned to dread and then to resignation. After resisting as long as we could, we canceled. Soon, the nation hunkered down, and we learned what it meant to “stay at home.” When it appeared that interstate travel would soon be banned, and with all of the Kern Institute staff working virtually, I boarded a sparsely occupied early morning flight from Mitchell to LaGuardia to shelter at home with my family.

A year later, our conference will finally happen in a virtual space. Since Dr. Bebeau prefers not to talk to her computer screen (how can we blame her?), I will deliver the plenary talk in honor of her contributions to the field.

 

So much has changed

The topic for today’s conference has become much more poignant and important and less simply “academic” as a consequence of the pandemic. The understanding of character and professional development of health professionals has evolved while the public watched physicians and all healthcare workers rush to the front lines. Although data on the public’s level of trust in our profession had been declining up until last year, they have soared as it became clear that we perform our duty, show up, and care in the face of unknowable risks. Health professionals are seen as people who possess talent, energy, resolve, and character. As medical educators, our work is to help students be, not only exquisitely competent, but also brimming with extraordinary sensitivity and humanity.

Many of our exhausted students, residents, and frontline faculty have been through rapid-fire, anguishing, morally ambiguous experiences over the past several months. They have put their own lives - and their families’ lives - at risk. They have witnessed people dying separated from their loved ones. They have seen how social determinants of health impact real people with real names. They have dealt with their own crazy uncles and social media acquaintances who doubt the data. And the pandemic is far from over.

 

The pandemic has changed how we view identity and character formation

Later today, I will speak about how we might ensure that our trainees and faculty possess mature, internalized professional identities, because solidity of identity prepares each of us to hone the character, conscientiousness, courage, and wisdom needed to act in accordance with our principles under highly complex circumstances. While nothing can replace the experiential learning at the bedside and in the clinic, most of the preparation for character development must happen in the classroom. Interactive discussions, reflection, theoretical analyses, and rehearsals best prepare us and our students for unpredictable future events.

This is work we must do, because the alternative is to allow everyone to learn only through experience which means many will simply “react” to situations, without exercising the habits required to make principled decisions under stress. Expecting our trainees to make good choices without helping them develop the tools to act with moral agency is unacceptable. We must try to educate and measure professional identity and character.

 

Hopefully, there will be many chances to talk with the over 120 conference attendees about how to best support the development of practical wisdom in physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, and others when, for instance, they are deciding how long to stay at the bedside with a terrified spouse or convincing someone they need a vaccine even though they have every reason not to trust the medical establishment.

I am hoping to talk about how we - teachers and students together - determine when a trainee can be “entrusted” to care for patients with less and less supervision. You see, we can measure a student’s competence to do the basic skills of doctoring, but we can’t be absolutely certain that an individual student - when faced with a real-life circumstance - will actually perform competently. As we try to determine whether our students have what it takes to do the right thing every time and when it matters, we make educated guesses buoyed by our experience but, too often, we depend simply on our subjective judgement of their character. I hope to provide a framework for thinking about these “trust judgments” as a matter of both character and competence of both the learner and the teacher.

It is interesting - and worrisome - that our “educated guesses” are very idiosyncratic; we rarely agree on what it means to be a competent physician. Yet, with experience and benchmarked performance metrics in the context of good relationships with our learners, we can make accurate judgments about who will be a trustworthy physician. Identifying trustworthiness and good judgement in a student is a harbinger of their future character, courage, and caring.

 

Challenges and opportunities

While far from over in the US, the pandemic is currently having a devastating impact in India and parts of Africa. Our sister and brother health care professionals in those countries are struggling to do the work they were trained to do under very difficult circumstances. In addition to concrete support, we send them our respect for their courage and professionalism.

I am grateful for the opportunity to host this conference at this inflection point in our understanding of character development and professional identity formation. The pandemic has given us both challenges and opportunities. Winston Churchill once said, “Never let a good crisis go to waste.” I hope that his sentiment will guide our work.

 


 

Adina Kalet, MD MPH is the Director of the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Institute for the Transformation of Medical Education and holder of the Stephen and Shelagh Roell Endowed Chair at the Medical College of Wisconsin.

Thursday, April 22, 2021

Remembering H. Jack Geiger, a Role Model and Troublemaker I wish I Had Known


From the 4/23/2021 newsletter


Director’s Corner


Remembering H. Jack Geiger, a Role Model and Troublemaker I wish I Had Known  


This week, Dr. Kalet struggles with her regret at not humanizing her “heroes” when she had the chance ... 




It was with deep regret that I read his obituary because I never had the courage to get to know H. Jack Geiger as a person. Despite having him as a role model for decades, I missed the opportunity to have him as a mentor or friend, and I am poorer for it.  

Geiger, a graduate of UW-Madison, Case Western Reserve, and Harvard, was a physician, civil rights and antiwar activist, journalist, founder of social medicine in the US. He made lots of “good trouble” in his life. He believed that physicians must use their full capacities, their knowledge and skills, and the moral authority that comes with the profession, to improve the social and geopolitical conditions that threatened health. 

Dr. Geiger died this past December, after living for almost a century. While I knew some of his story, the obituaries - and there were many including a beautiful one in the New England Journal of Medicine - pointed out that he excelled at being an iconoclastic rabble rouser. They describe how he was, more than once, sanctioned by his medical institutions for speaking out to “raise the bar” for our profession, but he persistent none-the-less. 


He was not like most of us.  A preternaturally brilliant, child of immigrant German Jewish parents, who were a physician (dad), and a scientist (mom), he finished high school at fourteen and ran away from home (with his parents’ permission!), to live in Harlem among actors, musicians, and the celebrated authors of the time. He entered the University of Wisconsin as undergraduate and wrote for the Capital Times in Madison before he was eighteen years old. He never took any straight paths, following his instincts and his strong moral compass. 

Both Dr. Geiger and I began at the Sophie Davis School for Biomedical Education (now the City University of New York Medical School) in 1978. I was a college freshman, and he a remarkably accomplished physician, social activist and newly minted Arthur C. Logan Professor of Community Medicine. I wish I had invited him for a cup of coffee or a beer. I never considered it; it was too intimidating I was convinced he would be “too busy”. Later, I wish I had visited him at his home in Brooklyn during his last decades when he stopped traveling, became frail, and had failing vison. I certainly could have. I am now certain that he would have made time to talk with me. He might have even enjoyed meeting a former student. But I never called.  Instead, I took the easier route and had conversations and debates with him in my head. It is hard to learn anything that way!

The problem of being afraid of our role models is this: they remain on pedestals and exist mostly in our imaginations. We try to understand them and learn from their examples. We watch them and read about them, but we never know them in their full humanity, warts and all.  

Of course, this “hero at a distance” is often all that is available to us. Our role models may not be proximate. They may be long gone, or they may be entirely fictional. But I now believe that if opportunities arise to transform role models into mentors, one should take full advantage, even though there might be risks. To truly know a remarkable person is invaluable, and the privilege to be known by someone who has done heroic things is rare. 

When I was in college, we knew only vaguely of his many accomplishments to that point, (he had yet to win his two Nobel Prizes) and we were way too self-absorbed and naïve to truly appreciate how unusual a physician he was. Although we heard him lecture occasionally, we were largely unaware of what a character, in all the senses of that word, he was. Boy, did we miss out! 

In fact, he was redefining what it meant to be a physician just as we were working very hard to become one. His example was destabilizing to our nascent professional identity formation. The lessons he represented, the moral exemplar he was, were lost on most of us.  Admittedly, it might have been difficult for us to truly appreciate what he had to teach us early in our careers, but we should have tried. Missing that opportunity was a great loss. Had we taken the risk and made the effort, we would have been the richer for it. 


How might my medical school have taken better advantage of this giant walking amongst us? I think there are “curriculum” lessons in this. In addition to the occasional lectures from him and about his work, the book chapters and New York Times editorials he wrote (but which we weren’t obligated to read), there should have been a way to understand him beyond the “hero” stories. Had we found ways to engage with him meaningfully as a person, it would have humanized this intimidating, moral exemplar and, perhaps, provided us each with more detailed career maps. What a remarkable “leadership training” program it might have been to talk with him informally, to hear his personal stories, his journey, and his views on his own coming of age! Besides reading about his work and hearing him speak, we would have been able to bring our questions, comments, and fears to him. 

It is also possible we might have been disappointed. That’s okay. After all, no role model is perfect. Many are not even particularly gifted in interpersonal skills. There might have been confrontations and rebukes. He might have initiated intellectual debates that rose well over our college-educated heads. This was a man who talked with Langston Hughes as a 14-year-old! But, had we the courage to engage, we might have learned more of what he had to offer in ways that would have challenged us and given our own embryonic careers direction. 

It is also true that he might have been too overwhelmingly engaged in other activities to be part of such a curriculum. Although he was only in his mid 50s when he came to the Sophie Davis School, he had already traveled to South Africa where he had studied their community health centers. He then brought this approach to the Mississippi Delta, sparking a movement that is credited with bringing basic health care access to tens of millions of Americans. At the same time, he was co-founding two Nobel Prize winning organizations, Physicians for Human Rights and Physicians for Social Responsibility. Sometimes, role models must be just that and nothing more; they have work to do and we should watch from the sidelines and take notes.  


The “writing prescriptions for food” lecture 

Every year, we gathered for the same “Geiger Lecture,” where he told the story of his work in rural Mississippi. The most memorable section was when he described the political battle into which he was drawn when funders realized that the program was writing, and then the federally subsidized community health center pharmacy was filling, prescriptions for food.  Every year he delivered the same punch line, describing how he won the battle. “I told them,” he said, “the last time I checked my textbooks, the specific therapy for malnutrition was, in fact, food.” 

I am ashamed to say that my classmates and I rolled our eyes at this story, much like children sigh at the Thanksgiving table when Grandpa tells the same stories every year. But these stories are our legacy and, at the risk of boring the children, it is through the frequent retelling of these “hero stories” that communal values are transmitted. Of course, now I want to know more. Was he scared or anxious when he need to confront those with the authority to stop his important work? How had he prepared? What would he have done if they had pulled the funding? I would have wanted to hear about his failures and how he delt with those. But now I cannot. 

When my son was little, he was absolutely enthralled with superheroes (still is, I think). Batman and Superman costumes were festooned throughout our home, red capes and black masks everywhere. Through our many conversations about the thoughts and feelings of his role models, we landed on the conclusion that it was easier to know what the right thing to do was than to actually do it.  Our maxim became, “courage means being scared but doing the right thing anyway.”  It would have taken courage to reach out and insisted that H. Jack Geiger talk with me, but the privilege to have known him better would likely have been worth the effort.  

I will be reaching out more and connecting with my heroes. And the Kern Institute will do what it can to create proximity with the “s/heros” of our times, to the benefit of our students, our trainees, and ourselves.  



Adina Kalet, MD MPH is the Director of the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Institute for the Transformation of Medical Education and holder of the Stephen and Shelagh Roell Endowed Chair at the Medical College of Wisconsin.