Embracing the collective through medical education

The journal Advances in Health Sciences Education: Theory and Practice has, under Geoff Norman’s leadership, promoted a collaborative approach to investigating educationally-savvy and innovative health care practices, where academic medical educators can work closely with healthcare practitioners to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advances in health sciences education : theory and practice 2020-12, Vol.25 (5), p.1177-1189
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container_title Advances in health sciences education : theory and practice
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description The journal Advances in Health Sciences Education: Theory and Practice has, under Geoff Norman’s leadership, promoted a collaborative approach to investigating educationally-savvy and innovative health care practices, where academic medical educators can work closely with healthcare practitioners to improve patient care and safety. But in medical practice in particular this networked approach is often compromised by a lingering, historically conditioned pattern of heroic individualism (under the banner ‘self help’). In an era promising patient-centredness and inter-professional practices, we must ask: ‘when will medicine, and its informing agent medical education, embrace democratic habits and collectivism?’ The symptom of lingering heroic individualism is particularly prominent in North American medical education. This is echoed in widespread resistance to a government-controlled public health, where the USA remains the only advanced economy that fails to provide universal health care. I track a resistance to collectivist medical-educational reform historically from a mid-nineteenth century nexus of influential thinkers who came, some unwittingly, to shape North American medical education within a Protestant-Capitalist individualist tradition. This tradition still lingers, where some doctors recall a fictional ‘golden age’ of medical practice and education, actually long since eclipsed by fluid inter-professional health care team practices. I cast this tension between conservative traditions of individualism and progressive collectivism as a political issue.
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subjects Collectivism
Cooperative Behavior
Cultural Characteristics
Delivery of Health Care - organization & administration
Democracy
Education
Education, Medical - organization & administration
Educational Change
Educational History
Humans
Ideology
Individualism
Medical Education
Medical practices
North America
Patient-Centered Care - organization & administration
Political Issues
Politics of Education
Resistance to Change
Self Help Programs
Social Systems
title Embracing the collective through medical education
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