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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Perspective: is it time for advocacy training in medical education?

TLDR
The authors argue that advocacy can help physicians fulfill their social contract and understand the challenges of the health care system and how to change it for the better so that physicians can experience increased professional satisfaction and effectiveness.
Abstract
As the modern medical system becomes increasingly complex, a debate has arisen over the place of advocacy efforts within the medical profession. The authors argue that advocacy can help physicians fulfill their social contract. For physicians to become competent in patient-centered, clinical, administrative, or legislative advocacy, they require professional training. Many professional organizations have called for curricular reform to meet society's health needs during the past 30 years, and the inclusion of advocacy training in undergraduate, graduate, and continuing medical education is supported on both pragmatic and ethical grounds. Undergraduate medical education, especially, is an ideal time for this training because a standard competency can be instilled across all specialties. Although the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education includes advocacy training in curricula for residency programs, few medical schools or residency programs have advocacy electives. By understanding the challenges of the health care system and how to change it for the better, physicians can experience increased professional satisfaction and effectiveness in improving patient care, systems-based practice, and public health.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Building a Generation of Physician Advocates: The Case for Including Mandatory Training in Advocacy in Canadian Medical School Curricula.

TL;DR: A case for making an advocacy curriculum mandatory for every Canadian medical trainee is presented, and it is argued that teaching trainees how to fulfill their professional responsibility to advocate may also help them meet the social accountability mandate of medical school education.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Systematic Review of Advocacy Curricula in Graduate Medical Education.

TL;DR: These curricula provide templates for integrating advocacy education into GME-level training programs across specialties, but more work needs to be done to define standards and expectations around GME training for this professional activity.
Journal Article

Teaching in the community.

Robinson
- 01 Jan 1990 - 

STUDENT LEADERSHIP Preparation of Faculty Members and Students to Be Citizen Leaders and Pharmacy Advocates

TL;DR: A national task force on leadership development in pharmacy invited colleges and schools to complete a phone survey to characterize the courses, processes, and noteworthy practices for leadership and advocacy development at their institution, and recommendations were derived from the survey results and literature review.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Is the professional satisfaction of general internists associated with patient satisfaction

TL;DR: The patients of physicians who have higher professional satisfaction may themselves be more satisfied with their care, according to a cross-sectional survey of patients and physicians in the greater-Boston area.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a normative definition of medical professionalism.

TL;DR: The author identifies nine behaviors that constitute medical professionalism and that physicians must exhibit if they are to meet their obligations to their patients, their communities, and their profession.
Journal ArticleDOI

Medical professionalism in the new millennium: a physicians' charter.

Medical Professionalism
- 09 Feb 2002 - 
TL;DR: The Charter on Medical Professionalism as mentioned in this paper is intended to encourage such dedication and to promote an action agenda for the profession of medicine that is universal in scope and purpose, which entails not only their personal commitment to the welfare of their patients but also collective efforts to improve the healthcare system for the welfare in society.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dissatisfaction with Medical Practice

TL;DR: The subjective and objective indicators of dissatisfaction with medical practice seem to have increased substantially during the past two decades, after a period of unprecedented satisfaction within the medical profession.
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