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Journal ArticleDOI

Perspective: Physician advocacy: what is it and how do we do it?

TLDR
The authors propose a definition and, using the biographies of actual physician advocates, describe the spectrum of physician advocacy, as first steps toward building a model for competency-based physician advocacy training and delineating physician advocacy in common practice.
Abstract
Many medical authors and organizations have called for physician advocacy as a core component of medical professionalism. Despite widespread acceptance of advocacy as a professional obligation, the concept remains problematic within the profession of medicine because it remains undefined in concept, scope, and practice. If advocacy is to be a professional imperative, then medical schools and graduate education programs must deliberately train physicians as advocates. Accrediting bodies must clearly define advocacy competencies, and all physicians must meet them at some basic level. Sustaining and fostering physician advocacy will require modest changes to both undergraduate and graduate medical education. Developing advocacy training and practice opportunities for practicing physicians will also be necessary. In this article, as first steps toward building a model for competency-based physician advocacy training and delineating physician advocacy in common practice, the authors propose a definition and, using the biographies of actual physician advocates, describe the spectrum of physician advocacy.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Systems-Based Training in Graduate Medical Education for Service Learning in the State Legislature in the United States: Pilot Study.

TL;DR: Promising results were demonstrated for the LEAD approach to incorporate advocacy training into graduate medical education, and positive feedback from legislators and pediatric residency directors was provided.
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Navigating the uncertainty of health advocacy teaching and evaluation from the trainee's perspective

TL;DR: For example, the authors reviewed curricular documents across nine direct-entry specialties at all Ontario medical schools, comparing content for the health advocacy and communicator roles to delineate role-specific challenges.
Journal ArticleDOI

ID/HIV Physician Ambassadors: Advancing Policy to Improve Health.

TL;DR: Key issues include funding for ID/HIV programs; the protection of public health and access to health care; improving research opportunities; and advancing the field of ID-HIV, including supporting the next generation of ID/hIV clinicians.
References
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Medical Professionalism in the New Millennium: A Physician Charter

TL;DR: The Charter on Medical Professionalism Project is the product of several years of work by leaders in the ABIM Foundation, the ACP‐ASIM Foundation, and the European Federation of Internal Medicine and consists of a brief introduction and rationale, three principles, and 10 commitments.
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Medicine. The NIH Roadmap.

TL;DR: The NIH Roadmap identifies the most compelling opportunities in three arenas: new pathways to discovery, research teams of the future, and reengineering the clinical research enterprise.
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The Developing Physician — Becoming a Professional

TL;DR: The problems with and success in trying to teach one of the core values of medicine, professionalism, are described and the authors say it becomes easier to teach.
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Primary Care Physicians' Experience of Financial Incentives in Managed-Care Systems

TL;DR: Incentives that depend on limiting referrals or on greater productivity apply selective pressure to physicians in ways that are believed to compromise care.
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Physician-citizens--public roles and professional obligations.

TL;DR: This work proposes a definition and a conceptual model of public roles that require evidence of disease causation and are guided by the feasibility and efficacy of physician involvement, and frames a public agenda for individual physicians and physician organizations that focuses on advocacy and community participation.
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