Tuesday, December 13, 2011

My BHAG for Family Medicine

I have a BHAG (Big Hairy Audacious Goal).

I want people to hear "Family Medicine" and know that it refers to a medical specialty dedicated to providing relationship-based, patient-centered health care.

I want people to know that family docs take care of a lot of complicated, challenging diseases - and not usually in isolation.  Our patients have high blood pressure, complications from type 2 diabetes, congestive heart failure, depression, chronic kidney disease, emphysema, anxiety, asthma, and coronary artery disease, to name a few; treating each of those conditions individually is nothing like treating them in relation to each other.

I want people to know that I trained for three years to become an expert in my specialty.  During my Family Medicine residency, I learned about providing preventive care.  I learned how to treat a multitude of acute problems - colds, fractures, lacerations, rashes, etc.  I learned how to deliver babies, resuscitate victims of cardiac arrest, and drop a central line into a coding patient.  I can take off your moles, skin tags, and warts.  I can remove your ingrown toenail and treat your acne.  I can obtain your pap smear, discuss your birth control options, and treat your STDs.

I want people to know that I can care for your kid and your grandparent.  I routinely counsel teens about sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll.  I am comfortable in offices, hospitals, maternity wards, newborn nurseries, intensive care units, nursing homes, and even patients' homes.

I want people to know that Family Medicine residents learn about using the best medical evidence and the latest medical technology to guide decision-making conversations with patients. They can intelligently sift through the tremendous reams of medical studies that are published daily to pull out the information most relevant to their patients.

I want people to know that those residents learn how to work within a healthcare team.  Nurses, medical assistants, pharmacists, care managers, social workers, administrative staff - it takes all of us to provide outstanding care.  These incredibly important people are my hands, eyes, and ears into the thousands of little tasks that must get done every day in the office and at the hospital.

I want people to know that no medical specialty is as devoted to medical education as Family Medicine.  The Society of Teachers of Family Medicine holds an annual meeting devoted solely to medical student education.  We are one of only a handful of medical specialties with an entire fellowship (post-residency training) devoted to faculty development - training the next generation of academic Family Medicine teachers, researchers, and leaders.

Lastly, I want people to know that family docs do everything that they do in the context of our patients' belief systems, families, and communities.  Our specialty is the only one that mandates dozens of hours of educational time during residency about the doctor-patient relationship.  How to help folks quit smoking/over-eating/whatever, how to tell someone that the biopsy did show cancer, how to mediate family disagreements about end-of-life wishes - this behavioral instruction is just as important to a Family Medicine resident as the pathophysiology, treatment, and prevention of disease.*

If you're not a family doc, I bet you didn't know all of those things.  And the blame for that truth lies squarely with us as family docs.  Frankly, other specialties have been better than us at promoting themselves.  You all likely know what a dermatologist or a cardiologist is, even if you're not working in the medical field. Family docs can learn a lot from how other specialties have advanced the interests of their patients by advancing their specialty's cause; it's something we have failed to recognize the importance of until now.

Because of that failure, Family Medicine is not understood - and thus not valued - by the public, by politicians, by health plan administrators, and by too many of the other people who make decisions about health care in this country.

We need to show them what Family Medicine is all about.

My BHAG is to share Family Medicine with the people who don't know about us yet. I hope that this blog does that in some small way; certainly, many of the Family Medicine bloggers and tweeters out there are doing it in a bigger way.

But, I don't think that's enough.  We need more.  We need an #FMRevolution.  I have to believe that there's something even bigger, hairier, and more audacious that we could do.  I wish that I knew just what that that big, hairy, audacious thing was. Fortunately, though, I am but one of many.

It will take all of us to get the chorus of Family Medicine to echo across our nation.

* Am I saying that other specialties don't care about relationships with patients, or patient-centered care, or evidence-based medicine?  Absolutely not.  But the statements above are true: other specialties do not systematically devote protected time in residency training about these issues the way Family Med residencies do.  You could argue that other specialties don't need this training as much as family docs, do, I suppose.  But that's for a future post...this post is about trying to boldly define our identity as a specialty.  Lambasting other specialties is not on my agenda.  Advancing the cause of Family Medicine is.

6 comments:

  1. Well done, Dr. Middleton. Primary Care (General Internal Medicine and Family Medicine) is also known as "Big Medicine" and it is time it became the most respected and sought after specialty.

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  2. Dr. Brayer, thank you so much for reading and for posting your kind words. GIM & FM definitely have a lot of common goals, and spreading the gospel of Primary Care is one!

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  3. Woohoo. Definitely good for likes, RT, and shares

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  4. Love it! This so beautifully reflects the mix of patients I saw just this morning.

    And please don't forget your partners in medicine - physician assistants who are dedicated to family medicine. 3 PAs and I work in our practice for 3 awesome, well trained, kind, competent physicians. Such satisfying work.

    Amy Barraclough PA-C
    @silverwoodkids

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  5. This is great!

    And it's a much better argument for family medicine than the misbegotten PCMH, where most of the health care is delivered by the "team" and a wall of administrative busy work is placed between the patient and the physician.

    I hope you send this to the AAFP.

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  6. Appreciate comments about PAs & PCMH. I've not had the privilege to work with a PA in a few years now, but Amy B. is absolutely right - it takes a team!

    southern pcp, I share your misgivings about the PCMH. It's not an inherently bad idea, but we seem to be losing the message of Family Medicine in its bureaucratic lists and sections.

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