Medicine: Preserving the Passion in the 21st CenturySpringer Science & Business Media, 2007 M11 23 - 478 pages Since 1987 this book has helped and inspired physicians at all stages of their careers to get the most out of their professional and personal lives. Phil R. Manning and Lois DeBakey are preeminent medical educators, who seek, in their own work and through this book, to redirect the focus of continuing medical education from the classroom to more creative methods. Their approach is based on the physician's specific clinical practice, thus making continuing medical education more likely to improve patient care. Manning and DeBakey have completely revised and updated this second edition to reflect significant changes in how master physicians use information technology to keep abreast of exploding new medical information. This edition also addresses how professionals are coping with changes in the practice of medicine effected by managed care. All-new Reflections and Personal Essays from some of the most important names in medicine provide perspicacity, wisdom, and above all practical insight into the many facets of medical practice. Through the eyes of these celebrated figures, readers will find ways of making their work both more effective and more enjoyable. This one-of-a-kind book will fascinate physicians, residents, and medical students seeking to preserve and enhance their passion for medicine. |
From inside the book
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Page xiv
... by providing constructive criticism, detecting errors, verifying references, offering suggestions, and keeping calm during the various emendations the authors found it necessary xiv MEDICINE: PRESERVING THE PASSION IN THE 21ST CENTURY.
... by providing constructive criticism, detecting errors, verifying references, offering suggestions, and keeping calm during the various emendations the authors found it necessary xiv MEDICINE: PRESERVING THE PASSION IN THE 21ST CENTURY.
Page xix
... Keeping Current 57 REFLECTIONS: Eugene Braunwald, M.D. 77 REFLECTIONS: Philip A. Tumulty, M.D. 83 REFLECTIONS: Bobby R. Alford, M.D. 89 . . . REFLECTIONS: William W. Parmley, M.D. 99 REFLECTIONS: Norton J. Greenberger, xxi.
... Keeping Current 57 REFLECTIONS: Eugene Braunwald, M.D. 77 REFLECTIONS: Philip A. Tumulty, M.D. 83 REFLECTIONS: Bobby R. Alford, M.D. 89 . . . REFLECTIONS: William W. Parmley, M.D. 99 REFLECTIONS: Norton J. Greenberger, xxi.
Page 7
... keep refurbishing your information. In 1958, when I was a senior medical student at the Massachusetts General Hospital, I went on rounds with the Chief Resident, John Knowles. He seemed to know everything about everything. I asked him ...
... keep refurbishing your information. In 1958, when I was a senior medical student at the Massachusetts General Hospital, I went on rounds with the Chief Resident, John Knowles. He seemed to know everything about everything. I asked him ...
Page 10
... keeping up with medical progress through reading and attending conferences. These are complementary. Masterful physicians emphasize skills in the physician–patient relation and a high standard of ethics, both of which are integral to ...
... keeping up with medical progress through reading and attending conferences. These are complementary. Masterful physicians emphasize skills in the physician–patient relation and a high standard of ethics, both of which are integral to ...
Page 13
... keep a jaded administrator alive and enthusiastically on his toes to see what the next 'routine case' will turn up.” COMPANIONSHIP IN MEDICINE Self-directed learning does not, of course, require isolation. In medicine, the collegial ...
... keep a jaded administrator alive and enthusiastically on his toes to see what the next 'routine case' will turn up.” COMPANIONSHIP IN MEDICINE Self-directed learning does not, of course, require isolation. In medicine, the collegial ...
Contents
Keeping Current | 57 |
Evidencebased Medicine | 123 |
The Medical Library | 191 |
Learning from Formal Consultations | 217 |
Learning by Teaching | 255 |
Social Ethical and Economic | 297 |
Medical Errors and Other Problems | 339 |
Organized Medicine and Lifelong Learning | 371 |
Professionalism | 417 |
Phil R Manning M D and Lois DeBakey Ph D | 437 |
NAME INDEX | 451 |
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Medicine: Preserving the Passion in the 21st Century Phil R. Manning,Lois DeBakey Limited preview - 2007 |
Common terms and phrases
activities allow American answer Association attending become believe better called career cians clinical colleagues College communication conferences consider consultation continuing medical course critical DeBakey developed discuss disease drug effective electronic evidence examination example experience formal healthcare hospital important improve interest internal Internet John journals keep knowledge laboratory learning lifelong major managed material medical education medical school medicine meetings methods never notes offer opportunity organizations participants patient performance physi physicians practice present problems procedures profession professional Professor publications published questions reading received record referring requires residents responsibility scientific served skills societies sources specific staff stimulate teacher teaching tests tion treatment understanding University writing
Popular passages
Page 201 - To hold him who has taught me this art as equal to my parents and to live my life in partnership with him, and if he is in need of money to give him a share of mine, and to regard his offspring as equal to my brothers in male lineage and to teach them this art — if they desire to learn it — without fee and...
Page 124 - Sackett et al. (1996) as follows: Evidence based medicine is the conscientious, explicit, and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients.
Page 95 - In words, as fashions, the same rule will hold; Alike fantastic, if too new, or old: Be not the first by whom the new are tried, Nor yet the last to lay the old aside.
Page 209 - I drew up required, that every member in his turn should produce one or more queries on any point of Morals, Politics, or Natural Philosophy, to be...
Page 8 - To study the phenomena of disease without books is to sail an uncharted sea, while to study books without patients is not to go to sea at all.
Page 53 - It is a body of men who carry on their work in accordance with rules designed to enforce certain standards both for the better protection of its members and for the better service of the public.
Page 69 - In medicine, two of the leading publications are the Journal of the American Medical Association and The New England Journal of Medicine.
Page 280 - If not — why not? Was it the fault of the surgeon, the disease, or the patient ? What can we do to prevent similar failures in the future? We believe that the general acceptance of a system of hospital organization based on the truthful record of the answers to these questions means the beginning of True Clinical Science.
Page 11 - There is ample evidence to support the view that adult learning is not most efficiently achieved through systematic subject instruction; it is accomplished by involving learners in identifying problems and seeking ways to solve them. It does not come in categorical bundles but in a growing need to know.
Page 9 - First-hand knowledge is the ultimate basis of intellectual life. To a large extent book-learning conveys second-hand information, and as such can never rise to the importance of immediate practice.