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Jul 13
2007
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All good things have to come to an end ...Posted by Staff in thoughts of an educator, residency, orthopedics |
“Thinking is easy, acting is difficult, and to put one's thoughts
into action is the most difficult thingin the world.”
~Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
into action is the most difficult thingin the world.”
~Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
When I was in medical school, one of the key issues that discussed at the time was the increasing need for primary care providers and the over abundance of sub-specialists. There was a push by multiple institutions to increase medical students interest in the primary care areas and a deemphasis of the sub-specialties. Over recent years that prediction was found to be off target.
Unfortunately, the opposite was found to be true. One of the causes for the miscalculation was an aging population and a predicted increasing need for care including sub-specialty care. Along with the general population, the orthopaedic workforce is also aging. There are a number of the elders who will be retiring in the near future with no one to fill their position or role. No where in orthopaedics is the particularly true than in my subspecialty, pediatric orthopaedics.As we go through our medical education and resident training, there are a few individuals who have a lasting impact on those with whom they have interacted. These are the individuals that many years later are still quoted and mimicked. In many instances, these individuals have dedicated their lives to the education of the young physician and the advancement of medical knowledge. Not all of the memories may be good memories, but they have effected you none the less. If you close your eyes and
visualize your education, these are the people you see. The more time a person is associated with a program; the more they become a part of that program. They are fixtures at that program, an "institution".As is the nature of life and careers, they all have to come to an end. Recently, I heard that one of my mentors has cut back his practice. He has not retired, but he has decrease his case volume and stopped performing major procedures. This past week I was reminiscing with some former residents from my program. As you do, we talked about our current practices, how many kids, new relationships, new cities, etc. After we finished with the formal updating of our lives, we reminisced about residency. We laughed about the good and bad. We all had a lot to say about my former mentor. It was very interesting that everyone had very similar stories. While I was still in residency, I remembered having other former residents tell these same stories to me. As we talked about him, I found out that he had cut down his practice. We all had a feeling of sadness about it. It seemed like the end of an era.
When a program loses someone who was influential, part of that program
dies. As with many tribes, they depend on the elders to impart wisdom and insight. It is with this wisdom we are able to stay away from mistakes of the past. They remind us of previous successes and failures. Because of their years of experience, they are able to quickly reference the patient catalog and give advise base on previous experience. In their mind, it intuitively "makes sense." It is true their techniques make have fallen behind the current en vogue treatments and/or techniques, but it is their experience that is vital to the education of both medical students, residents, and young attending staff.
In my specialty where 60% of the Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North America members are over the age of 50, the era is coming to an end in multiple institutions. Unfortunately with the current generation of attendings and residents (GEN X) choosing sexier and more lucrative specialties such as sport medicine and spine surgery, the number of specialists in the other specialties has decreased. For a number of reasons (malpractice, case volume, lower salaries, interest), residents have shied away from some of the other specialties. Pediatrics has be hit particularly hard. We know the mentors and sub-specialty exposure influences resident selection of sub-specialty. With many of the great educators reaching retirement age, who will assume the role?
I look back at my own education and remember how much I was influenced by my faculty. Both in my fellowship and residency, it was the wisdom of my elders which particularly influenced me. As I look to the future, I hope these voids will be filled. This is an unknown. In the end, all I can do is hope and pray that this is only a cycle and we are on the bottom end of that cycle. If not, may be at the beginning of an ice age.“Wise men speak because they have something to say;
Fools speak because they have to say something.”
~Plato
Fools speak because they have to say something.”
~Plato
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