How to balance the sickcare culture of conformity with a culture of creativity
Arlen Meyers, MD, MBA
President and CEO, Society of Physician Entrepreneurs, another lousy golfer, terrible cook, friction fixer
Sickcare is a culture of conformity and competition. Premeds know it. Medical students and residents learn it. But, once they graduate, they are told they will be paid for value. Unfortunately, few will teach them how to do it and reconcile the culture of conformity and competition with an innovative culture of creativity , collaboration and interprofessional communication.
That culture of conformity is a barrier to sick care innovation and entrepreneurship. Conservative Andrew Breitbart said that"politics is downstream from culture"-meaning that to win elections, partisans first need to shape culture. The same holds true for the medical education establishment if they want to encourage graduates, trainees and clinicians to color outside of the lines when it is appropriate.
Here are some ways to balance the two mindsets:
6.Train the trainers. Provide faculty with the knowledge, skills, abilties and competencies they need to integrate creativity, innovation and entrepreneurship as part of their basic science and clinical rotations. But, what should an introduction to entrepreneurship teaching and learning include for basic science and clinical faculty who do not have innovation and entrepreneurship domain expertise include?
The learning objective of the module should be to know how to integrate healthcare innovation and entrepreneurship topics into basic science courses and clinical rotations by challenging students with?case based, problem based and project based learning? in real world settings and applications to help them perfect sickcare?entrepreneurial knowledge, skills, attitudes and competencies.
7. Let medical students and residents take a gap year to learn how to create and sell something. Over half of medical schools already have an arrangement whereby students can take a one year leave of abscence. But they call it something other than a gap year. They call it getting an MBA. Or, offer them a fellowship in entrepreneurship and innovation.
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10. Give medical students and residents a non clinical exit ramp. The next phase of medical school education reform is in progress. One question medical educators and Deans will have to address is, "What business are we in?" Are you in the business of graduating doctors who will only take care of patients directly, or, are you in the business of creating opportunities for graduates to pursue biomedical careers of their choice, including non-clinical careers that do not involve seeing patients face to face for a significant part of their working life? Patients are not the only stakeholders that have a dog in the sickcare hunt.
11. Teach philanthropreneurship Philanthropreneurship has four elements. ?First, the driving force must be a passion to make life better for others, especially those who are underprivileged. Second, there has to be an element of giving, whether this is in terms of money or time. Third, there needs to be creativity, the envisioning of novel approaches to solving problems. And finally, philanthropreneurship requires leadership and strategic thinking– directing, organizing, and influencing the efforts of others.?
12. Destroy your innovation silos Sick care badly needs innovation if it is to become healthcare . Yet, it's questionable whether it can be fixed from inside. Despite the popularity of open innovation and community based, participatory innovation networks, healthcare organizations and doctors seem to shun outside ideas and collaboration and are perceived as arrogant know-it-alls, stuck in the ivory tower or healthcare city , when it comes to knowing what's best for patients. They have a silo mindset that blocks collaboration with other stakeholders in the innovation supply chain. The challenge for most organizations is to create and engage stakeholders.
Innovation starts with mindset. The clinical mindset is different from the entrepreneurial mindset and the ethics of medicine are different from the ethics of business. We need to give experience, educate and train doctors who can reconcile the two. Thankfully, it is starting to happen and it will make better doctors.
Arlen Meyers, MD, MBA is the President and CEO of the Society of Physician Entrepreneurs