Taken from : http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1196411,00.html

   Teaching Doctors To Care  The problem with most medical students is that 
they've never been really sick. Now some are learning what it's like to be 
chronically ill
  By NATHAN THORNBURGH/BOSTON

   
  Posted Sunday, May 21, 2006
  
Claire Brickell, 25, an aspiring neurologist in her third year at Harvard 
Medical School, already knows far more about health care than most of us. She 
can diagnose heart failure from a chest X ray. She can diagram the intricate 
circuits of the brain. And if she needed to, she could probably pull off a 
pretty decent tracheotomy. But when it comes to communicating with patients, 
Brickell has a problem: she's too healthy. Like most of her classmates, she has 
spent very little time as a patient. She has never had to weigh the advice of a 
trusted friend against conflicting orders given by a cold and distant doctor. 
She has never had to take daily injections for a disease she doesn't 
understand. She has rarely even gone through the most basic crucible of illness 
in the U.S., the interminable wait in a doctor's office.
   
  Enter Santa Ocasio, 56, a Dominican immigrant who is fighting a protracted 
battle with Type 2 diabetes. In a pilot program that is the leading edge of a 
broad curriculum overhaul at Harvard Medical School, Brickell has been paired 
with Ocasio for nearly five months. She sees her as a patient every week at the 
Spanish Clinic of Boston's Brigham and Women's Hospital and tags along on 
visits to her specialists. In fact, the goal is for Brickell to be there every 
time Ocasio encounters the health-care system. It's not just a way to learn 
about treating diabetes; it's a crash course in the myriad frustrations of a 
patient caught in the maw of modern medicine--confusing prescriptions, language 
barriers and an endless parade of strangers in white coats.
   
  Why would the U.S.'s top medical school ask its students to spend valuable 
time trailing a patient instead of a doctor? At Harvard and other medical 
schools across the country, educators are beginning to realize that empathy is 
as valuable to a doctor as any clinical skill. Whether it's acknowledging that 
a patient was inconvenienced by having to wait an hour before being seen or 
listening when someone explains why he didn't take his meds, doctors who try to 
understand their patients may be the best antidote for the widespread 
dissatisfaction with today's health-care system.
   
  So Harvard has built closer partnerships between students and patients into 
the principal clinical experience, a small but important part of its most 
significant curriculum reform in two decades. The University of Pennsylvania 
Medical School began a similar program in 1997, and other schools are following 
suit. As long as medical students are still getting a healthy diet of clinical 
learning, educators say, there's little downside.
   
  Still, centering clinical learning on patients is a fairly radical concept 
for a medical-education system that is notoriously resistant to change. Medical 
schools operate largely on principles established in 1910. For most of the 
intervening century, the third year of medical school has meant total immersion 
in a series of clerkships in the major fields--six weeks in cardiology, six 
weeks in intensive care and so on. Students met patients when they were 
admitted into that section of the hospital, and the relationships ended as soon 
as the patients were discharged or moved to another ward.
   
  Dr. Erik Alexander, who directs the new program at Brigham and Women's, says 
the old model prevents students from seeing the larger picture. Every patient 
is a complex combination of sickness and health across multiple biological 
systems, and patients are regularly shuttled between various parts of the 
hospital in the course of their treatment. The best doctors in the future, he 
says, will make those connections across fields and treat the patient as a 
whole individual, not a series of symptoms.
   
  Cambridge Hospital, a Harvard-affiliated branch of Cambridge Health Alliance, 
took the patient-partnering concept even further, including group lunches and, 
in some cases, home visits. Dr. Barbara Ogur, who co-directs the Cambridge 
pilot program, says that for too long, medical students in their third year 
suffered what she calls "ethical erosion," in which the pace and pressure of 
the hospital floor desensitized students to the physical suffering and minor 
indignities of being a patient.
   
  For third-year student Rachel Bortnick, 27, a science buff from childhood, 
one of the lasting lessons is that patients sometimes don't want the help she 
is being trained to give. One cancer patient, whom she had followed from 
initial diagnosis through treatment, decided to quit chemotherapy so that he 
could leave the hospital, essentially to die.
   
  "It's hard to watch a patient at death's door," says Bortnick. "You want to 
do something to prevent it. But this patient really wanted peace and quiet, to 
be somewhere he wouldn't be intruded in on by doctors every hour of the night." 
Bortnick eventually made peace with her patient's resignation, and after he 
died earlier this year, she attended his funeral.
   
  It's clear that experiences like that are meaningful to the students, but 
health-care advocates say patient-centered rhetoric has been around for at 
least as long as HMOs. The fact is, even the most exquisitely ethical medical 
students will have to work in a health-care system that is driven by the 
pressure of the bottom line. Marcia Hams, program coordinator with the 
health-care advocacy group Community Catalyst, says Harvard has the right idea. 
For students from other Boston-area medical schools, her organization tries to 
impart a similar lesson with Walk in My Shoes, a program that asks students to 
simulate patient tasks like signing up for Medicaid or searching for an 
interpreter in a hospital. But Hams cautions that it will take more than 
curriculum reform to get patients the care they deserve. "If doctors only get a 
minute and a half with a patient," she says, "then whatever they learned in med 
school about patient needs isn't going to matter a lot."
   
  For Dr. Guillermo Herrera, who has been running Brigham and Women's Spanish 
Clinic since he founded it in 1971, better patient-doctor communication is 
exactly what his growing Hispanic patient population needs. The close 
relationship between Ocasio and Brickell has helped Ocasio navigate her way to 
a more honest dialogue with doctors--and eventually to better health. Ocasio 
had resisted treating her diabetes for a dangerously long time, for example, 
and even after she started going to the clinic, she refused to take her 
medication. Only after spending a few weeks with Brickell did Ocasio open up 
enough to say that back in Santo Domingo, her friends had told her that insulin 
caused blindness and led people to have their limbs amputated. After Brickell 
heard that, she was able to convince Ocasio that those were symptoms of the 
disease, not the insulin. For the first time in her life, Ocasio has been 
taking her insulin regularly, and she's feeling much better.
   
  Brickell says the experience taught her that learning to see the world from 
the patient's point of view isn't squishy science; it's a way to get the kind 
of results everyone wants from the medical system. "Doctors aren't supposed to 
feel sorry for their patients. They're supposed to fix them," says Brickell. 
"And I think this program will help us do that."
   
  "Sometime the best cure is... not medicine, or surgery by the best surgeon, 
but simply a little empathy and a smile from a person with a white coat" -Nuke 
F, MD (I love my patients!)

                
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