Fascinating piece about how coaching can improve your professional
performance, from a surgeon. This set off a few thoughts in my head,
which I thought I'd ask for some input on from the list:

* Shiv (and other surgeons on the list) what are your thoughts on this?
Have you tried it, or seen it being tried? With what results?

* In general, the notion of coaching helping you with your professional
life seems to be to be quite well entrenched for the "softer" skills,
but not so popular for more technical ones. Is this a correct
impression, in your experience?

* A slightly more sociological opinion: the whole notion of coaches
(i.e., people whom you pay to give you some instruction in some skill
area) seems very American (more specifically, USAnian) to me. I wonder
why it should be so. Thoughts?

Udhay

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/10/03/111003fa_fact_gawande?currentPage=all

Annals Of Medicine
Personal Best

Top athletes and singers have coaches. Should you?
by Atul Gawande October 3, 2011

No matter how well trained people are, few can sustain their best
performance on their own. That’s where coaching comes in.

I’ve been a surgeon for eight years. For the past couple of them, my
performance in the operating room has reached a plateau. I’d like to
think it’s a good thing—I’ve arrived at my professional peak. But mainly
it seems as if I’ve just stopped getting better.

During the first two or three years in practice, your skills seem to
improve almost daily. It’s not about hand-eye coördination—you have that
down halfway through your residency. As one of my professors once
explained, doing surgery is no more physically difficult than writing in
cursive. Surgical mastery is about familiarity and judgment. You learn
the problems that can occur during a particular procedure or with a
particular condition, and you learn how to either prevent or respond to
those problems.

Say you’ve got a patient who needs surgery for appendicitis. These days,
surgeons will typically do a laparoscopic appendectomy. You slide a
small camera—a laparoscope—into the abdomen through a quarter-inch
incision near the belly button, insert a long grasper through an
incision beneath the waistline, and push a device for stapling and
cutting through an incision in the left lower abdomen. Use the grasper
to pick up the finger-size appendix, fire the stapler across its base
and across the vessels feeding it, drop the severed organ into a plastic
bag, and pull it out. Close up, and you’re done. That’s how you like it
to go, anyway. But often it doesn’t.

Even before you start, you need to make some judgments. Unusual anatomy,
severe obesity, or internal scars from previous abdominal surgery could
make it difficult to get the camera in safely; you don’t want to poke it
into a loop of intestine. You have to decide which camera-insertion
method to use—there’s a range of options—or whether to abandon the
high-tech approach and do the operation the traditional way, with a
wide-open incision that lets you see everything directly. If you do get
your camera and instruments inside, you may have trouble grasping the
appendix. Infection turns it into a fat, bloody, inflamed worm that
sticks to everything around it—bowel, blood vessels, an ovary, the
pelvic sidewall—and to free it you have to choose from a variety of
tools and techniques. You can use a long cotton-tipped instrument to try
to push the surrounding attachments away. You can use electrocautery, a
hook, a pair of scissors, a sharp-tip dissector, a blunt-tip dissector,
a right-angle dissector, or a suction device. You can adjust the
operating table so that the patient’s head is down and his feet are up,
allowing gravity to pull the viscera in the right direction. Or you can
just grab whatever part of the appendix is visible and pull really hard.

Once you have the little organ in view, you may find that appendicitis
was the wrong diagnosis. It might be a tumor of the appendix, Crohn’s
disease, or an ovarian condition that happened to have inflamed the
nearby appendix. Then you’d have to decide whether you need additional
equipment or personnel—maybe it’s time to enlist another surgeon.

Over time, you learn how to head off problems, and, when you can’t, you
arrive at solutions with less fumbling and more assurance. After eight
years, I’ve performed more than two thousand operations. Three-quarters
have involved my specialty, endocrine surgery—surgery for endocrine
organs such as the thyroid, the parathyroid, and the adrenal glands. The
rest have involved everything from simple biopsies to colon cancer. For
my specialized cases, I’ve come to know most of the serious difficulties
that could arise, and have worked out solutions. For the others, I’ve
gained confidence in my ability to handle a wide range of situations,
and to improvise when necessary.

As I went along, I compared my results against national data, and I
began beating the averages. My rates of complications moved steadily
lower and lower. And then, a couple of years ago, they didn’t. It
started to seem that the only direction things could go from here was
the wrong one.

Maybe this is what happens when you turn forty-five. Surgery is, at
least, a relatively late-peaking career. It’s not like mathematics or
baseball or pop music, where your best work is often behind you by the
time you’re thirty. Jobs that involve the complexities of people or
nature seem to take the longest to master: the average age at which S. &
P. 500 chief executive officers are hired is fifty-two, and the age of
maximum productivity for geologists, one study estimated, is around
fifty-four. Surgeons apparently fall somewhere between the extremes,
requiring both physical stamina and the judgment that comes with
experience. Apparently, I’d arrived at that middle point.

It wouldn’t have been the first time I’d hit a plateau. I grew up in
Ohio, and when I was in high school I hoped to become a serious tennis
player. But I peaked at seventeen. That was the year that Danny Trevas
and I climbed to the top tier for doubles in the Ohio Valley. I
qualified to play singles in a couple of national tournaments, only to
be smothered in the first round both times. The kids at that level were
playing a different game than I was. At Stanford, where I went to
college, the tennis team ranked No. 1 in the nation, and I had no chance
of being picked. That meant spending the past twenty-five years trying
to slow the steady decline of my game.

I still love getting out on the court on a warm summer day, swinging a
racquet strung to fifty-six pounds of tension at a two-ounce
felt-covered sphere, and trying for those increasingly elusive moments
when my racquet feels like an extension of my arm, and my legs are
putting me exactly where the ball is going to be. But I came to accept
that I’d never be remotely as good as I was when I was seventeen. In the
hope of not losing my game altogether, I play when I can. I often bring
my racquet on trips, for instance, and look for time to squeeze in a match.

One July day a couple of years ago, when I was at a medical meeting in
Nantucket, I had an afternoon free and went looking for someone to hit
with. I found a local tennis club and asked if there was anyone who
wanted to play. There wasn’t. I saw that there was a ball machine, and I
asked the club pro if I could use it to practice ground strokes. He told
me that it was for members only. But I could pay for a lesson and hit
with him.

He was in his early twenties, a recent graduate who’d played on his
college team. We hit back and forth for a while. He went easy on me at
first, and then started running me around. I served a few points, and
the tennis coach in him came out. You know, he said, you could get more
power from your serve.

I was dubious. My serve had always been the best part of my game. But I
listened. He had me pay attention to my feet as I served, and I
gradually recognized that my legs weren’t really underneath me when I
swung my racquet up into the air. My right leg dragged a few inches
behind my body, reducing my power. With a few minutes of tinkering, he’d
added at least ten miles an hour to my serve. I was serving harder than
I ever had in my life.

Not long afterward, I watched Rafael Nadal play a tournament match on
the Tennis Channel. The camera flashed to his coach, and the obvious
struck me as interesting: even Rafael Nadal has a coach. Nearly every
élite tennis player in the world does. Professional athletes use coaches
to make sure they are as good as they can be.

But doctors don’t. I’d paid to have a kid just out of college look at my
serve. So why did I find it inconceivable to pay someone to come into my
operating room and coach me on my surgical technique?

What we think of as coaching was, sports historians say, a distinctly
American development. During the nineteenth century, Britain had the
more avid sporting culture; its leisure classes went in for games like
cricket, golf, and soccer. But the aristocratic origins produced an
ethos of amateurism: you didn’t want to seem to be trying too hard. For
the Brits, coaching, even practicing, was, well, unsporting. In America,
a more competitive and entrepreneurial spirit took hold. In 1875,
Harvard and Yale played one of the nation’s first American-rules
football games. Yale soon employed a head coach for the team, the
legendary Walter Camp. He established position coaches for individual
player development, maintained detailed performance records for each
player, and pre-planned every game. Harvard preferred the British
approach to sports. In those first three decades, it beat Yale only four
times.

The concept of a coach is slippery. Coaches are not teachers, but they
teach. They’re not your boss—in professional tennis, golf, and skating,
the athlete hires and fires the coach—but they can be bossy. They don’t
even have to be good at the sport. The famous Olympic gymnastics coach
Bela Karolyi couldn’t do a split if his life depended on it. Mainly,
they observe, they judge, and they guide.

Coaches are like editors, another slippery invention. Consider Maxwell
Perkins, the great Scribner’s editor, who found, nurtured, and published
such writers as F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, and Thomas Wolfe.
“Perkins has the intangible faculty of giving you confidence in yourself
and the book you are writing,” one of his writers said in a New Yorker
Profile from 1944. “He never tells you what to do,” another writer said.
“Instead, he suggests to you, in an extraordinarily inarticulate
fashion, what you want to do yourself.”

The coaching model is different from the traditional conception of
pedagogy, where there’s a presumption that, after a certain point, the
student no longer needs instruction. You graduate. You’re done. You can
go the rest of the way yourself. This is how élite musicians are taught.
Barbara Lourie Sand’s book “Teaching Genius” describes the methods of
the legendary Juilliard violin instructor Dorothy DeLay. DeLay was a
Perkins-like figure who trained an amazing roster of
late-twentieth-century virtuosos, including Itzhak Perlman, Nigel
Kennedy, Midori, and Sarah Chang. They came to the Juilliard School at a
young age—usually after they’d demonstrated talent but reached the
limits of what local teachers could offer. They studied with DeLay for a
number of years, and then they graduated, launched like ships leaving
drydock. She saw her role as preparing them to make their way without her.

Itzhak Perlman, for instance, arrived at Juilliard, in 1959, at the age
of thirteen, and studied there for eight years, working with both DeLay
and Ivan Galamian, another revered instructor. Among the key things he
learned were discipline, a broad repertoire, and the exigencies of
technique. “All DeLay’s students, big or little, have to do their
scales, their arpeggios, their études, their Bach, their concertos, and
so on,” Sand writes. “By the time they reach their teens, they are
expected to be practicing a minimum of five hours a day.” DeLay also
taught them to try new and difficult things, to perform without fear.
She expanded their sense of possibility. Perlman, disabled by polio,
couldn’t play the violin standing, and DeLay was one of the few who were
convinced that he could have a concert career. DeLay was, her biographer
observed, “basically in the business of teaching her pupils how to
think, and to trust their ability to do so effectively.” Musical
expertise meant not needing to be coached.

Doctors understand expertise in the same way. Knowledge of disease and
the science of treatment are always evolving. We have to keep developing
our capabilities and avoid falling behind. So the training inculcates an
ethic of perfectionism. Expertise is thought to be not a static
condition but one that doctors must build and sustain for themselves.

Coaching in pro sports proceeds from a starkly different premise: it
considers the teaching model naïve about our human capacity for
self-perfection. It holds that, no matter how well prepared people are
in their formative years, few can achieve and maintain their best
performance on their own. One of these views, it seemed to me, had to be
wrong. So I called Itzhak Perlman to find out what he thought.

I asked him why concert violinists didn’t have coaches, the way top
athletes did. He said that he didn’t know, but that it had always seemed
a mistake to him. He had enjoyed the services of a coach all along.

He had a coach? “I was very, very lucky,” Perlman said. His wife, Toby,
whom he’d known at Juilliard, was a concert-level violinist, and he’d
relied on her for the past forty years. “The great challenge in
performing is listening to yourself,” he said. “Your physicality, the
sensation that you have as you play the violin, interferes with your
accuracy of listening.” What violinists perceive is often quite
different from what audiences perceive.

“My wife always says that I don’t really know how I play,” he told me.
“She is an extra ear.” She’d tell him if a passage was too fast or too
tight or too mechanical—if there was something that needed fixing.
Sometimes she has had to puzzle out what might be wrong, asking another
expert to describe what she heard as he played.

Her ear provided external judgment. “She is very tough, and that’s what
I like about it,” Perlman says. He doesn’t always trust his response
when he listens to recordings of his performances. He might think
something sounds awful, and then realize he was mistaken: “There is a
variation in the ability to listen, as well, I’ve found.” He didn’t know
if other instrumentalists relied on coaching, but he suspected that many
find help like he did. Vocalists, he pointed out, employ voice coaches
throughout their careers.

The professional singers I spoke to describe their coaches in nearly
identical terms. “We refer to them as our ‘outside ears,’ ” the great
soprano Renée Fleming told me. “The voice is so mysterious and fragile.
It’s mostly involuntary muscles that fuel the instrument. What we hear
as we are singing is not what the audience hears.” When she’s preparing
for a concert, she practices with her vocal coach for ninety minutes or
so several times a week. “Our voices are very limited in the amount of
time we can use them,” she explains. After they’ve put in the hours to
attain professional status, she said, singers have about twenty or
thirty years to achieve something near their best, and then to sustain
that level. For Fleming, “outside ears” have been invaluable at every point.

So outside ears, and eyes, are important for concert-calibre musicians
and Olympic-level athletes. What about regular professionals, who just
want to do what they do as well as they can? I talked to Jim Knight
about this. He is the director of the Kansas Coaching Project, at the
University of Kansas. He teaches coaching—for schoolteachers. For
decades, research has confirmed that the big factor in determining how
much students learn is not class size or the extent of standardized
testing but the quality of their teachers. Policymakers have pushed
mostly carrot-and-stick remedies: firing underperforming teachers,
giving merit pay to high performers, penalizing schools with poor
student test scores. People like Jim Knight think we should push coaching.

California researchers in the early nineteen-eighties conducted a
five-year study of teacher-skill development in eighty schools, and
noticed something interesting. Workshops led teachers to use new skills
in the classroom only ten per cent of the time. Even when a practice
session with demonstrations and personal feedback was added, fewer than
twenty per cent made the change. But when coaching was introduced—when a
colleague watched them try the new skills in their own classroom and
provided suggestions—adoption rates passed ninety per cent. A spate of
small randomized trials confirmed the effect. Coached teachers were more
effective, and their students did better on tests.

Knight experienced it himself. Two decades ago, he was trying to teach
writing to students at a community college in Toronto, and floundering.
He studied techniques for teaching students how to write coherent
sentences and organize their paragraphs. But he didn’t get anywhere
until a colleague came into the classroom and coached him through the
changes he was trying to make. He won an award for innovation in
teaching, and eventually wrote a Ph.D. dissertation at the University of
Kansas on measures to improve pedagogy. Then he got funding to train
coaches for every school in Topeka, and he has been expanding his
program ever since. Coaching programs have now spread to hundreds of
school districts across the country.

There have been encouraging early results, but the data haven’t yet been
analyzed on a large scale. One thing that seems clear, though, is that
not all coaches are effective. I asked Knight to show me what makes for
good coaching.

We met early one May morning at Leslie H. Walton Middle School, in
Albemarle County, Virginia. In 2009, the Albemarle County public schools
created an instructional-coaching program, based in part on Knight’s
methods. It recruited twenty-four teacher coaches for the twenty-seven
schools in the semi-rural district. (Charlottesville is the county seat,
but it runs a separate school district.) Many teacher-coaching programs
concentrate on newer teachers, and this one is no exception. All
teachers in their first two years are required to accept a coach, but
the program also offers coaching to any teacher who wants it.

Not everyone has. Researchers from the University of Virginia found that
many teachers see no need for coaching. Others hate the idea of being
observed in the classroom, or fear that using a coach makes them look
incompetent, or are convinced, despite assurances, that the coaches are
reporting their evaluations to the principal. And some are skeptical
that the school’s particular coaches would be of any use.

To find its coaches, the program took applications from any teachers in
the system who were willing to cross over to the back of the classroom
for a couple of years and teach colleagues instead of students. They
were selected for their skills with people, and they studied the methods
developed by Knight and others. But they did not necessarily have any
special expertise in a content area, like math or science. The coaches
assigned to Walton Middle School were John Hobson, a bushy-bearded
high-school history teacher who was just thirty-three years old when he
started but had been a successful baseball and tennis coach, and Diane
Harding, a teacher who had two decades of experience but had spent the
previous seven years out of the classroom, serving as a technology
specialist.

Nonetheless, many veteran teachers—including some of the best—signed up
to let the outsiders in. Jennie Critzer, an eighth-grade math teacher,
was one of those teachers, and we descended on her first-period algebra
class as a small troupe—Jim Knight, me, and both coaches. (The school
seemed eager to have me see what both do.)

After the students found their seats—some had to search a little,
because Critzer had scrambled the assigned seating, as she often does,
to “keep things fresh”—she got to work. She had been a math teacher at
Walton Middle School for ten years. She taught three ninety-minute
classes a day with anywhere from twenty to thirty students. And she had
every class structured down to the minute.

Today, she said, they would be learning how to simplify radicals. She
had already put a “Do Now” problem on the whiteboard: “Simplify ?36 and
?32.” She gave the kids three minutes to get as far as they could, and
walked the rows of desks with a white egg timer in her hand as the
students went at it. With her blond pigtails, purple striped sack dress,
flip-flops, and painted toenails, each a different color, she looked
like a graduate student headed to a beach party. But she carried herself
with an air of easy command. The timer sounded.

For thirty seconds, she had the students compare their results with
those of the partner next to them. Then she called on a student at
random for the first problem, the simplified form of ?36. “Six,” the
girl said.

“Stand up if you got six,” Critzer said. Everyone stood up.

She turned to the harder problem of simplifying ?32. No one got the
answer, 4 ?2. It was a middle-level algebra class; the kids didn’t have
a lot of confidence when it came to math. Yet her job was to hold their
attention and get them to grasp and apply three highly abstract
concepts—the concepts of radicals, of perfect squares, and of factoring.
In the course of one class, she did just that.

She set a clear goal, announcing that by the end of class the students
would know how to write numbers like ?32 in a simplified form without
using a decimal or a fraction. Then she broke the task into steps. She
had the students punch ?32 into their calculators and see what number
they got (5.66). She had them try explaining to their partner how whole
numbers differed from decimals. (“Thirty seconds, everyone.”) She had
them write down other numbers whose square root was a whole number. She
made them visualize, verbalize, and write the idea. Soon, they’d figured
out how to find the factors of the number under the radical sign, and
then how to move factors from under the radical sign to outside the
radical sign.

Toward the end, she had her students try simplifying ?20. They had one
minute. One of the boys who’d looked alternately baffled and distracted
for the first half of class hunched over his notebook scratching out an
answer with his pencil. “This is so easy now,” he announced.

I told the coaches that I didn’t see how Critzer could have done better.
They said that every teacher has something to work on. It could involve
student behavior, or class preparation, or time management, or any
number of other things. The coaches let the teachers choose the
direction for coaching. They usually know better than anyone what their
difficulties are.

Critzer’s concern for the last quarter of the school year was whether
her students were effectively engaged and learning the material they
needed for the state tests. So that’s what her coaches focussed on.
Knight teaches coaches to observe a few specifics: whether the teacher
has an effective plan for instruction; how many students are engaged in
the material; whether they interact respectfully; whether they engage in
high-level conversations; whether they understand how they are
progressing, or failing to progress.

Novice teachers often struggle with the basic behavioral issues. Hobson
told me of one such teacher, whose students included a hugely disruptive
boy. Hobson took her to observe the boy in another teacher’s classroom,
where he behaved like a prince. Only then did the teacher see that her
style was the problem. She let students speak—and shout, and
interrupt—without raising their hands, and go to the bathroom without
asking. Then she got angry when things got out of control.

Jennie Critzer had no trouble maintaining classroom discipline, and she
skillfully used a variety of what teachers call “learning
structures”—lecturing, problem-solving, coöperative learning,
discussion. But the coaches weren’t convinced that she was getting the
best results. Of twenty kids, they noticed, at least four seemed at sea.

Good coaches know how to break down performance into its critical
individual components. In sports, coaches focus on mechanics,
conditioning, and strategy, and have ways to break each of those down,
in turn. The U.C.L.A. basketball coach John Wooden, at the first squad
meeting each season, even had his players practice putting their socks
on. He demonstrated just how to do it: he carefully rolled each sock
over his toes, up his foot, around the heel, and pulled it up snug, then
went back to his toes and smoothed out the material along the sock’s
length, making sure there were no wrinkles or creases. He had two
purposes in doing this. First, wrinkles cause blisters. Blisters cost
games. Second, he wanted his players to learn how crucial seemingly
trivial details could be. “Details create success” was the creed of a
coach who won ten N.C.A.A. men’s basketball championships.

At Walton Middle School, Hobson and Harding thought that Critzer should
pay close attention to the details of how she used coöperative learning.
When she paired the kids off, they observed, most struggled with having
a “math conversation.” The worst pairs had a girl with a boy. One
boy-girl pair had been unable to talk at all.

Élite performers, researchers say, must engage in “deliberate
practice”—sustained, mindful efforts to develop the full range of
abilities that success requires. You have to work at what you’re not
good at. In theory, people can do this themselves. But most people do
not know where to start or how to proceed. Expertise, as the formula
goes, requires going from unconscious incompetence to conscious
incompetence to conscious competence and finally to unconscious
competence. The coach provides the outside eyes and ears, and makes you
aware of where you’re falling short. This is tricky. Human beings resist
exposure and critique; our brains are well defended. So coaches use a
variety of approaches—showing what other, respected colleagues do, for
instance, or reviewing videos of the subject’s performance. The most
common, however, is just conversation.

At lunchtime, Critzer and her coaches sat down at a table in the empty
school library. Hobson took the lead. “What worked?” he asked.

Critzer said she had been trying to increase the time that students
spend on independent practice during classes, and she thought she was
doing a good job. She was also trying to “break the plane” more—get out
from in front of the whiteboard and walk among the students—and that was
working nicely. But she knew the next question, and posed it herself:
“So what didn’t go well?” She noticed one girl who “clearly wasn’t
getting it.” But at the time she hadn’t been sure what to do.

“How could you help her?” Hobson asked.

She thought for a moment. “I would need to break the concept down for
her more,” she said. “I’ll bring her in during the fifth block.”

“What else did you notice?”

“My second class has thirty kids but was more forthcoming. It was
actually easier to teach than the first class. This group is less
verbal.” Her answer gave the coaches the opening they wanted. They
mentioned the trouble students had with their math conversations, and
the girl-boy pair who didn’t talk at all. “How could you help them be
more verbal?”

Critzer was stumped. Everyone was. The table fell silent. Then Harding
had an idea. “How about putting key math words on the board for them to
use—like ‘factoring,’ ‘perfect square,’ ‘radical’?” she said. “They
could even record the math words they used in their discussion.” Critzer
liked the suggestion. It was something to try.

For half an hour, they worked through the fine points of the observation
and formulated plans for what she could practice next. Critzer sat at a
short end of the table chatting, the coaches at the long end beside her,
Harding leaning toward her on an elbow, Hobson fingering his beard. They
looked like three colleagues on a lunch break—which, Knight later
explained, was part of what made the two coaches effective.

He had seen enough coaching to break even their performance down into
its components. Good coaches, he said, speak with credibility, make a
personal connection, and focus little on themselves. Hobson and Harding
“listened more than they talked,” Knight said. “They were one hundred
per cent present in the conversation.” They also parcelled out their
observations carefully. “It’s not a normal way of communicating—watching
what your words are doing,” he said. They had discomfiting information
to convey, and they did it directly but respectfully.

I asked Critzer if she liked the coaching. “I do,” she said. “It works
with my personality. I’m very self-critical. So I grabbed a coach from
the beginning.” She had been concerned for a while about how to do a
better job engaging her kids. “So many things have to come together. I’d
exhausted everything I knew to improve.”

She told me that she had begun to burn out. “I felt really isolated,
too,” she said. Coaching had changed that. “My stress level is a lot
less now.” That might have been the best news for the students. They
kept a great teacher, and saw her get better. “The coaching has
definitely changed how satisfying teaching is,” she said.

I decided to try a coach. I called Robert Osteen, a retired general
surgeon, whom I trained under during my residency, to see if he might
consider the idea. He’s one of the surgeons I most hoped to emulate in
my career. His operations were swift without seeming hurried and elegant
without seeming showy. He was calm. I never once saw him lose his
temper. He had a plan for every circumstance. He had impeccable
judgment. And his patients had unusually few complications.

He specialized in surgery for tumors of the pancreas, liver, stomach,
esophagus, colon, breast, and other organs. One test of a cancer surgeon
is knowing when surgery is pointless and when to forge ahead. Osteen
never hemmed or hawed, or pushed too far. “Can’t be done,” he’d say upon
getting a patient’s abdomen open and discovering a tumor to be more
invasive than expected. And, without a pause for lament, he’d begin
closing up again.

Year after year, the senior residents chose him for their annual
teaching award. He was an unusual teacher. He never quite told you what
to do. As an intern, I did my first splenectomy with him. He did not
draw the skin incision to be made with the sterile marking pen the way
the other professors did. He just stood there, waiting. Finally, I took
the pen, put the felt tip on the skin somewhere, and looked up at him to
see if I could make out a glimmer of approval or disapproval. He gave me
nothing. I drew a line down the patient’s middle, from just below the
sternum to just above the navel.

“Is that really where you want it?” he said. Osteen’s voice was a low,
car-engine growl, tinged with the accent of his boyhood in Savannah,
Georgia, and it took me a couple of years to realize that it was not his
voice that scared me but his questions. He was invariably trying to get
residents to think—to think like surgeons—and his questions exposed how
much we had to learn.

“Yes,” I answered. We proceeded with the operation. Ten minutes into the
case, it became obvious that I’d made the incision too small to expose
the spleen. “I should have taken the incision down below the navel,
huh?” He grunted in the affirmative, and we stopped to extend the incision.

I reached Osteen at his summer home, on Buzzards Bay. He was enjoying
retirement. He spent time with his grandchildren and travelled, and,
having been an avid sailor all his life, he had just finished writing a
book on nineteenth-century naval mapmaking. He didn’t miss operating,
but one day a week he held a teaching conference for residents and
medical students. When I explained the experiment I wanted to try, he
was game.

He came to my operating room one morning and stood silently observing
from a step stool set back a few feet from the table. He scribbled in a
notepad and changed position once in a while, looking over the
anesthesia drape or watching from behind me. I was initially
self-conscious about being observed by my former teacher. But I was
doing an operation—a thyroidectomy for a patient with a cancerous
nodule—that I had done around a thousand times, more times than I’ve
been to the movies. I was quickly absorbed in the flow of it—the
symphony of coördinated movement between me and my surgical assistant, a
senior resident, across the table from me, and the surgical technician
to my side.

The case went beautifully. The cancer had not spread beyond the thyroid,
and, in eighty-six minutes, we removed the fleshy, butterfly-shaped
organ, carefully detaching it from the trachea and from the nerves to
the vocal cords. Osteen had rarely done this operation when he was
practicing, and I wondered whether he would find anything useful to tell me.

We sat in the surgeons’ lounge afterward. He saw only small things, he
said, but, if I were trying to keep a problem from happening even once
in my next hundred operations, it’s the small things I had to worry
about. He noticed that I’d positioned and draped the patient perfectly
for me, standing on his left side, but not for anyone else. The draping
hemmed in the surgical assistant across the table on the patient’s right
side, restricting his left arm, and hampering his ability to pull the
wound upward. At one point in the operation, we found ourselves
struggling to see up high enough in the neck on that side. The draping
also pushed the medical student off to the surgical assistant’s right,
where he couldn’t help at all. I should have made more room to the left,
which would have allowed the student to hold the retractor and freed the
surgical assistant’s left hand.

Osteen also asked me to pay more attention to my elbows. At various
points during the operation, he observed, my right elbow rose to the
level of my shoulder, on occasion higher. “You cannot achieve precision
with your elbow in the air,” he said. A surgeon’s elbows should be loose
and down by his sides. “When you are tempted to raise your elbow, that
means you need to either move your feet”—because you’re standing in the
wrong position—“or choose a different instrument.”

He had a whole list of observations like this. His notepad was dense
with small print. I operate with magnifying loupes and wasn’t aware how
much this restricted my peripheral vision. I never noticed, for example,
that at one point the patient had blood-pressure problems, which the
anesthesiologist was monitoring. Nor did I realize that, for about half
an hour, the operating light drifted out of the wound; I was operating
with light from reflected surfaces. Osteen pointed out that the
instruments I’d chosen for holding the incision open had got tangled up,
wasting time.

That one twenty-minute discussion gave me more to consider and work on
than I’d had in the past five years. It had been strange and more than a
little awkward having to explain to the surgical team why Osteen was
spending the morning with us. “He’s here to coach me,” I’d said. Yet the
stranger thing, it occurred to me, was that no senior colleague had come
to observe me in the eight years since I’d established my surgical
practice. Like most work, medical practice is largely unseen by anyone
who might raise one’s sights. I’d had no outside ears and eyes.

Osteen has continued to coach me in the months since that experiment. I
take his observations, work on them for a few weeks, and then get
together with him again. The mechanics of the interaction are still
evolving. Surgical performance begins well before the operating room,
with the choice made in the clinic of whether to operate in the first
place. Osteen and I have spent time examining the way I plan before
surgery. I’ve also begun taking time to do something I’d rarely done
before—watch other colleagues operate in order to gather ideas about
what I could do.

A former colleague at my hospital, the cancer surgeon Caprice Greenberg,
has become a pioneer in using video in the operating room. She had the
idea that routine, high-quality video recordings of operations could
enable us to figure out why some patients fare better than others. If we
learned what techniques made the difference, we could even try to coach
for them. The work is still in its early stages. So far, a handful of
surgeons have had their operations taped, and begun reviewing them with
a colleague.

I was one of the surgeons who got to try it. It was like going over a
game tape. One rainy afternoon, I brought my laptop to Osteen’s kitchen,
and we watched a recording of another thyroidectomy I’d performed. Three
video pictures of the operation streamed on the screen—one from a camera
in the operating light, one from a wide-angle room camera, and one with
the feed from the anesthesia monitor. A boom microphone picked up the sound.

Osteen liked how I’d changed the patient’s positioning and draping.
“See? Right there!” He pointed at the screen. “The assistant is able to
help you now.” At one point, the light drifted out of the wound and we
watched to see how long it took me to realize I’d lost direct
illumination: four minutes, instead of half an hour.

“Good,” he said. “You’re paying more attention.”

He had new pointers for me. He wanted me to let the residents struggle
thirty seconds more when I asked them to help with a task. I tended to
give them precise instructions as soon as progress slowed. “No, use the
DeBakey forceps,” I’d say, or “Move the retractor first.” Osteen’s
advice: “Get them to think.” It’s the only way people learn.

And together we identified a critical step in a thyroidectomy to work
on: finding and preserving the parathyroid glands—four fatty glands the
size of a yellow split pea that sit on the surface of the thyroid gland
and are crucial for regulating a person’s calcium levels. The rate at
which my patients suffered permanent injury to those little organs had
been hovering at two per cent. He wanted me to try lowering the risk
further by finding the glands earlier in the operation.

Since I have taken on a coach, my complication rate has gone down. It’s
too soon to know for sure whether that’s not random, but it seems real.
I know that I’m learning again. I can’t say that every surgeon needs a
coach to do his or her best work, but I’ve discovered that I do.

Coaching has become a fad in recent years. There are leadership coaches,
executive coaches, life coaches, and college-application coaches. Search
the Internet, and you’ll find that there’s even Twitter coaching.
(“Would you like to learn how to get new customers/clients, make
valuable business contacts, and increase your revenue using Twitter?
Then this Twitter coaching package is perfect for you”—at about eight
hundred dollars for a few hour-long Skype sessions and some e-mail
consultation.) Self-improvement has always found a ready market, and
most of what’s on offer is simply one-on-one instruction to get amateurs
through the essentials. It’s teaching with a trendier name. Coaching
aimed at improving the performance of people who are already
professionals is less usual. It’s also riskier: bad coaching can make
people worse.

The world-famous high jumper Dick Fosbury, for instance, developed his
revolutionary technique—known as the Fosbury Flop—in defiance of his
coaches. They wanted him to stick to the time-honored straddle method of
going over the high bar leg first, face down. He instinctively wanted to
go over head first, back down. It was only by perfecting his odd
technique on his own that Fosbury won the gold medal at the 1968 Mexico
City Olympics, setting a new record on worldwide television, and
reinventing high-jumping overnight.

Renée Fleming told me that when her original voice coach died, ten years
ago, she was nervous about replacing her. She wanted outside ears, but
they couldn’t be just anybody’s. “At my stage, when you’re at my level,
you don’t really want to go to a new person who might mess things up,”
she said. “Somebody might say, ‘You know, you’ve been singing that way
for a long time, but why don’t you try this?’ If you lose your path,
sometimes you can’t find your way back, and then you lose your
confidence onstage and it really is just downhill.”

The sort of coaching that fosters effective innovation and judgment, not
merely the replication of technique, may not be so easy to cultivate.
Yet modern society increasingly depends on ordinary people taking
responsibility for doing extraordinary things: operating inside people’s
bodies, teaching eighth graders algebraic concepts that Euclid would
have struggled with, building a highway through a mountain, constructing
a wireless computer network across a state, running a factory, reducing
a city’s crime rate. In the absence of guidance, how many people can do
such complex tasks at the level we require? With a diploma, a few will
achieve sustained mastery; with a good coach, many could. We treat
guidance for professionals as a luxury—you can guess what gets cut first
when school-district budgets are slashed. But coaching may prove
essential to the success of modern society.

There was a moment in sports when employing a coach was unimaginable—and
then came a time when not doing so was unimaginable. We care about
results in sports, and if we care half as much about results in schools
and in hospitals we may reach the same conclusion. Local health systems
may need to go the way of the Albemarle school district. We could create
coaching programs not only for surgeons but for other doctors,
too—internists aiming to sharpen their diagnostic skills, cardiologists
aiming to improve their heart-attack outcomes, and all of us who have to
figure out ways to use our resources more efficiently. In the past year,
I’ve thought nothing of asking my hospital to spend some hundred
thousand dollars to upgrade the surgical equipment I use, in the vague
hope of giving me finer precision and reducing complications. Avoiding
just one major complication saves, on average, fourteen thousand dollars
in medical costs—not to mention harm to a human being. So it seems worth
it. But the three or four hours I’ve spent with Osteen each month have
almost certainly added more to my capabilities than any of this.

Talk about medical progress, and people think about technology. We await
every new cancer drug as if it will be our salvation. We dream of
personalized genomics, vaccines against heart disease, and the
unfathomed efficiencies from information technology. I would never deny
the potential value of such breakthroughs. My teen-age son was spared
high-risk aortic surgery a couple of years ago by a brief stent
procedure that didn’t exist when he was born. But the capabilities of
doctors matter every bit as much as the technology. This is true of all
professions. What ultimately makes the difference is how well people use
technology. We have devoted disastrously little attention to fostering
those abilities.

A determined effort to introduce coaching could change this. Making sure
that the benefits exceed the cost will take work, to be sure. So will
finding coaches—though, with the growing pool of retirees, we may
already have a ready reserve of accumulated experience and know-how. The
greatest difficulty, though, may simply be a profession’s willingness to
accept the idea. The prospect of coaching forces awkward questions about
how we regard failure. I thought about this after another case of mine
that Bob Osteen came to observe. It didn’t go so well.

The patient was a woman with a large tumor in the adrenal gland atop her
right kidney, and I had decided to remove it using a laparoscope. Some
surgeons might have questioned this decision. When adrenal tumors get to
be a certain size, they can’t be removed laparoscopically—you have to do
a traditional, open operation and get your hands inside. I persisted,
though, and soon had cause for regret. Working my way around this tumor
with a ten-millimetre camera on the end of a foot-and-a-half-long wand
was like trying to find my way around a mountain with a penlight. I
continued with my folly too long, and caused bleeding in a blind spot.
The team had to give her a blood transfusion while I opened her belly
wide and did the traditional operation.

Osteen watched, silent and blank-faced the entire time, taking notes. My
cheeks burned; I was mortified. I wished I’d never asked him along. I
tried to be rational about the situation—the patient did fine. But I had
let Osteen see my judgment fail; I’d let him see that I may not be who I
want to be.

This is why it will never be easy to submit to coaching, especially for
those who are well along in their career. I’m ostensibly an expert. I’d
finished long ago with the days of being tested and observed. I am
supposed to be past needing such things. Why should I expose myself to
scrutiny and fault-finding?

I have spoken to other surgeons about the idea. “Oh, I can think of a
few people who could use some coaching” has been a common reaction. Not
many say, “Man, could I use a coach!” Once, I wouldn’t have, either.

Osteen and I sat together after the operation and broke the case down,
weighing the decisions I’d made at various points. He focussed on what I
thought went well and what I thought didn’t. He wasn’t sure what I ought
to have done differently, he said. But he asked me to think harder about
the anatomy of the attachments holding the tumor in.

“You seemed to have trouble keeping the tissue on tension,” he said. He
was right. You can’t free a tumor unless you can lift and hold taut the
tissue planes you need to dissect through. Early on, when it had become
apparent that I couldn’t see the planes clearly, I could have switched
to the open procedure before my poking around caused bleeding. Thinking
back, however, I also realized that there was another maneuver I could
have tried that might have let me hold the key attachments on tension,
and maybe even freed the tumor.

“Most surgery is done in your head,” Osteen likes to say. Your
performance is not determined by where you stand or where your elbow
goes. It’s determined by where you decide to stand, where you decide to
put your elbow. I knew that he could drive me to make smarter decisions,
but that afternoon I recognized the price: exposure.

For society, too, there are uncomfortable difficulties: we may not be
ready to accept—or pay for—a cadre of people who identify the flaws in
the professionals upon whom we rely, and yet hold in confidence what
they see. Coaching done well may be the most effective intervention
designed for human performance. Yet the allegiance of coaches is to the
people they work with; their success depends on it. And the existence of
a coach requires an acknowledgment that even expert practitioners have
significant room for improvement. Are we ready to confront this fact
when we’re in their care?

“Who’s that?” a patient asked me as she awaited anesthesia and noticed
Osteen standing off to the side of the operating room, notebook in hand.

I was flummoxed for a moment. He wasn’t a student or a visiting
professor. Calling him “an observer” didn’t sound quite right, either.

“He’s a colleague,” I said. “I asked him along to observe and see if he
saw things I could improve.”

The patient gave me a look that was somewhere between puzzlement and alarm.

“He’s like a coach,” I finally said.

She did not seem reassured.


-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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