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THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA

THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA . University Charter: 1789 Faculty of Medicine: 1879. PROFESSIONALISM AND MEDICINE’S SOCIAL CONTRACT. VIGNETTE.

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THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA

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  1. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA University Charter: 1789 Faculty of Medicine: 1879

  2. PROFESSIONALISM AND MEDICINE’S SOCIAL CONTRACT

  3. VIGNETTE You are a patient in the emergency room with chest pain. You have a personal cardiologist who has treated you for a heart attack in the past. You ask that he be called and are informed that he is unavailable as he is about to go to a basketball game.

  4. VIGNETTE A long-standing patient of yours has developed a life-threatening condition, whose optimal treatment is not covered under his health care plan. You are asked to endorse his insurance claim using a diagnosis for which the specific treatment is covered.

  5. The Current Situation Society “a better informed community is asking for accountability, transparency, and sound professional standards” Medicine “feels that it’s autonomy is severely restricted by budgets, bureaucracy, guidelines, and peer review” Dunning. BMJ: 1999

  6. THE RESULT • Medicine’s relationship with society is under intense scrutiny • Most call this relationship a “Social Contract”- a term used for 300 years • Reciprocal rights and obligations are fundamental to the concept A BASIS FOR THE DIALOGUE WHICH MUST TAKE PLACE BEYWEEN MEDICINE & SOCIETY

  7. WHAT IS A SOCIAL CONTRACT ?

  8. 18th century concept Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau Explains the relationship between citizens and the state Concept evolved over time Still used to describe the organization of contemporary society (Rawls, Daniels) Stresses Mutual Privileges and Obligations The Social Contract

  9. THE SOCIAL CONTRACT “The rights and duties of the state and its citizens are reciprocal and the recognition of this reciprocity constitutes a relationship which by analogy can be called a social contract” Gough, “The Social Contract”, 1957

  10. The Social Contract The Social Contract in Health Care Hinges on Professionalism • It serves as the basis for the expectations of medicine and society. • It is constantly being renegotiated as society & medicine evolve • Professionalism must evolve as the contract changes

  11. The Contract - Historical • Solo practitioner • Patient payer • Accountable to patient • Minimal accountability to society • Unquestioned authority and autonomy • Opportunities to demonstrate altruism • High level of trust “NOSTALGIC PROFESSIONALISM” (Hafferty) Persists in our self-image and in society’s view of physicians. individual covenant

  12. WHAT CHANGED- HEALTH CARE • Effectiveness of health care • Complexity of health care • Cost of health care The Result: $ Risk • 3rd party payers • state • corporate sector A REVISED CONTRACT

  13. WHAT CHANGED- SOCIETY • Questioning society • Blind vs earned trust • Altruism • Self-regulation • New levels of accountability • To payers • To society A REVISED CONTRACT

  14. The Contract - Tensions Traditional • Calling vs Job • Altruism vs Self-Interest • Art vs Science/Technology • Autonomy vs Accountability

  15. The Contract - Tensions NEW • Medicine - Moral Act or Commodity • Fiduciary Duty to Patients vs Social Justice • Collegiality vs Competition collegiality self-regulation • Employee vs Independent Professional

  16. Threats to Medicine’s Professionalism Arise From Two Sources INTERNAL- Within the Profession MEDICINE MUST CONTROL EXTERNAL- Beyond Medicine’s Control MEDICINE MUST NEGOTIATE

  17. PROFESSIONAL STATUS ISIMPORTANT TO MEDICINE IT CONFERS: • Prestige and Respect • Trust • Autonomy in Practice • Self- Regulation • Financial Rewards

  18. PROFESSIONALISM IS ALSO IMPORTANT TO SOCIETY “ Neither economic incentives, nor technology, nor administrative control has proved an effective surrogate for the commitment to integrity evoked in the ideal of professionalism ” Sullivan, 1995

  19. WHAT IS MEDICAL PROFESSIONALISM?

  20. Physicians Have Two Roles • HEALER • PROFESSIONAL • Served simultaneously • Analyzed separately

  21. Healing and Professionalism THE HEALER THE PROFESSIONAL Middle ages “Learned professions” clergy, law, medicine 1850:Legislation monopoly 1900:University linkage The Present Antiquity technology “curing” The Present Asclepius Hippocrates Maimonedes Other Cultures Codes of Ethics Science

  22. Professionalism as the word is used usually includes both roles

  23. Attributes PHYSICIAN Healer Professional Competence Commitment Confidentiality Altruism Trustworthy Integrity / Honesty codes of ethics Morality / Ethical Behavior Responsibility to profession Autonomy Self-regulation associations institutions Responsibility to society Team work Caring/ compassion listen Insight Openness Respect for the healing function Respect patient dignity/autonomy Advocate for Patient Presence/Accompany Professional Healer Based on the Literature

  24. The Primary Role is that of the Healer

  25. DEFINITION: PROFESSION “An occupation whose core element is work based upon the mastery of a complex body of knowledge and skills. It is a vocation in which knowledge of some department of science or learning or the practice of an art founded upon it is used in the service of others. Its members are governed by codes of ethics and professa commitment to competence, integrity and morality, altruism, and to the promotion of the public goodwithin their domain. These commitments form the basis of a social contract between a profession and society, which in return grants the profession a monopoly over the use of its knowledge base, the right to considerable autonomy in practice and the privilege of self-regulation. Professions and their members are accountable to those served, to their colleagues, and to society.” • Derived from the Oxford English Dictionary and the literature on professionalism • Cruess, Johnston, Cruess “Teaching and Learning in Medicine”, 2004

  26. UNIVERSALITY PROFESSIONALISM VARIES BETWEEN COUNTRIES & CULTURES DEPENDING ON THEIR SOCIAL CONTRACT THE ROLE OF THE HEALER IS UNIVERSAL

  27. The Social Contract “A BARGAIN” Medicine is given prestige, autonomy , the privilege of self-regulation , and rewards on the understanding that it will be altruistic, self-regulate well , be trustworthy, and address the concerns of society

  28. The Social Contract A mix of: • the written and the unwritten – licensing laws, health care legislation, codes of ethics • legal and moral obligations • the universal and the local Constantly evolving (being “renegotiated”)

  29. WHO ARE THE PARTIES TO THE CONTRACT?

  30. THE SOCIAL CONTRACT SOCIETY THE MEDICAL PROFESSION Patients Medicine’s PROFESSIONALISM P O L I T I C A L General Institutions Public Expectations Obligations Individual Physicians Government Politicians Civil Servants Managers PROFESSIONALISM Cruess & Cruess Perspectives in Biol & Med. 2008

  31. MEDIATORS OF THE SOCIAL CONTRACT 1. Health Care System 2. Regulatory Framework 3. The Commercial Sector 4. Other Stakeholders 5. The Media after Rosen & Dewar, 2004

  32. WHAT ARE THE EXPECTATIONS OF MEDICINE AND SOCIETY?

  33. Patients/ Public Expectations of Medicine Fulfill the role of the healer Assured competence Access to care Altruistic service Morality, Integrity, Honesty Trustworthiness Codes of Ethics Accountability/Transparency Respect for patient autonomy Source of objective advice Promotion of the public good Medicine’s Expectations of Patients/Public Trust Autonomy (to exercise judgment) Role in public policy Share responsibility for health Lifestyle Rewards – non-financial – financial Cruess & Cruess Perspectives in Biol & Med. 2008

  34. Government’s Expectations of Medicine Assured competence Morality, integrity, honesty Compliance Accountability performance productivity cost-effectiveness Transparency Team health care Source of objective advice Promotion of the public good • Medicine’s Expectations of • Government • Trust • Autonomy (to exercise judgment) • Self-regulation • Health Care System • value-laden • equitable • adequately funded & staffed • reasonable freedom in system • Role in developing health policy • Monopoly • Rewards – non-financial • respect • – financial Cruess & Cruess Perspectives in Biol & Med. 2008

  35. Public/Patient Expectations of Government Quality health care Health care system Accessible Fair Value laden Adequately funded & staffed Input into health policy Reasonable cost Transparency Accountability Government Expectations of the Public/Patient Appropriate use of resources Reasonable expectations Some responsibility for own health Support for public policy ? input into public policy & management Cruess & Cruess Perspectives in Biol & Med. 2008

  36. Expectations of the parties may conflict Tensions -patient primacy vs social justice -accountability vs autonomy -finite resources vs infinite demand - the role of the healer vs market forces - fiduciary duty vs legal obligations HEALER ROLE/PATIENT PRIMACY/FIDUCIARY DUTY TAKE PRECEDENCE

  37. THE SOCIAL CONTRACT THERE ARE CONSEQUENCES WHEN EXPECTATIONS ARE NOT MET “BREACHES” IN THE CONTRACT

  38. Breaching the Social Contract MEDICINE FAILS TO MEET SOCIETAL EXPECTATIONS THE RESULT- A CHANGE IN THE CONTRACT public trust in the “system” (contract) trust in physician/profession medical influence on public policy self-regulation external regulation autonomy

  39. Breaching the Social Contract SELF-REGULATION Case Study: THE UNITED KINGDOM Bristol/Shipman Result:Changes in the GMC Loss of Disciplinary Power NO LONGER TRUE SELF-REGULATION A MAJOR CHANGE IN THE CONTRACT AND IN PROFESSIONAL STATUS

  40. Breaching the Social Contract Society Fails to Meet Medicine’s Expectations PESSIMISM OPTIMISM Medicine’s Response: Bi-Polar Trust in the “system” (contract) Cooperation Withdrawal Job vs Calling Satisfaction Involvement community associations stakeholders Negotiation ? Satisfaction

  41. CANADA 2011 • Funding of the System • Personnel • Personal Freedom MAJOR CHANGE IN THE CONTRACT ?? BREACH Trust in the System

  42. USA 2011 • Market Oriented System MD Entrepreneurs • Competition Collegiality • Uninsured Moral Dilemma • Increased Accountability • Clinical Autonomy MAJOR CHANGE IN THE CONTRACT ?? BREACH Trust in the System + Uncertainty

  43. What Should Medicine Do? • These issues are here to stay • Linked to societal changes MEDICINE MUST • Address issues within its control • Negotiate issues which it cannot control Negotiate a Contract that Supports the Healer Role

  44. What issues within its control should medicine address?

  45. What Should Medicine Do? • ENSURE THAT ALL PHYSICIANS UNDERSTAND THEIR OBLIGATIONS TO SOCIETY AS PROFESSIONALS • TEACH PROFESSIONALISM & THE SOCIAL CONTRACT TO MEDICAL STUDENTS, RESIDENTS, FACULTY & IN CME (LCME, ACGME, OTHERS)

  46. MEDICINE MUST ADDRESS ITS FAILURES • Perceived altruism individual- lifestyle financial gain collective- “union” activities • Flawed self-regulation • Badly managed conflicts of interest • Lack of attention to social justice

  47. What Should Medicine Do? Negotiate to Address External Stresses • Requires: a trusted single or coordinated voice a negotiating table • Recognize multiple stakeholders • Medicine no longer the dominant player - but it must be at the table

  48. What Should Medicine Do? • Negotiations must:Preserve Trust Satisfy both sides • Negotiations not Symmetrical Society through government determines the nature of the social contract and hence of medical professionalism However- SOCIETY NEEDS THE HEALER!

  49. What Should Medicine Do? • Medicine alone can not change the social contract- the health care system • The public and medicine have similar expectations • Medicine and the public should form an alliance to negotiate a social contract supportive of thevalues of the healer and the professional Cohen, S. Cruess & Davidson. JAMA, 2007

  50. “Since time immemorial, a part of human culture has been man’s care for himself, for the body in which the spirit resides - that is for his own health. The culture of healing may be a less visible aspect of life, yet it is perhaps the most important indicator of the humanity of any society” Vaclav Havel, Summer Meditations, 1993

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