Tiger Woods and Neck Injury - Saving Money and Surviving

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Friday, October 15, 2010

Abraham Verghese - The Top Gun of American Medicine

Posted on 12:05 AM by Henry Witiou
The first year medical students I precept were too young to see Tom Cruise's alter ego Lieutenant Pete "Maverick" Mitchell grace the big screen in the 1986 blockbuster film Top Gun.  Yet, the story has a relevant analogy to medicine. 

According to the film, during the Vietnam war American pilots were relying too much on technology to bring enemy fighters down.  They weren't as skilled in taking out the opposition.  They fired their technologically advanced missiles to try and get the job done.  They didn't think.  It didn't work.  They forgot the art of dogfighting.

The military discovered that technology alone wasn't going to get the job done. The best fighter pilots needed the skills, insight, and wisdom on when to use technology and when not to. As a result, the Navy Fighter Weapons School, known simply as Top Gun, was created to retrain the military pilots on this vital lost skill. 

The goal of the program was specifically to make the best of the best even better.

Like the military, the country is discovering that the healthcare system enabled with dazzling technology isn't getting the job done either.  One study suggests that Americans don't live as long as citizens from other industrialized countries not due to our obesity or smoking habits but because of the failings of the healthcare system even though we pay more per capita on healthcare.  Since the recent and current generation of doctors, residents, and medical students are trained to rely heavily on technology, the situation is only going to get worse.  These doctors do not know how to do a thoughtful history or thorough physical examination.  Individual patients as well as the nation will pay a price for more unnecessary testing as well as wasted time and money which could have been avoided if doctors focused on the art of medicine. 

To slow healthcare costs, the next generation of doctors will need the skills, insight, and wisdom on how to take an accurate history, perform a thoughtful clinical examination, and use technology judiciously.  They must be experts in the art of medicine.  Like the art of dogfighting, the art of medicine was a skill that should have been embraced as technology proliferated instead of being marginalized in training.


So who are medicine's Top Guns?  Who are the best of the best?  Where is medicine's Navy Fighter Weapons School?

If medical students want to be the best of the best, then they should look no further than Dr. Abraham Verghese of Stanford Medical School.  Dr. Verghese, already an accomplished author who is also board certified in internal medicine and infectious disease, engages them with the virtuoso performances on the fine art of medicine.  For doctors to become expert diagnosticians, he and his colleagues outlined 25 skills doctors should know simply as a beginning to more learning.

If students want to be in the specialty where the best and brightest work, then they should look no further than primary care, family medicine or internal medicine.  Besides dermatology, primary care is a specialty where doctors often start evaluating patients by talking, observing and examining.  Primary care doctors often see patients for the first time without any test results as these visits are usually the first time someone has sought medical care.  As a result, they need to skills to figure out which patient needs more extensive work-up and which one can safely care for the problem at home.  Though primary care isn't as attractive to medical students and proposals are underway to make the field more appealing, there is no question that it is the most cognitive specialty - a doctor's doctor specialty.

If the US healthcare system is to provide Americans better care it will need a generation of Top Guns in primary care to lead the change.  What Dr. Verghese offers his medical students and residents in his training is what all of us want in our doctor - someone who listens, observes, and examines thoughtfully to get the right diagnosis.

In other words, a doctor who is the best of the best.  As a practicing doctor, I would jump at the opportunity to learn from him.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in Abraham Verghese, clinical exam, primary care, Stanford, Top Gun | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Do Computers Really Come Between Doctors and Patients? Is the Future Here?
    One of my favorite movies is Back to the Future starring Michael J. Fox.  I must admit after reading this New York Times piece, titled ...
  • How Effective Are Generic Drugs?
    A brief ABC News video titled How Effective Are Generic Drugs? provides the truth about generic drugs. For the vast majority of individual...
  • Can Price Shopping Improve Health Care? Do Pigs Fly?
    In a recent Time magazine article Could Price Shopping Could Costs and Improve Health Care, the author suggests as many others have done i...
  • Book Review - the Empowered Patient by CNN Elizabeth Cohen. Too Adversarial.
    I understand the frustration and anger in CNN Senior Medical Correspondent Elizabeth Cohen’s new book, the Empowered Patient.  I agree that ...
  • Our Big Problem - Obesity - Who Will Solve?
    The Wall Street Journal recently published Our Big Problem: Obesity penned by a British physician Anthony Daniels, pen name Theodore Dalrym...
  • Rock Health, Enterpreneurs, Doctors and Witchcraft?
    I recently viewed health care through the lenses of a technology entrepreneur by attending the Health Innovation Summit hosted by Rock Healt...
  • The truth about prostate cancer screening
    Earlier this month, the American Cancer Society revised its recommendation for men regarding prostate cancer screening based on the latest r...
  • Why Understanding Teaming Is Critical for Health Care Leaders
    Solving the American health care system crisis is among the most complex and important challenges facing this generation. Is it possible ...
  • Part II - What Doctors and Healthcare Can Learn from the New England Patriots
    Although my team, the New England Patriots lost Super Bowl XLVI to the New York Giants in one of the most exciting and tense games in recent...
  • Coronary Calcium Scans Can Raise Cancer Risks
    Interesting articles from the Annals of Internal Medicine and reported in HealthDay courtesy of Yahoo. In summary, there is risk of radiatio...

Categories

  • ABC
  • Abraham Verghese
  • accountable care organization
  • Aenor Sawyer
  • alternative medicine
  • America Health Insurance Plans
  • American Academy of Family Physicians
  • American Academy of Pediatrics
  • American Cancer Society
  • American dream
  • American Heart Association
  • Amy Edmondson
  • Android
  • Annals of Internal Medicine
  • antibiotics
  • AP-GfK
  • Apple
  • Archives of Internal Medicine
  • Associated Press
  • atul gawande
  • autism
  • autopsy
  • avian flu
  • aviation industry
  • bankruptcy
  • Bill Belichick
  • Bill Maher
  • Blue Cross Blue Shield
  • bmi
  • board certification
  • body scans
  • book promotion
  • book review
  • boutique / concierge medicine
  • breast cancer
  • breast MRI
  • British Medical Journal
  • Brittany Murphy
  • c-section
  • calories
  • cancer
  • Captain Sullenberger
  • car accidents
  • cdc
  • Cedars Sinai
  • celebrity
  • cellphone
  • Centers for Disease Control
  • checklists
  • chest pain
  • child development
  • cholesterol
  • choosing doctor
  • Chuck Yeager
  • Clay Christensen
  • Cleveland Clinic
  • clinical exam
  • CNN
  • colon cancer
  • colonoscopy
  • communications
  • Congress
  • Congressional Budget Office
  • consumer driven health care
  • consumer reports
  • coronary calcium scan
  • Danielle Ofri
  • Democrats
  • Dennis Quaid
  • dermatomes
  • diabetes
  • dieting
  • doctor conversations
  • doctor patient relationship
  • Dr. Frank Ryan
  • Dr. Oz
  • Dr. Roizen
  • drowning
  • drug overdose
  • e-patient
  • EBRI
  • Economist
  • EKG
  • electronic medical records
  • Elizabeth Cohen
  • Elizabeth Edwards
  • empowered patient
  • entrepreneurs
  • evidence-based research
  • FAA
  • false positive
  • family history
  • family medicine
  • Family Practice News
  • FDA
  • federal government
  • FedEx
  • flexible sigmoidoscopy
  • flu vaccine
  • Forbes
  • Fortune
  • Framingham Heart Study
  • gallbladder surgery
  • generic medication
  • ginkgo biloba
  • Glenn Beck
  • globalization
  • glucosamine
  • Goldman Sachs
  • google
  • government run healthcare
  • H1N1 influenza
  • Harvard Business Review
  • Harvard Business School
  • Health Affairs
  • health insurance
  • health savings accounts
  • healthcare costs
  • healthcare crisis
  • healthcare rationing
  • healthcare reform
  • HealthDay
  • heart attack
  • heart disease
  • heart scan
  • heart stent
  • heparin
  • herbal and dietary supplements
  • high blood pressure
  • high deductible insurance
  • Hispanics
  • history taking
  • HIV
  • HMO
  • hormone replacement therapy
  • hospital safety
  • HSA
  • human papilloma virus
  • hypothyroidism
  • IIHS
  • immunizations
  • information technology
  • insurers
  • Intel
  • Intermountain Healthcare
  • internet
  • iPhone
  • iPod
  • iron triangle
  • JAMA
  • Japanese Americans
  • Jason Hwang
  • Jean Chatzky
  • Jerome Groopman
  • Jerome Grossman
  • John Murtha
  • John Wooden
  • Kaiser
  • knee pain
  • LA Times
  • LASIK eye surgery
  • leadership
  • Leapfrog Group
  • licensing
  • Life Line Screening
  • Lipitor
  • Lisa Sanders
  • lyme disease
  • macular degeneration
  • Malcolm Gladwell
  • malpractice
  • mammogram
  • Massachusetts
  • Mayo Clinic
  • Medicaid
  • medical decision making
  • medical errors
  • medical home
  • medical omission
  • medical savings accounts
  • medical students
  • Medicare
  • medication splitting
  • medications
  • Medline Plus
  • meningitis
  • mentoring
  • Michael J Fox
  • Michael Pollan
  • Microsoft
  • migraine
  • Money magazine
  • motor vehicle accidents
  • MP3 players
  • MRI
  • multiple sclerosis
  • multitasking
  • mutual funds
  • National Cancer Institute
  • National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA)
  • NCQA
  • neck pain
  • New England Journal of Medicine
  • New England Patriots
  • new year resolution
  • New York
  • Newsweek
  • Nicholas Kristof
  • NPR
  • nurse practitioners
  • NY Times
  • obesity
  • office of the patient advocate
  • office visit
  • open enrollment
  • Oprah
  • osteoporosis
  • ovarian cancer
  • overtreatment
  • Pamela Hartzband
  • pandemic
  • Pap smear
  • parenting
  • patient education
  • patient safety
  • Pauline Chen
  • PCMH
  • pertussis
  • Peter Pronovost
  • pharmaceutical companies
  • pharmacist
  • pharmacy
  • physician assistants
  • physician leadership
  • physician reimbursement
  • plastic surgery
  • Plavix
  • PLCO
  • pneumovax
  • portion distortion
  • post-herpetic neuralgia
  • pregnant women
  • prenatal
  • President Bush
  • President Obama
  • preventive health
  • preventive screening tests
  • primary care
  • prostate cancer
  • protocols
  • public health
  • Public plan
  • radiculopathy
  • Real Simple
  • Republicans
  • retail clinics
  • retirement planning
  • Robert Wachter
  • Rock Health
  • sacramento magazine
  • San Antonio Breast Symposium
  • San Francisco chronicle
  • SARS
  • saw palmetto
  • Scott Haig
  • SEIU
  • Senator Kennedy
  • Shannon Brownlee
  • Sharon Ito
  • shingles
  • Stanford
  • state medical board
  • Steve Jobs
  • Suzanne Somers
  • swimming
  • syncope
  • Tara Parker-Pope
  • teaming
  • teamwork
  • texting
  • The Thrifty Patient
  • Thomas Goetz
  • Thomas Lee
  • Tiger Woods
  • Time magazine
  • Today show
  • Tom Brady
  • Tom Lee
  • Top Gun
  • true story
  • tylenol
  • ultrasound
  • uninsured
  • unions
  • US News and World Report
  • US Preventive Services Task Force
  • USA Today
  • VA
  • vaccinations
  • vaccinations Newsweek
  • vegetarian
  • Vinod Kholsa
  • Virginia Mason
  • virtual colonoscopy
  • virtual medicine
  • vitamin b12
  • vitamins
  • Wal-Mart
  • Wall Street Journal
  • Warren Buffet
  • Washington Post
  • weight loss
  • White Coke Can
  • whooping cough
  • Wired
  • worksite clinics
  • writing
  • Zostavax
  • zoster

Blog Archive

  • ►  2012 (12)
    • ►  November (1)
    • ►  October (2)
    • ►  September (1)
    • ►  August (4)
    • ►  April (2)
    • ►  March (1)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2011 (20)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  October (1)
    • ►  September (2)
    • ►  August (2)
    • ►  July (2)
    • ►  June (2)
    • ►  April (3)
    • ►  March (2)
    • ►  February (3)
    • ►  January (2)
  • ▼  2010 (45)
    • ►  December (2)
    • ►  November (3)
    • ▼  October (5)
      • The Best Health Insurance - Can Save Your Life
      • Abraham Verghese - The Top Gun of American Medicine
      • How to Pick Good Health Insurance - Your Life Depe...
      • Health Reform - Explained Simply - from Kaiser Fam...
      • Do I Need Cholesterol Medication? Is My Cholester...
    • ►  September (4)
    • ►  August (5)
    • ►  July (4)
    • ►  June (4)
    • ►  May (5)
    • ►  April (4)
    • ►  March (2)
    • ►  February (3)
    • ►  January (4)
  • ►  2009 (47)
    • ►  December (3)
    • ►  November (8)
    • ►  October (6)
    • ►  September (8)
    • ►  August (7)
    • ►  July (9)
    • ►  June (6)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Henry Witiou
View my complete profile