Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Professionalism and Medical Social Engagement

Jack Coulehan, Peter C Williams, S. Van McCrary, and Catherine Belling in the Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, 2003 12 21-38,  article, "The Best Lack All Conviction: Biomedical Ethics, Professionalism and Social Responsibility" do a superb job of discussing "Professionalism and Social Engagement".  As a clinician I truly admire the way they summarize the issues clearly.
They begin by asking "Are altruism and social activism appropriate topics for medical education to address/"  While saying we 'admire' doctors who 'work in free clinics' or 'engage in public policy debates" but, "do these activities make them better doctors or simply better people?
I have had to reflect on this alot in my life because it's my personal experience that I have been penalized routinely for putting patients concerns first and "rocking the boat' or 'swimming upstream' against individual and institutional graft and corruption.
I was indeed told that my membership in Physicians for Social Responsibility and my days as a card carrying member of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association was considered a 'fault' in a psychiatrist.  While I was reading Jay Lifton, MD's books, including "Nazi Doctors',  my colleagues who went onto increased power and position were studying "business administration" and reading 'financial columns."
I began a dual speciality in Community Medicine and Psychiatry where at the time the furthest extremes of equation public and private were represented by both faculties. The Community Medicine faculty taught me public health concerns and I even wrote a paper on Psychiatry and Social Responsibility in the 80's in the Canadian journal, seeing it back paged. I wrote responses to medicare decisions in the provincial journals and was actively involved in medicine and politics.
In comparison one colleague saw roughly 50 patients for 30 years having a coffee clutch weekly with these loyal patients.  I saw thousands in comparison and worked on the toughest 'assignments'.  I am usually uttterly exhausted by the end of any clinical day.  I certainly haven't time left over for the constant beaurocratic in fighting and back scratching.
New patients are the greatest risk of complaint.  A 'stable' is never a threat.  My colleague who 'gives patients what they want' has a loyal following. Popularity is their calling.  Rate your doctor has their name as 5 star.  They cherry pick patients and had been seeing their friends only for decades.  They sat on committees and served in the main stream high profile positions.  They had energy for these functions where they ensured that the greatest funding and support went to doctors of like mind.  In the end they had 'position power'.  They never 'rocked the boat' and they never challenged the authorities.
Social responsibility is a precarious position.
I think back to a half dozen complaints I had to the College of Physicians and Surgeons and the most vociferously complaining patients on rate your doctor.  These complaints have been specifically to do with my diagnosis and addressing addictions. While in my psychiatric residency I worked in the Winnipeg Detox.  I fear I was the only psychiatrist who did that, certainly the only one I knew while I was there.  When I came to BC I just naturally continued to diagnose alcoholism and substance dependence according to DSMIV criteria, using AUDIT and CAGE screening tests when available.  Alcoholism and substance abuse disorders were simply rarely diagnosed. The standing joke in the 80's was that you didn't have an alcoholism problem unless you drank more than your doctor.
I have seen patients that other colleagues have 'colluded with' and said they did not have 'alcoholism'.  No clinician would question a list of DUI's and liver disease etc as evidenced based diagnosis but I would invariably be the first to make the "diagnosis" despite dozens of doctors seeing the patients. The patients would be outraged,
The consequences of my doing my 'job' of diagnosing 'alcohol dependence", "cocaine abuse' and other DSMIV Axis I diagnosis has been that my life has been threatened repeatedly, my windows shot out, beer bottles smashed against my windshield, cases of empties thrown at my house, my dog killed.  It would have been professional and socially responsible for my colleagues to have made the correct diagnosis but 'at what cost.'
The consequence of a diagnosis of 'addiction' was that people who were working in safety sensitive areas and were causing accidents in the work place would be 'required' to 'undergo' treatment for the addiction.However if they could get a psychaitrist to say that they were 'depressed' rather than having a 'concurrent diagnosis' they could avoid the  consequence of their actions.  Indeed if they could get a psychaitrist to tell them their mother's lack of breast feeding necessitated their drinking at the age of 50, even better.
The cost of doing the 'right thing' being the 'socially responsible' doctor, is that I have lost at least a quarter million dollars  in real money and time.  I've lost personal time to pursue my own research interests.  Instead of addressing issues of 2012 I'm mired in dealing with what was proven true and beneficial 20 years ago.  Indeed in general psychiatry circles I am surrounded by proponents of 'better living through chemistry' and considered too 'conservative' when it comes to addiction matters.  Social activism is only 'hip' if it's left wing and pro pot smoking.
The politics of medicine favour those who make the most money in the practice of medicine.  Making the most money is based on doing the old technologies and old standards of approach.  The reformer is an enemy of anyone who benefits from the status quo.
All my pro bono work in a variety of areas has in no way benefitted me in the 'hierarchy' of medicine.  Indeed I've heard colleagues contend that if I'm doing these things for free then they are without value.  When doctors have attempted to get paid for all their many hours of 'free' work people collectively become obscenely offended yet would never expect anyone else to work overtime, be on call, or work without pay.  The deeply shameful government year in and year out published the 'gross earnings' of doctors who routinely paid tens of thousands of dollars in training and started earning 10 to 15 years later and died routinely 10 years younger and worked on average 120 hours, the equivalent of 3 government jobs, yet were compensated at a penance of their worth.  When people complain of the 'nationalization' of mines and copywright theft and fixed housing income and interference in private business, I just reflect that I have worked my entire life with a ceiling, and supported government services up the ying yang through taxes and my doing the core clinical work which is what causes the overall health care services to be supported. There is no health care services without doctors but administrators and planners and beaurocrats galore ride on the shirt tails of the work of physicians, work that is commonly donated free. So every time I did 'motivational therapy' regarding quitting smoking going back
Now I'm at the end of my career and if the life expectancy of the doctors I started is anything to speak too, perhaps my life, due to stress and overwork and lack of resources or support.  So many of my colleagues I worked with in early years died in their 60's, and then there were those friends who died young from diseases the caught in their work.  Every doctor I know except some administrative government types and a few for profit only doctors generally does pro bono work.  Even in the 'bad' United States it was standard for doctors to donate their time to the indigent hospitals.  If I were paid in my office today for all the work that I do I'd be a millionaire many times over.  Looking at the fee schedules with a colleague recently we laughed at how the 'bean counters' have set it up so that hospital doctors with accounting departments can ensure that ever cent owed is collected whereas in community medicine and psychiatry bad debt in the name of the game.  I've lost 20$ of my income in uncollected fees in a bad year, 10% in a good year.  When I had a psychopathic staff person steal from me her criminal behaviour was never addressed by police or government.  The doctor is routinely treated as the 'bad' person with all those poor people who are suffering and yet it's so forgotten that doctors are patients too.
I don't get breaks financially.  I don't have people doing things for free for me.  Instead my life has been that people in business learn I'm a doctor and I am double charged even though a doctor saved their baby's life. There's a great lie in business that business people are 'big hearted' . They're not. The rich are rich by not losing money.  Yet we know the standard joke is to invest where doctors are not.  Because doctors collectively are giving it away.
So despite being reasonably re imbursed, not at all in the league of health care administrators when their time off, holidays, lunches, perks, coffees, pensions, plans and everything is truly factored in, we're still working for free alot for the sake of patients. We're covering the indigent. We're all doing our best for children and commonly women and the old.  We're staying late at bed sides and we're really caring.  But when doctors go on salary oddly they work like normal people and the whole system simply cannot afford salaried doctors here.  Salary commonly brings out the 'union' 'work to rule' ideation. Maybe it works elsewhere. Maybe it could work.  The difficulty in the field is that there are those who are communists and those who are capitalists. The socialists sit in between somewhere and mostly we thrive in a mixed economy.  My favourite cosmetic surgeon donated time to the burn clinic. He made his money on nips and tucks and could enjoy restoring children's faces after devastating burns.  The standard medical service payment couldn't pay anything near his fees and any businessman wouldn't work in the low end of the scale with the burn patients. Yet most plastic surgeons I know do just this.  Even the dermatologists, another high paying group who could all be rich overnight if they just stuck to botox instead serve in indigent communities.  It's normal to see this.

So this article definitely wet my whistle.  The AMA recommended 'each physician has an obligation to share in providing care to the indigent".


The authors of this article while raising the question and discussing it conclude
"In summary, it is fair to say that there is a long tradition of social responsibility in the medical profession."

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

as I mentioned before you are a kind and caring person

and a perfectionist

at your age Dr

it is time to let the younger ones take the weight

or you will burn yoursef out

again

haykind said...

I appreciate your thoughts but my impression is that the good doctors are collectively burnt out. I am hopeful when I hear more and more people speaking up for the community and profession. The people I most admired are withdrawing from the controversial areas of medicine. I was more keenly interested in spiritual psychiatry having done an MDiv, studied many years in theology, teaching courses and enjoying the British Medical Associations Spiritual Psychiatry. It's mandatory in Britain and the US but locally it's deeply frowned on. Here euthanasia, abortion, materialism, aetheism,addiction, dialectics and bioethics are the haute couture. So far much of the bioethics I see being celebrated is not like these authors who remind me of my studies of Aristotelian Ethics with emphasis on the Good. Instead there's this doggerel social darwinism and the attempt to put perfume on decaying bodies. A Jewish colleague who had survived Auschwitz, and was someone I so appreciated as a mentor described the ideas of political correctness as 'maggots crawling off the dead bodies of Marx and Freud". He was as pilloried for his contributions as my other colleague mentor a brilliant psychiatrist who had been a spit fire pilot in the Battle of Britain. Most recently my mentor who was awarded by the Pope for his work was subjected to outright persecution because he like the others were frankly ahead of their times. They all were going strong till 70's expressing truth from experience that is smothered by the Darth Vaders of this age. My preference is for spiritual psychiatry because I believe that philosophy is really just a religion of materialism today as academically practiced. We are more moved by Steven Jobs and NASA and rightly so. At least my theological colleagues have less difficults with Higgs Particle so recently found.

haykind said...

As for 'perfectionism', I was told in years of therapy and training that I was decidedly 'psychologically minded'. Psychological mindedness is the ability to tolerate the tension of opposites. I've long argued that extremists never appreciate the safety of their positions because they are narcissistically overwhelmed by their one sided bullet holes. Moderates such as my self who sit dead centre taking a middle position are riddled with holes from every side, front and back. It is in the middle that trench warfare occurs and where eurekas are heard. Extremists simply meet out the outer edges of their minds, like the Nazis and Communists. It's why Jesus said 'love your neighbour' and Martin Buber sought the 'thou' .

haykind said...

I appreciate your thoughts but my impression is that the good doctors are collectively burnt out. I am hopeful when I hear more and more people speaking up for the community and profession. The people I most admired are withdrawing from the controversial areas of medicine. I was more keenly interested in spiritual psychiatry having done an MDiv, studied many years in theology, teaching courses and enjoying the British Medical Associations Spiritual Psychiatry. It's mandatory in Britain and the US but locally it's deeply frowned on. Here euthanasia, abortion, materialism, aetheism,addiction, dialectics and bioethics are the haute couture. So far much of the bioethics I see being celebrated is not like these authors who remind me of my studies of Aristotelian Ethics with emphasis on the Good. Instead there's this doggerel social darwinism and the attempt to put perfume on decaying bodies. A Jewish colleague who had survived Auschwitz, and was someone I so appreciated as a mentor described the ideas of political correctness as 'maggots crawling off the dead bodies of Marx and Freud". He was as pilloried for his contributions as my other colleague mentor a brilliant psychiatrist who had been a spit fire pilot in the Battle of Britain. Most recently my mentor who was awarded by the Pope for his work was subjected to outright persecution because he like the others were frankly ahead of their times. They all were going strong till 70's expressing truth from experience that is smothered by the Darth Vaders of this age. My preference is for spiritual psychiatry because I believe that philosophy is really just a religion of materialism today as academically practiced. We are more moved by Steven Jobs and NASA and rightly so. At least my theological colleagues have less difficults with Higgs Particle so recently found.