HIGH PRAISE FROM THE HEAD OF THE AAMC
Darrell Kirch, guest speaker at the College of Medicine’s capstone 10th-anniversary
event Oct. 7, offered congratulations for 10 years of innovation – and
challenged his audience to join him in transforming the nation’s health system
into one that truly responds to patients’ needs.
“I
can’t say enough good things about what you’ve accomplished,” said Kirch,
president and CEO of the Association of American Medical Colleges. “The problem
is now we need to extend it to other medical schools and to the entire
health-care system.”
(In the photo here, he's making sure his audience notices the garnet and gold
in his tie.)
Kirch took his listeners, both on the main campus and by webcast at the
college’s regional campuses, on a lively tour of the past century of American
health care. He showed how the U.S. – despite great advances in medical
knowledge and education – has created a culture that discourages
patient-centered care. Add in the recent health-reform act and the downturn in
the economy, Kirch said, and you have a system in urgent need of change.
“Who is going to fix this?” he asked. “You need to have some of the best minds
in the nation who understand how you deliver health care, how you educate health
professionals and how you study – do research on what works and doesn’t. You
need to have those come together, and they come together in academic medicine.”
He described a recipe for change that has six ingredients – and he said he had
seen all six ingredients at work during his two days at the College of Medicine.
Those ingredients are:
1. A mission statement that you actually intend to fulfill. “You have the most
focused mission statement I’ve ever seen for a medical school,” he said. “And
you’ve been relentless in every one of your programs to line up your activities
with that mission statement.”
2. Integrated, interactive leadership.
3. Teamwork.
4. A focus on results. “What I’m impressed by is you’re actually saying not
just ‘Are we doing good things?’ but ‘Are we really delivering on what we
promised – what we promised when we were established and what we say in our
mission statement, what we say to our students when they apply?’ You’re
measuring your results in line with your promises.”
5. Medical ethics. “When you have expansive areas of Florida where people can’t
even get to health care, when you have people searching in vain for decent
primary care homes, that’s not a just health-care system,” Kirch said.
6. Courage. “We’re at a time in our country when I fear courage is in short
supply,” he said. “But I know where we need it most is in fixing our health-care
system and training the next generation of physicians to be our partners in
doing that.”
Also that evening was the first public viewing of “From Ideas to Outcomes,” a
25-minute video charting the first 10 years of the College of Medicine.
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