Beyond the Box: Focussing on Shared Humanity in Medical Professionalism

IF 1.4 Q4 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
Clinical Teacher Pub Date : 2025-01-05 DOI:10.1111/tct.70020
Beatrice T. B. Preti
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We have more in common than different—differences, I might add, which are often socially imposed and perpetuated. We are all alive, living in the same world. We breathe the same air, rest on the same ground, feel the same sun.</p><p>If we focus on our shared humanity, on the myriad things that connect us, this allows the (often) socially imposed boxes that separate us to fade into the background. Consider the things that typically breed separation—or ‘otherness’. Why does it matter on what side of an arbitrary line in the sand one was born, or one lived, or one lives or one works, if we are here now, in this moment, together? Why does it matter what languages one speaks, if we can understand each other? Why does it matter by what name one calls God—or if one calls to God at all? Why does it matter what shade one's skin is, or one's hair colour, or hairstyle or outwardly projected appearance in general? Does that affect whether one is kind? Understanding? Patient? Knowledgeable? Can we focus on each other as individuals, brilliant and unique, without focussing on what separates us? Yes, tribalism (connection to a group, to the exclusion of others) exists in medicine [<span>7</span>]. Yes, there is belonging and comfort to be found amongst those with whom one perceives similarity. I am not arguing otherwise.</p><p>But does tribalism have a <i>place</i> in medicine? Or does it stand in the way of what might be called true professionalism—seeing each other first and foremost as individuals?</p><p>Let us consider this in more detail.</p><p>As the mixed-race child of two multicultural parents, cultural norms have always been in flux, more contingent on those surrounding me than on my presence. Hierarchy, power, tradition and culture were concepts I knew before I could articulate the words—and adaptation was an unspoken understanding. A religious gathering with one group of family, for example, was a very different affair from a religious gathering with another part of the family. Understandable, when one considers culture to be the product of social learning defining belonging a group [<span>8</span>].</p><p>And yet, growing up, our house—a sanctuary where adaptation was unnecessary—was a melting pot of foods, smells, accents, clothes, colours, … something undefinable by textbook classification, but uniquely <i>us</i>. Even now, I struggle to describe myself according to any one particular culture's norms. What word captures that phenomenon when cultures collide, creating something that does not fit into any particular group?</p><p>There are rooms where a melting pot is not welcome. Where a lack of culture, a lack of a box to fit into, breeds discomfort. There are crowds where one is more often defined by what is <i>not</i> than by what one is. Many who read this will share understanding.</p><p>However, the idea that medicine, with its increasing diversity, has given rise to a melting pot of its own is intriguing [<span>4, 5</span>]. I returned to work shortly after the final conference plenary talk. Within the space of a single morning, three separate individuals indicated to me that they had a clear idea of what a doctor should look/sound/act like—and I was not fitting the bill. Despite over a decade in the medical field, it is still not uncommon for me to hear that I am not a ‘real’ doctor, that a real doctor is, well, defined by some box I do not fit into.</p><p>And I have counselled many learners who have faced similar struggles.</p><p>Patients have a sense of what professionalism in medicine is. Naturally, this sense changes from room to room. From culture to culture. From person to person. And it is foolish to think the face of medicine could ever match the expectations of a mosaic of patients, cultures, backgrounds, beliefs and—yes—prejudices.</p><p>It is one thing to discuss professionalism within medicine. To discuss the need to focus on our shared humanity when interacting with patients, ignoring for a moment the problem of cultural norms within the diverse patient groups we face. Not everyone will see humanity when looking at a doctor. Such is the nature of medicine, where patients come to us at their worst, their most vulnerable. But we are also those patients, with our diverse backgrounds, cultures, beliefs and prejudices that follow us wherever we go.</p><p>Before we can expect others to see us for who we are, beyond the boxes we do and do not fit into, we need to see humanity when we look at each other. And this shared humanity, I would argue, should serve as a crucial component backbone for professional norms in medicine, providing a scaffold through which more profession-specific nuances can fall.</p><p>Tensions arise when students experience conflict between personal values and professional norms [<span>9</span>]. In the chaotic background of world events and politics, I have had many learners come to me, battling moral distress as they try to balance their duties to the profession with duties to humanity. They find themselves torn between advocacy for human rights and maintaining a ‘professional’ front, struggling to find the line between being an ‘acceptable’ advocate and being a ‘troublemaker’. By trying to walk the line between various cultures, traditions, and social norms, they find themselves walking no line at all, feeling inauthentic, and sliding into burnout, isolation, and disillusionment. I have heard the stories of learners whose interactions with others within medicine have left them feeling less than human. They are floundering within a culture, within a system, which fails to recognise their humanity. They have been rejected by the ‘tribe’.</p><p>And, perhaps, here lies the key. While it is debatable whether tribalism is inherent to human nature, it is indisputable that one cannot create a tribe without individuals. <i>Medicine</i> cannot operate without individuals. No culture or society can. Yet tribalism, reciprocally, erases the emphasis on the individual. And it is folly to think one person can influence the centuries of culture, tradition, hierarchy, and power that play into current professional norms (in the Western world).</p><p>Or is it?</p><p>In medicine, we are taught in early days to treat all patients the same, to put aside personal prejudices, biases and thoughts and to care for the patient in front of us as if they are the only person who matters.</p><p>Could not the same hold true for those who work in medicine as well? If we treat each physician, each learner, each <i>other</i>, as individuals we share humanness with, could this not create a different culture—a culture of shared humanity? Before we can speak about redefining professional norms, the culture of medicine—we need to learn how we, as individual humans, can reach across the divide towards other humans.</p><p>We are all struggling. We are all flawed. And, oftentimes, individual interactions, individual change, can feel like a drop in an ocean. But how else can change start, if not with one person?</p><p>As the child of a tree with roots spanning countries, continents, nations and peoples, I have always struggled to find a ‘fit’. To find a box that describes me. More often than not, I find boxes used by others for ‘othering’: to point out differences, rather than similarities. Some of the most interesting conversations I have had have been with other melting pots, a journey of discovery, connection, and learning.</p><p>And if I can apply this same curiosity, learning and connection to every person I meet, perhaps, this is the first step in finding my ‘professionalism’, walking a new path into a modern era of medicine.</p><p><b>B.T.B. Preti:</b> conceptualization, writing–original draft, writing–review and editing.</p><p>The author declares no conflicts of interest.</p>","PeriodicalId":47324,"journal":{"name":"Clinical Teacher","volume":"22 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.4000,"publicationDate":"2025-01-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/tct.70020","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Clinical Teacher","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/tct.70020","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

The need to critically re-examine the professional norms we are demonstrating and teaching in medical education has gained traction in the published literature [1] and beyond. At a recent medical education conference, several plenary speakers discussed various aspects of professionalism and professional norms [2, 3]. These helped foster a number of more formal [4, 5] and informal conversations about different meanings of the term ‘professionalism’, its implications and the ever-present collisions at the estuary of medical culture, tradition, hierarchy and power, all evolving over time.

Current professional norms differ from place to place but generally provide a framework or guideline for physician (and trainee!) behaviour [6]. Issues arise, however, when the cultural norms on which professionalism are based do not reflect the norms and values of those working in the profession [2-5]. Focussing on and connecting on shared humanity—on those aspects that we all have in common and those aspects that make us wonderfully, brilliantly unique—could provide a very broad scaffold in which each individual physician could thrive. After all, there is more that connects us than separates us—and a focus on this is (or should be) the true professionalism of the medical profession.

Before launching into professionalism as a whole, we can first start by considering what, exactly, ‘shared humanity’ is. It is a term growing in popularity, but the nuanced differences in its meaning can vary from setting to setting. By shared humanity, in this article, I am referring, very simply, to the human existence that binds us all. We have more in common than different—differences, I might add, which are often socially imposed and perpetuated. We are all alive, living in the same world. We breathe the same air, rest on the same ground, feel the same sun.

If we focus on our shared humanity, on the myriad things that connect us, this allows the (often) socially imposed boxes that separate us to fade into the background. Consider the things that typically breed separation—or ‘otherness’. Why does it matter on what side of an arbitrary line in the sand one was born, or one lived, or one lives or one works, if we are here now, in this moment, together? Why does it matter what languages one speaks, if we can understand each other? Why does it matter by what name one calls God—or if one calls to God at all? Why does it matter what shade one's skin is, or one's hair colour, or hairstyle or outwardly projected appearance in general? Does that affect whether one is kind? Understanding? Patient? Knowledgeable? Can we focus on each other as individuals, brilliant and unique, without focussing on what separates us? Yes, tribalism (connection to a group, to the exclusion of others) exists in medicine [7]. Yes, there is belonging and comfort to be found amongst those with whom one perceives similarity. I am not arguing otherwise.

But does tribalism have a place in medicine? Or does it stand in the way of what might be called true professionalism—seeing each other first and foremost as individuals?

Let us consider this in more detail.

As the mixed-race child of two multicultural parents, cultural norms have always been in flux, more contingent on those surrounding me than on my presence. Hierarchy, power, tradition and culture were concepts I knew before I could articulate the words—and adaptation was an unspoken understanding. A religious gathering with one group of family, for example, was a very different affair from a religious gathering with another part of the family. Understandable, when one considers culture to be the product of social learning defining belonging a group [8].

And yet, growing up, our house—a sanctuary where adaptation was unnecessary—was a melting pot of foods, smells, accents, clothes, colours, … something undefinable by textbook classification, but uniquely us. Even now, I struggle to describe myself according to any one particular culture's norms. What word captures that phenomenon when cultures collide, creating something that does not fit into any particular group?

There are rooms where a melting pot is not welcome. Where a lack of culture, a lack of a box to fit into, breeds discomfort. There are crowds where one is more often defined by what is not than by what one is. Many who read this will share understanding.

However, the idea that medicine, with its increasing diversity, has given rise to a melting pot of its own is intriguing [4, 5]. I returned to work shortly after the final conference plenary talk. Within the space of a single morning, three separate individuals indicated to me that they had a clear idea of what a doctor should look/sound/act like—and I was not fitting the bill. Despite over a decade in the medical field, it is still not uncommon for me to hear that I am not a ‘real’ doctor, that a real doctor is, well, defined by some box I do not fit into.

And I have counselled many learners who have faced similar struggles.

Patients have a sense of what professionalism in medicine is. Naturally, this sense changes from room to room. From culture to culture. From person to person. And it is foolish to think the face of medicine could ever match the expectations of a mosaic of patients, cultures, backgrounds, beliefs and—yes—prejudices.

It is one thing to discuss professionalism within medicine. To discuss the need to focus on our shared humanity when interacting with patients, ignoring for a moment the problem of cultural norms within the diverse patient groups we face. Not everyone will see humanity when looking at a doctor. Such is the nature of medicine, where patients come to us at their worst, their most vulnerable. But we are also those patients, with our diverse backgrounds, cultures, beliefs and prejudices that follow us wherever we go.

Before we can expect others to see us for who we are, beyond the boxes we do and do not fit into, we need to see humanity when we look at each other. And this shared humanity, I would argue, should serve as a crucial component backbone for professional norms in medicine, providing a scaffold through which more profession-specific nuances can fall.

Tensions arise when students experience conflict between personal values and professional norms [9]. In the chaotic background of world events and politics, I have had many learners come to me, battling moral distress as they try to balance their duties to the profession with duties to humanity. They find themselves torn between advocacy for human rights and maintaining a ‘professional’ front, struggling to find the line between being an ‘acceptable’ advocate and being a ‘troublemaker’. By trying to walk the line between various cultures, traditions, and social norms, they find themselves walking no line at all, feeling inauthentic, and sliding into burnout, isolation, and disillusionment. I have heard the stories of learners whose interactions with others within medicine have left them feeling less than human. They are floundering within a culture, within a system, which fails to recognise their humanity. They have been rejected by the ‘tribe’.

And, perhaps, here lies the key. While it is debatable whether tribalism is inherent to human nature, it is indisputable that one cannot create a tribe without individuals. Medicine cannot operate without individuals. No culture or society can. Yet tribalism, reciprocally, erases the emphasis on the individual. And it is folly to think one person can influence the centuries of culture, tradition, hierarchy, and power that play into current professional norms (in the Western world).

Or is it?

In medicine, we are taught in early days to treat all patients the same, to put aside personal prejudices, biases and thoughts and to care for the patient in front of us as if they are the only person who matters.

Could not the same hold true for those who work in medicine as well? If we treat each physician, each learner, each other, as individuals we share humanness with, could this not create a different culture—a culture of shared humanity? Before we can speak about redefining professional norms, the culture of medicine—we need to learn how we, as individual humans, can reach across the divide towards other humans.

We are all struggling. We are all flawed. And, oftentimes, individual interactions, individual change, can feel like a drop in an ocean. But how else can change start, if not with one person?

As the child of a tree with roots spanning countries, continents, nations and peoples, I have always struggled to find a ‘fit’. To find a box that describes me. More often than not, I find boxes used by others for ‘othering’: to point out differences, rather than similarities. Some of the most interesting conversations I have had have been with other melting pots, a journey of discovery, connection, and learning.

And if I can apply this same curiosity, learning and connection to every person I meet, perhaps, this is the first step in finding my ‘professionalism’, walking a new path into a modern era of medicine.

B.T.B. Preti: conceptualization, writing–original draft, writing–review and editing.

The author declares no conflicts of interest.

跳出框框:关注医学专业精神中的共同人性。
需要批判性地重新审视我们在医学教育中所展示和教学的专业规范,这在已发表的文献中已经获得了吸引力。在最近的一次医学教育会议上,几位全体发言人讨论了专业精神和专业规范的各个方面[2,3]。这有助于促进一些更正式的[4,5]和非正式的对话,讨论术语“专业”的不同含义,它的含义以及在医学文化、传统、等级和权力的河口一直存在的冲突,所有这些都随着时间的推移而发展。目前的专业规范因地而异,但通常为医生(和实习生)的行为提供了一个框架或指导方针。然而,当专业精神所依据的文化规范不能反映专业人士的规范和价值观时,问题就出现了[2-5]。关注并关注共同的人性——关注我们所有人的共同之处,关注那些让我们变得精彩、独特的方面——可以提供一个非常广阔的框架,让每个医生都能在其中茁壮成长。毕竟,将我们联系在一起的东西比将我们分开的东西要多——专注于此才是(或者应该是)医学职业真正的专业精神。在全面探讨专业主义之前,我们可以先考虑一下什么是“共同的人性”。这是一个越来越受欢迎的术语,但其含义的细微差异可能因环境而异。在这篇文章中,我所说的共享人性,非常简单地指的是将我们所有人联系在一起的人类存在。我们的共同之处多于不同之处——我不妨补充一句,这些不同之处往往是社会强加的,是长期存在的。我们都活着,生活在同一个世界。我们呼吸同样的空气,在同一片土地上休息,感受同样的阳光。如果我们专注于我们共同的人性,专注于将我们联系在一起的无数事物,这就允许(通常)社会强加的将我们分开的盒子消失在背景中。想想那些通常会导致分离或“差异性”的事情。如果我们现在在这里,在这一刻,在一起,为什么一个人出生,生活,生活,工作在任意一条沙线的哪一边那么重要呢?如果我们能相互理解,说什么语言又有什么关系呢?为什么一个人用什么名字称呼上帝——或者一个人是否呼求上帝——那么重要呢?为什么一个人的肤色、发色、发型或外表都很重要呢?这会影响一个人是否善良吗?理解吗?病人吗?知识渊博的吗?我们能不能把彼此当作独立的个体,聪明而独特,而不去关注我们之间的区别?是的,部落主义(与一个群体联系,排斥他人)存在于医学领域。是的,在那些与你有相似之处的人中间,你会找到归属感和舒适感。我不是在反驳。但是部落主义在医学中有一席之地吗?或者它是否阻碍了所谓的真正的专业精神——首先把彼此视为个体?让我们更详细地考虑这个问题。作为两个多元文化父母的混血儿,文化规范一直在变化,更多地取决于我周围的人,而不是我的存在。等级制度、权力、传统和文化,这些概念在我能够清晰地表达出来之前就已经知道了,而适应是一种不言而喻的理解。例如,一组家庭的宗教聚会与另一组家庭的宗教聚会是非常不同的。这是可以理解的,当一个人认为文化是社会学习的产物,定义了属于一个群体[8]。然而,在成长过程中,我们的家——一个无需适应的庇护所——是一个食物、气味、口音、衣服、颜色的大熔炉……一些教科书上无法分类的东西,但却是我们独有的。即使是现在,我也很难根据任何一种特定文化的规范来描述自己。当文化碰撞,创造出不适合任何特定群体的东西时,哪个词能描述这种现象?在有些地方,熔炉是不受欢迎的。在这里,缺乏文化,缺乏可以适应的框框,会滋生不适。在有些人群中,定义一个人的往往是他不是什么,而不是他是什么。许多读过这篇文章的人都会有同感。然而,随着医学多样性的增加,医学本身已经形成了一个大熔炉的想法是有趣的[4,5]。在最后一次全体会议发言后不久,我就回去工作了。在一个上午的时间里,三个不同的人向我表示,他们对医生应该是什么样子/声音/行为有一个明确的想法——而我不符合这个要求。尽管在医学领域工作了十多年,我仍然经常听到有人说我不是一个“真正的”医生,一个真正的医生,嗯,是被一些我不适合的盒子所定义的。 我也辅导过许多面临类似困境的学习者。病人知道什么是医学专业。当然,这种感觉会随着房间的不同而变化。从一个文化到另一个文化。从一个人到另一个人。认为医学的面貌能够符合病人、文化、背景、信仰和偏见的期望是愚蠢的。在医学领域讨论专业性是一回事。讨论在与患者互动时关注我们共同的人性的必要性,暂时忽略我们所面临的不同患者群体中的文化规范问题。不是每个人在看医生的时候都会看到人性。这就是医学的本质,病人在最糟糕、最脆弱的时候来找我们。但我们也是这些病人,我们有着不同的背景、文化、信仰和偏见,无论我们走到哪里,这些都伴随着我们。在我们期望别人看到真实的我们之前,我们需要在我们看待彼此时看到人性,而不是我们所能适应和不适应的框框。我认为,这种共同的人性应该成为医学专业规范的重要组成部分,为更多专业特定的细微差别提供一个支撑。当学生经历个人价值观和专业规范之间的冲突时,紧张情绪就会产生。在世界事件和政治的混乱背景下,我有许多学习者来找我,在努力平衡他们对职业的责任和对人类的责任时,他们正在与道德困境作斗争。他们发现自己在倡导人权和维持“专业”战线之间左右为难,努力寻找“可接受”的倡导者和“麻烦制造者”之间的界限。当他们试图游走在不同的文化、传统和社会规范之间时,他们发现自己完全没有界线,感觉不真实,并陷入倦怠、孤立和幻灭的境地。我听过一些学生的故事,他们在医学领域与其他人的互动让他们觉得自己不如人。他们在一种文化中挣扎,在一种不承认他们人性的制度中挣扎。他们被“部落”拒绝了。也许,关键就在这里。虽然部落主义是否为人类固有的天性尚有争议,但毫无疑问的是,一个人不能没有个体就创造一个部落。医学离不开个体。任何文化或社会都不能。然而,反过来,部落主义抹去了对个人的强调。认为一个人可以影响几个世纪以来的文化、传统、等级制度和权力是愚蠢的,这些都是目前(西方世界)的职业规范。是吗?在医学上,早期我们被教导要一视同仁地对待所有的病人,把个人偏见、偏见和想法放在一边,把我们面前的病人当作唯一重要的人来照顾。这难道不也适用于那些从事医学工作的人吗?如果我们把每一个医生、每一个学习者、每一个人都当作我们共同拥有人性的个体来对待,这难道不会创造出一种不同的文化——一种共同拥有人性的文化吗?在我们谈论重新定义专业规范和医学文化之前,我们需要了解作为个体的我们如何跨越鸿沟,与他人沟通。我们都在挣扎。我们都有缺点。而且,很多时候,个体的互动,个体的改变,感觉就像沧海一粟。但如果不是从一个人开始,改变还能从哪里开始呢?作为一棵树的孩子,它的根跨越了国家、大陆、民族和民族,我一直在努力寻找一个“合适的”。去找一个描述我的盒子。通常情况下,我发现别人用方框来表示“他人”:指出不同之处,而不是相似之处。我和其他大熔炉进行过一些最有趣的对话,这是一次发现、联系和学习的旅程。如果我能把同样的好奇心、学习和联系运用到我遇到的每一个人身上,也许,这是找到我的“专业精神”的第一步,走上一条通往现代医学时代的新道路。预演:构思、写作—初稿、写作—评审、编辑。作者声明无利益冲突。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Clinical Teacher
Clinical Teacher MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
5.60%
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期刊介绍: The Clinical Teacher has been designed with the active, practising clinician in mind. It aims to provide a digest of current research, practice and thinking in medical education presented in a readable, stimulating and practical style. The journal includes sections for reviews of the literature relating to clinical teaching bringing authoritative views on the latest thinking about modern teaching. There are also sections on specific teaching approaches, a digest of the latest research published in Medical Education and other teaching journals, reports of initiatives and advances in thinking and practical teaching from around the world, and expert community and discussion on challenging and controversial issues in today"s clinical education.
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