The practice of medicine revolves around people. A person in need is at the center of the health-caring circle, and all around are people who are trying to be of help. Blood tests, respiratory devices, infusions, MRI’s, and other forms of advanced technology at their very best diagnose and treat, and that is so very important and essential, but they alone are not able to care. They are not alive, and they know nothing about love, joy, kindness, sorrow, loss, dying, death and the cry of a newborn child. Only human beings can care – that is, if they choose to do so. If they are encouraged to do so. If they have experienced other human beings caring for them and about them.
And it all starts with each of us. Do we have the courage to express the humanity of our own beating and sometimes breaking heart? Do we have the passion and determination to change a culture of business as usual? To acknowledge that the “hidden curriculum” can become more powerful than all the humane lessons we are taught in lecture halls? That “hidden curriculum,” the one not spoken aloud but acted upon, is rather the anti-practice of medicine, the health uncaring institution.
The cure, I believe, is not “humanism in medicine.” Because to me, the phrasing and timing are all wrong. Let us pause, take a deep breath, remember deeply, and bring to mind what we seem to have forgotten. Medicine IS humanism. As Hippocrates said, “Wherever the art of medicine is loved, there is also the love of humanity.” And from that foundation, life-affirming questions can be asked:
* Who are these unique people who have come to me for help?
* What is their story?
* How can I respond to their needs?
* What kind of doctor am I?
* What are the qualities of my medical practicing?
* What does my healthcare institution reveal about how it cares for human beings who
are sick?
* How does this institution care for those who are trying to be of help?
* And what intentional actions can I bring to my encounters with these center-of the-
circle people that show I care, and because I care, I am an even a more competent,
effective, and professional physician?
This is not a quiz, but it is a test of how we will respond each and every day to the call of being a health caring physician. One day we will all be at the center of that circle. When “connectivity units” are equal to “productivity units,” or better yet, when it is comprehended that there can be no lasting productivity without caring and connection, the art of medicine will be practiced.
(originally published on the HealthCetera blog of the Center for Health & Media Policy at Hunter College)