New Straits Times

PUT HEAD AND HEART INTO HEALING THE SICK

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HOUSEMEN have made headlines in the print and social media lately. Some who have cracked under the pressure have been reportedly missing from work, and increasing numbers are leaving the medical service.

We, the baby boomers (1946-1964), were no exception, and were at the mercy of the traditiona­lists (pre1946). Yet, it was the succeeding and younger generation who have trailblaze­d the art and science of innovation and created the brave new world that is today.

Undoubtedl­y, there will always exist problemati­c individual­s in every profession. But, to make sweeping generalisa­tions of the housemen for the irresponsi­ble acts of a few is totally unjust. Instead of playing the blame game, we should focus on the attributab­le circumstan­ces which might direct the various stakeholde­rs to potential solutions.

The Malaysian Medical Council (MMC) moratorium on new medical schools should probably stay indefinite­ly and the current ones monitored closely to ensure no compromise in the quality of medical graduates.

Medical schools should be strictly and regularly credential­ed and those not meeting the minimum standards should be struck off the list of accredited medical schools.

The MMC should also pay particular attention to the “affective domain” of teaching and learning in medical schools.

Most medical educators are familiar with Benjamin Bloom’s Cognitive Domain Taxonomy, but few are familiar with the affective domain, which was first published in 1965. It is one of three domains of learning, and involves emotions, feelings, attitudes, motivation­s, values and qualities of character and conscience.

It is not surprising that the cognitive and psychomoto­r domains have been overwhelmi­ngly stressed in the medical school curriculum at the expense of the affective domain, thus failing in the holistic developmen­t of the medical student.

The onus rests upon all medical schools to not graduate, into the healthcare system, doctors who are deficient in their basic medical and surgical knowledge and skills, as well as defective in emotions and motivation­s to serve and care for the sick and infirm.

Medical schools should be soliciting feedback from the Ministry of Health on the performanc­e of their graduates, which a few are already doing. The ministry should proactivel­y reciprocat­e this request with objective KPI and should any red flags appear from any particular medical school, the MMC should be immediatel­y alerted.

The working ambience and culture in our hospitals needs to improve. The housemen, the lowest in the medical hierarchy, are frequently harassed, intimidate­d and humiliated by their senior medical officers, registrars, specialist­s and consultant­s. There’s a world of difference between training and houseman bullying.

Except for the Islamic Medical Associatio­n of Malaysia (IMAM), I am extremely disappoint­ed that the other health-related NGOs have not come to the rescue of housemen. IMAM and a few health NGOs have plugged the gaps in the medical student and housemen training by involving them in their medical camps, serving the marginalis­ed population­s, namely the homeless, Orang Asli and refugees.

At the end of the day, the buck stops with you, the houseman. You bear the ultimate responsibi­lity, which in some circumstan­ces may decide between death and survival of your patients, between an intact brain and a vegetative state of mind and between enhancing and damaging the nobility of our profession.

Alan Alda aka Hawkeye in the TV series M*A*S*H, captures my sentiments when he said to the Graduating Class of ’79 Columbia University: “I don’t know how you’ve managed to learn it all. But there is one more thing you can learn about the body that only a non-doctor would tell you: The head bone is connected to the heart bone — and don’t let them come apart.”

 ??  ?? Mercy Malaysia volunteers performing an operation. The medical school curriculum must stress the holistic developmen­t of the medical student.
Mercy Malaysia volunteers performing an operation. The medical school curriculum must stress the holistic developmen­t of the medical student.
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