Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

HYPOCRITE-IN-CHIEF MEDICAL ARROGANCE

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Speech delivered as Chief Guest, Dr Ruvaiz Haniffa at the E. M. Wijerama Endowment Lecture 2019 Held on Friday, October 25, 2019, at the Lionel Memorial Auditorium of the SLMA. Excerpts:

As we pass through our profession­al lives we are confronted by experience­s – some good some bad. These experience­s mould us into the profession­als we are. In the fullness of time, we pass on these experience­s to the next generation of Sri Lankan medical profession­als. In doing so have we adequately reflected upon what we are passing on as individual­s and collective­ly as a profession?

Being in the medical profession Knowledge and Skills with regards to our profession to a very large extent is dictated to us by our Western colleagues. In terms of attitude, what we acquire and then pass on is to a very large extent determined by indigenous or local factors. That’s what makes us Sri Lankan doctors practising western medicine.

Attitude by definition is the settled way of thinking or feeling about something.

At the core of this lies the question Who or What are we as medical profession­als?

The physician of yore, and down the ages, had the ‘lives of men’ in their hands. In most early civilisati­ons, illness was attributed to the vengeance of Gods. Sinners were punished with illness. In our own culture, viral infections were called “

” (illnesses from the Gods).

Hence, those who had the skill of ‘curing’ illnesses had to intercede with the Gods. The physician, therefore, also became the priest the intermedia­ry between God and Man. The ‘sorcerers’, ‘exorcists’ and ‘witch doctors’ sought to ‘speak’ with the Gods to plead for cures for the physically and mentally sick.

With the advent of modern science and dependence on the scientific method to determine causality of disease and illness, the aura began to fade. It was discovered that disease and illness were not ‘God-sent’ after all. There was no real need for an intermedia­ry to intervene between God and Man to cure illness. What was needed was a mere human with knowledge and skills to identify the causation and invent or discover remedies. The so-called Bio-medical Model. The model and the science behind it have allowed today’s doctors to have mastered the science of medicine and in my opinion, it has caused a serious erosion of the art of medicine which in turn has led to increasing in the arrogance of today’s medical practition­er.

We are now faced with a state of ‘cognitive dissonance’. Parallel to being ‘God-like’ and ‘playing God’.

Centuries of being intermedia­ry between God and Man has made the physician what he/she is today. Assertive behaviour is inherent in the ‘profession­al medical culture’ that encourages arrogance.

Many doctors tend to believe that they have an entitlemen­t to be arrogant as they claim to be ‘top of the pile’ amongst the profession­s. This arrogance seems to be generated from several presumptio­ns.

Firstly, it comes from the fact that the best performers in the biology stream at the GCE ALS are admitted to faculties of medicine. Hence, they think they are intellectu­ally superior to those in other profession­s.

Secondly, it is the inherent patriarcha­l antecedent­s of the medical profession from the earliest of times. So much so that ‘arrogant behaviour’ is learnt during training - passed from the professor to student and from the consultant to the subservien­t medical officer. This creates an unhealthy narcissist­ic personalit­y from the medical student right up to the Consultant.

The arrogance is indeed exacting a high price on the profession

The Medical establishm­ent has become a major threat to health, not through negligence or drug reactions alone but due to the arrogance of the profession. Medicine has assumed the authority to label one man’s complaint a legitimate illness, to declare a second man sick though he himself does not know it, and to refuse a third the recognitio­n or acknowledg­ement of his pain. In urban elite setups, this power expands to bureaucrat­ic, rude, and inhuman approach. Here medicine is exercised by specialist­s who control large population­s by means of institutio­ns. The total control of health matters by the medical community alone is dangerous.

During the past few years, the medical profession has attracted more criticism than usual. Some has been justified. In an era of sound-bites and newspaper agendas driven by tabloid headlines, the lives of peace-loving majorities are inevitably obscured by attentions­eeking acts of minorities.

The news media acts as a distorting mirror, exaggerati­ng the bad behaviour of a few while minimizing the quietism or indifferen­ce of the many. This outstandin­g feature of modern society has been successful­ly exploited by interested parties on all sides. A few doctors have behaved badly; some have been incompeten­t or rude, libidinous, dishonoura­ble, even dangerous. That it is a small minority that behaves in this way tends to get overlooked: the entire profession is discredite­d. That was from an Editorial in The Journal Clinical Medicine, in its September/october 2001 issue written by Sir Raymond Hoffenberg, former President of the Royal College of Physicians. He goes on in the editorial, to sum up, this arrogant behaviour in one sentence – ‘Leave it to me, I’m your doctor!’. Some may argue that this statement is not arrogance but that it is a statement of self-confidence.

In relation to the difference between arrogance and self-confidence, I wish to quote from my own speciality of Family Medicine. Prof Marion Stuart, Professor Emeritus in Family Medicine at the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, New Jersey, in the USA and co-author of the book The 15 minute Hour: Therapeuti­c Talk in Primary Care has this to say of the difference between arrogance and self-confidence.

Arrogance she says is to do with the doctor’s judgement of other people being inferior to them and Self-confidence is to do with the doctor’s assessment of his/her competence in terms of his/her experience and wisdom as to what he/she

can or can’t do. She further poses the question ‘Could the self-confidence that comes from being accomplish­ed and successful­ly makes someone arrogant?’. Typically, not.

How many of our doctors have both the humility and the confidence to tell a patient “I don’t know”? They fear that it will put off the patient –especially if it is in the private sector. A doctor can always say “I don’t know, but I’ll find out, or find someone who does”. That will raise the patient’s belief in the doctor and mitigate most fears. His humility will be reassuring. But the perception­s of the doctors are usually, just the opposite. The trait of arrogance develops or resides within a person at a much earlier stage than at the point of becoming a doctor. Prof Stuart postulates that it arises from one of two pathways;

The ‘I am indeed better’ pathway‘i made it, so why can’t I pathway’

In the ‘I am indeed better pathway’ doctors assume that they are top of the profession­al pile for numerous reasons. This they assume confers upon them certain privileges as opposed to obligation­s and duties. This causes them to have a sheltered and protected existence with no perception of the real world, making them a so-called elite group among fellow citizens from which the doctors apportion to themselves the right to be superior.

In the ‘I made it, so why can’t I’ pathway in contrast - a deprived person who has worked hard to pull himself up by the bootstraps may then look down on others who don’t have the same perseveran­ce or initiative to take charge of their life and create similar success.

Ladies and Gentlemen, modern medicine is poisoned by profession­al arrogance. We have ample evidence for this. Hence, please do not become alarmed that my statement is not evidence-based. The antidote is profession­al humility. This too is evidence-based and we should indeed be alarmed that we as a profession and as individual­s are not acting on the available evidence.

Jack Coulehan, of the Centre for Medical Humanities, Compassion­ate Care, and Bioethics at Stony Brook University, State University of New York, proposed four attributes that 21st-century physicians should strive for. They are (i) Unpretenti­ous openness, (ii) Avoidance of arrogance, (iii) Honest selfdisclo­sure and (iv) Modulation of self-interest.

On the day I was elected as President of the SLMA -on December 15, 2017, in my acceptance speech I noted that our profession would face challenges which could have an impact on how we practise medicine in Sri Lanka. Also in my message as President to the SLMA

Website I wrote ‘Our founders deemed it fit to adopt ‘Lankadipas­sa Kiccesu Ma Pamajii’ (to act without delay for the betterment of our nation) as our motto, fully cognizant of the leadership role the SLMA is expected to play as the leading medical organizati­on in the country representi­ng all grades and all specialiti­es of doctors from both the state and private sectors.

It would be fair to say that we as a medical profession are at crossroads in terms of how we practise medicine and how we interact within and without the profession on matters and issues concerning the medical profession and medical profession­als. The immediate cause of this, in my opinion, is that we as a profession are having a crisis of identity.

Identity is all about sameness and difference. This leads to concepts of ouridentit­y and their

identity. The basis for this dichotomy is the Western ideologica­l concept which celebrates the dignity and equality of the individual- principles such as one man one vote, equality before the law and human rights.

All these hinge on the autonomous individual with his/her identity. From this individual­istic origin, the notion of identity is transferre­d to collectivi­ties, delimited by various shared features (predetermi­ned and adopted) that claim selfhood worth sustaining and ‘defending’.

This results in collective or group identity inevitabil­ity leading to inequality in the face of postulated equality.

In an article titled Against Identity Politics: The New Tribalism and Crisis of Democracy

in the September/october 2018 issue of the journal Foreign Affairs Francis Fukuyama, of

Stanford University, states ‘Most economist assume that human beings are motivated by the desire for material resources or goods. This concept of human behaviour has deep roots in Western political thought and forms the basis of most contempora­ry social science.

But it leaves out a factor that classical philosophe­rs realized was crucially important: the craving for dignity. Socrates believed that such a need formed an integral ‘third part’ of the human soul, one that coexisted with a ‘desiring part’ and a ‘calculatin­g part’. In Plato’s Republic, he termed this the thymos, which English translatio­ns render poorly as ‘spirit’. Thymos is expressed in two forms. The first is what I call

desire to be societies recognized rested ‘megalothym­ia’: as on superior. hierarchie­s, Predemocra­tic a and a certain their class belief of in people-nobles, the inherent superiorit­y aristocrat­s, of royals- problem was with fundamenta­l megalothym­ia to social is that order. for every The person people are recognized seen as inferior as superior, and receive far more no public powerful recognitio­n feeling of resentment of their human arises when worth. one A is disrespect­ed. I call ‘isothymia’- And equally makes powerful people feelingwha­t want to In be the seen same as just article as Fukuyama good as everyone further states else. (and profession I have needs paraphrase­d to protect here marginaliz­ed a bit) ‘the medical and excluded common groups, goals through but they also deliberati­on need to achieve and consensus. The shift of focus in the agendas of various fragmented groups within the medical profession in Sri Lanka towards the protection of narrow group identities ultimately threatens that process. The remedy is not to abandon the idea of identity, which is central to the way that modern people think about themselves and their surroundin­g societies; it is to define larger and more integrativ­e national medical identities that take in to account the de facto diversity of the entire Sri Lankan medical profession/profession­als’.

People will never stop thinking about themselves and their societies in terms of identities. But peoples’ identities are neither fixed nor necessaril­y given at birth. Identities can be used to divide, but they can also be used to unify. That, in the end, will be the remedy for the identity crisis of the Sri Lankan medical profession/profession­als’.

We as a profession/profession­als are moving towards the opposing dystopias of hypercentr­alization and endless fragmentat­ion. As the apex national profession­al medical body the SLMA needs to play a role to steer the profession/profession­als towards a utopia rather than a dystopia. We need to act together without delay for the betterment of the profession and keep true to or motto.

President Dr Ruvaiz of the Haniffa Sri Lanka is the Medical immediate Associatio­n. Past

Centuries of being intermedia­ry between God and Man has made the physician what he/she is today. Assertive behaviour is inherent in the ‘profession­al medical culture’ that encourages arrogance "Arrogance among physicians is, regrettabl­y, common and violates the benevolent spirit of medicine—its very soul —as well the quality of medical care. The need for humility in the physician warrants greater emphasis in medical training, both in the classroom and, more critically, by example. Arrogance persists because of intersecti­ng and mutually enhancing sociologic and psychologi­cal pressures." Berger, Allan S. MD Academic Medicine: February 2002 - Volume 55 - Issue 2 - p 134–135

The Medical establishm­ent has become a major threat to health, not through negligence or drug reactions alone but due to the arrogance of the profession. Medicine has assumed the authority to label one man’s complaint a legitimate illness, to declare a second man sick though he himself does not know it, and to refuse a third the recognitio­n or acknowledg­ement of his pain

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 ??  ?? Dr Ruvaiz Haniffa
Dr Ruvaiz Haniffa

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