The Soul of Medicine Task Force was initiated in  1999, in response to the disillusionment felt by practicing clinicians and medical students to increasing pressures in the healthcare environment – pressures which often do not place priority on humanistic patient care. 

The Soul of Medicine task force engages clinicians and students in discussions about how to assure that the important patient-physician relationship is not compromised in the contentious healthcare debate. Care and compassion must not be sacrificed for protocol and cost-effectiveness.
A second focus of the Soul of Medicine is to respond to medical students who have told us that 
they would like to meet with physicians who actually promote a caring, respectful relationship with patients and their families and with their students. Too often, what students actually experience from seasoned physicians in clinics or on rounds is not the behavior that they wish to emulate as caregivers. 
We believe that the future of the healing arts rests with our trainees. They fear for the loss of their dreams and seek guidance from clinicians who practice the values they wish to emulate.  PSR is committed to promoting this relationship with the great majority of clinicians for whom service and compassion remain paramount. 

For the 8th year, PSR will host the Soul of Medicine brunch. The brunch is a opportunity for  medical students and faculty members to informally share their concerns about the current health care environment. It is a time for  rejuvenation and confirmation about the study and practice of medicine. Last year, over 30 faculty from the 5 area medical schools and 150 students attended the brunch.

In another Soul of Medicine Initiative, the Philadelphia Inquirer and PSR convened a diverse group of stakeholders - doctors, nurses, alternative medicine practitioners, patients, hospital executives, hospice workers, employers, insurance executives - to attempt a new, more productive conversation about what the ideal healthcare system might look like and how to achieve that system. 

Weigh in with your view at: http://www.ethepeople.org/a-national/article/10912/view


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