Brazilian Family Medicine and academic excellence
Autor(a) principal: | |
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Data de Publicação: | 2011 |
Tipo de documento: | Artigo |
Idioma: | por eng |
Título da fonte: | Revista Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade (Online) |
Texto Completo: | https://www.rbmfc.org.br/rbmfc/article/view/403 |
Resumo: | An incredibly young and vibrant college. Who would not be impressed by the tremendous energy, enthusiasm, and dedication of general practitioner colleagues in Brazil – so many young doctors, so committed to Family Medicine. The Brazilian Society of Family and Community Medicine Conference (11th Brazilian Congress of Family and Community Medicine) was an uplifting experience and unique in its scale, youth, and vibrancy. With 4,000 delegates, it was the largest general practitioner conference I had ever attended and, with so few delegates over 40 years of age, it was the youngest one. Up to 18 parallel sessions came together effortlessly and there was no pharmaceutical involvement. I was also struck by the easy dialogue between speakers and the audience – this was a conversation of equals. I have never seen anything quite like that. Brazilians have the potential to be future leaders in primary care, but I do not think they quite appreciate their own potential.How can you build on this potential? In setting the agenda for the development of General Practice as an academic discipline, McWhinney outlined four principles: a unique field of action; a defined body of knowledge; an active area of research; and an intellectually rigorous training1,2. Of these, General Practice has identified a unique field of action; there is a consensus on the defined body of knowledge – as shown in some textbooks by authors, such as Bruce Duncan. Brazil has some excellent postgraduate General Practice training programmes. Not all general practitioners have undertaken this training and, as it evolves, it is important to integrate those who have not had formal training. The three main cornerstones of the academic discipline are already in place. However, like many academic disciplines, the difficulty is nurturing that final component: the research.Is research really necessary? Most of us are general practitioners because we are interested in people and their illnesses. Spending time in libraries and in laboratories and writing papers were not a priority. But, ask any family doctor if he/she is interested in finding out how illness affects his/her patients, how he/she might best treat them in the community, and how to provide the best healthcare, and he/she would undoubtedly agree. Research asks these very questions. If the discipline of General Practice is to flourish, research is not an option, it is a necessity. Asking how we can improve the healthcare for our patients is part of our discipline.Who should be involved in research? Others are already researching community healthcare in Brazil. A quick literature search shows that a lot of this is undertaken by hospital specialists. Therefore, it is important that general practitioners be part of this work. It is not enough to let others lead the way. It perpetuates the belief that General Practice is a second-class academic discipline and it will delay our acceptance as equals among the medical specialties. If General Practice is to be valued by peers in other branches of medicine, we must compete in the areas that they value. And, although we may not like it, the key criteria against which every academic discipline is measured, are academic endeavour, research publications, and higher degrees. For us to take our place as an academic discipline, there must be a vibrant General Practice research culture, which means that general practitioners will need to undertake university based Master’s and Doctoral level degrees and publish research. Not someone else – that means you.Will it be difficult to create a research culture? Yes, but you have huge advantages. You already have a university academic department of General Practice. Most of the other countries leading General Practice research had to fight this battle before you. You have a superb General Practice infrastructure with real time computerisation of the consultation and a huge strength in numbers. Accelerating to meet current level of international research is possible. But, academic research and publication in peer reviewed journals have their own rules and structure. Those interested in research should be encouraged to link with academic departments, and the College might fund fellowships and studentships to help doctors learn these skills. It is important to build international links through two-way international exchanges. Brazilian general practitioners could spend time at other universities and international academics could be invited to visit Brazil to work with local institutions.Is there anything to avoid? Try not to separate academic General Practice from the clinicians and from patients. Everyone must gain, but not everyone needs to be a leader or to be directly involved. Try to ensure that every general practitioner feels ownership of the research agenda and is proud to be part of it. But, most of all, make sure that the academics ask research questions that matter to patients.Do not focus on the problems, but look at your potential. Brazil could be a world leader. |
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Brazilian Family Medicine and academic excellenceMedicina familiar en Brasil y excelencia académicaMedicina de Família no Brasil e excelência acadêmicaFamily PracticeEducationMedicalAcademies and InstitutesMedicina Familiar y ComunitariaEducación MédicaAcademias e InstitutosMedicina de Família e ComunidadeEducação MédicaAcademias e InstitutosAn incredibly young and vibrant college. Who would not be impressed by the tremendous energy, enthusiasm, and dedication of general practitioner colleagues in Brazil – so many young doctors, so committed to Family Medicine. The Brazilian Society of Family and Community Medicine Conference (11th Brazilian Congress of Family and Community Medicine) was an uplifting experience and unique in its scale, youth, and vibrancy. With 4,000 delegates, it was the largest general practitioner conference I had ever attended and, with so few delegates over 40 years of age, it was the youngest one. Up to 18 parallel sessions came together effortlessly and there was no pharmaceutical involvement. I was also struck by the easy dialogue between speakers and the audience – this was a conversation of equals. I have never seen anything quite like that. Brazilians have the potential to be future leaders in primary care, but I do not think they quite appreciate their own potential.How can you build on this potential? In setting the agenda for the development of General Practice as an academic discipline, McWhinney outlined four principles: a unique field of action; a defined body of knowledge; an active area of research; and an intellectually rigorous training1,2. Of these, General Practice has identified a unique field of action; there is a consensus on the defined body of knowledge – as shown in some textbooks by authors, such as Bruce Duncan. Brazil has some excellent postgraduate General Practice training programmes. Not all general practitioners have undertaken this training and, as it evolves, it is important to integrate those who have not had formal training. The three main cornerstones of the academic discipline are already in place. However, like many academic disciplines, the difficulty is nurturing that final component: the research.Is research really necessary? Most of us are general practitioners because we are interested in people and their illnesses. Spending time in libraries and in laboratories and writing papers were not a priority. But, ask any family doctor if he/she is interested in finding out how illness affects his/her patients, how he/she might best treat them in the community, and how to provide the best healthcare, and he/she would undoubtedly agree. Research asks these very questions. If the discipline of General Practice is to flourish, research is not an option, it is a necessity. Asking how we can improve the healthcare for our patients is part of our discipline.Who should be involved in research? Others are already researching community healthcare in Brazil. A quick literature search shows that a lot of this is undertaken by hospital specialists. Therefore, it is important that general practitioners be part of this work. It is not enough to let others lead the way. It perpetuates the belief that General Practice is a second-class academic discipline and it will delay our acceptance as equals among the medical specialties. If General Practice is to be valued by peers in other branches of medicine, we must compete in the areas that they value. And, although we may not like it, the key criteria against which every academic discipline is measured, are academic endeavour, research publications, and higher degrees. For us to take our place as an academic discipline, there must be a vibrant General Practice research culture, which means that general practitioners will need to undertake university based Master’s and Doctoral level degrees and publish research. Not someone else – that means you.Will it be difficult to create a research culture? Yes, but you have huge advantages. You already have a university academic department of General Practice. Most of the other countries leading General Practice research had to fight this battle before you. You have a superb General Practice infrastructure with real time computerisation of the consultation and a huge strength in numbers. Accelerating to meet current level of international research is possible. But, academic research and publication in peer reviewed journals have their own rules and structure. Those interested in research should be encouraged to link with academic departments, and the College might fund fellowships and studentships to help doctors learn these skills. It is important to build international links through two-way international exchanges. Brazilian general practitioners could spend time at other universities and international academics could be invited to visit Brazil to work with local institutions.Is there anything to avoid? Try not to separate academic General Practice from the clinicians and from patients. Everyone must gain, but not everyone needs to be a leader or to be directly involved. Try to ensure that every general practitioner feels ownership of the research agenda and is proud to be part of it. But, most of all, make sure that the academics ask research questions that matter to patients.Do not focus on the problems, but look at your potential. Brazil could be a world leader.Um colégio de especialistas incrivelmente jovem e vibrante. Quem não conseguiria ficar impressionado com tanta energia, entusiasmo e dedicação dos colegas médicos de família e comunidade no Brasil – muitos jovens médicos, muito comprometidos com Medicina de Família. A conferência da Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade –SBMFC (11º Congresso Brasileiro de Medicina de Família e Comunidade) foi uma experiência única e inspiradora em sua escala, com sua juventude e energia. Com 4.000 representantes, foi a maior conferência de médicos de família que já participei e, com poucos representantes com mais de 40 anos de idade, foi a mais jovem. Até 18 sessões paralelas foram realizadas facilmente juntas, e não houve participação farmacêutica. Foi surpreendente o diálogo horizontal entre os palestrantes e o público – foi uma conversa entre pessoas iguais. Nunca tinha visto algo parecido com aquilo. Os médicos de família brasileiros têm potencial para serem futuros líderes em Atenção Primária, mas não acho que têm apreciado isso.Como podem desenvolver tal potencial? Ao estabelecer uma agenda para o desenvolvimento da Medicina de Família como uma disciplina acadêmica, McWhinney ressaltou quatro princípios: um campo de ação único; um corpo de conhecimento definido; uma área de pesquisa ativa e um treinamento intelectual rigoroso1,2. A partir disso, a Medicina de Família têm se identificado como um campo de práticas único, e há consenso geral sobre o seu corpo de conhecimento, hoje bem definida – conforme é mostrado em alguns livros de autores brasileiros, tais como Bruce Duncan. O Brasil tem alguns excelentes cursos de pós-graduação para treinamento da Medicina de Família, principalmente os programas de residência médica. Nem todos os clínicos gerais brasileiros realizaram este treinamento, e é importante integrar aqueles que ainda não participaram de um treinamento formal. Os três pontos fundamentais da disciplina acadêmica já estão sendo realizados. Entretanto, como muitas disciplinas acadêmicas, a dificuldade está no fato de estimular o componente final: a pesquisa.A pesquisa é realmente necessária? Nós, na grande maioria, tornamo-nos médicos de família, pois estamos interessados nas pessoas e em suas doenças e condições. Ficar em bibliotecas e em laboratórios, e escrever artigos não eram nossas prioridades. Mas, pergunte a qualquer médico de família se está interessado em descobrir como a doença afeta seus pacientes, qual é a melhor forma de tratá-los na comunidade, e como fornecer a melhor assistência à saúde; indiscutivelmente tais médicos iriam concordar. A pesquisa faz essas perguntas. Se a disciplina Medicina de Família deve prosperar, a pesquisa não é uma opção, mas sim uma necessidade. Perguntar e pesquisar como podemos melhorar a assistência à saúde de nossos pacientes faz parte da disciplina.Quem deveria se envolver em pesquisas? Outros pesquisadores já estão investigando sobre assistência à saúde na comunidade no Brasil. Uma rápida busca na literatura mostra que muito disso está sendo feito por especialistas hospitalares. Portanto, é importante que médicos de família façam parte deste grupo de pesquisadores. Não basta deixar outras pessoas mostrarem o caminho. Isso perpetua o pensamento de que a Medicina de Família é uma disciplina acadêmica de segunda classe, o que irá atrasar nossa aceitação como iguais entre as especialidades médicas. Se a Medicina de Família deve ser valorizada entre os companheiros em outros ramos da medicina, devemos competir nas áreas em que eles valorizam. Embora, talvez, não gostamos disso, os principais critérios sob os quais toda disciplina acadêmica é medida são: o esforço acadêmico, publicações de pesquisas e diplomas superiores. Para termos nosso lugar como uma disciplina acadêmica, deve-se ter uma cultura de pesquisa vibrante, ou seja, os Médicos de Família precisarão ter os diplomas universitários de Mestrado e Doutorado e publicar pesquisas. Significa que isso precisa ser feito por vocês próprios, e não por outras pessoas.Será difícil criar uma cultura de pesquisa em Medicina de Família? Sim, mas vocês têm grandes vantagens. Vocês já possuem alguns departamentos acadêmicos de Medicina de Família ou Atenção Primária nas universidades. A maioria dos outros países que possui pesquisa em Medicina de Família teve que vencer esta batalha antes de vocês. Vocês têm uma grande infraestrutura de Medicina de Família, alguns lugares com informatização em tempo real da consulta e um grande poder nos números e indicadores. Acelerar esse processo para alcançar o nível atual de pesquisa internacional é possível. Mas, a pesquisa e a publicação acadêmicas em revistas revisadas por pares possuem suas próprias regras e estrutura. Aqueles que estão interessados em pesquisa devem se encorajar em se juntarem a departamentos acadêmicos, e a SBMFC deveria fundar sociedades e fornecer bolsas de estudo para ajudar médicos a aprenderem suas habilidades em pesquisa. É importante construir parcerias internacionais por meio de intercâmbios de dois modos: médicos de família brasileiros poderiam passar um tempo em outras universidades e estudantes internacionais poderiam ser convidados a visitarem o Brasil para trabalharem com instituições locais.Há algo que deve ser evitado, alguns cuidados que devem ser tomados? Tente não separar a prática acadêmica da Medicina de Família da prática clínica dos médicos de família com seus pacientes. Todos devem ganhar, estar envolvidos, mas nem todos precisam ser líderes de pesquisa ou estarem diretamente envolvidos. Tente garantir que cada médico de família sinta que faça parte da agenda de pesquisa e que tenha orgulho disso. Mas, acima de tudo, garanta que os pesquisadores acadêmicos façam perguntas que realmente importem aos pacientes.Enfim, não se foquem nos problemas, mas observem seu potencial. O Brasil pode ser um líder mundial em Medicina de Família.Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade (SBMFC)2011-09-15info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionCartas ao Editor; Letters to Editorapplication/pdfapplication/pdfhttps://www.rbmfc.org.br/rbmfc/article/view/40310.5712/rbmfc6(20)403Revista Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade; Vol. 6 No. 20 (2011); 171-174Revista Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade; Vol. 6 Núm. 20 (2011); 171-174Revista Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade; v. 6 n. 20 (2011); 171-1742179-79941809-5909reponame:Revista Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade (Online)instname:Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade (SBMFC)instacron:SBMFCporenghttps://www.rbmfc.org.br/rbmfc/article/view/403/368https://www.rbmfc.org.br/rbmfc/article/view/403/369Copyright (c) 2012 Domhnall MacAuleyinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessMacAuley, Domhnall2020-05-21T21:01:03Zoai:ojs.rbmfc.org.br:article/403Revistahttp://www.rbmfc.org.br/index.php/rbmfchttps://www.rbmfc.org.br/rbmfc/oai||david@sbmfc.org.br2179-79941809-5909opendoar:2020-05-21T21:01:03Revista Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade (Online) - Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade (SBMFC)false |
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv |
Brazilian Family Medicine and academic excellence Medicina familiar en Brasil y excelencia académica Medicina de Família no Brasil e excelência acadêmica |
title |
Brazilian Family Medicine and academic excellence |
spellingShingle |
Brazilian Family Medicine and academic excellence MacAuley, Domhnall Family Practice Education Medical Academies and Institutes Medicina Familiar y Comunitaria Educación Médica Academias e Institutos Medicina de Família e Comunidade Educação Médica Academias e Institutos |
title_short |
Brazilian Family Medicine and academic excellence |
title_full |
Brazilian Family Medicine and academic excellence |
title_fullStr |
Brazilian Family Medicine and academic excellence |
title_full_unstemmed |
Brazilian Family Medicine and academic excellence |
title_sort |
Brazilian Family Medicine and academic excellence |
author |
MacAuley, Domhnall |
author_facet |
MacAuley, Domhnall |
author_role |
author |
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv |
MacAuley, Domhnall |
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv |
Family Practice Education Medical Academies and Institutes Medicina Familiar y Comunitaria Educación Médica Academias e Institutos Medicina de Família e Comunidade Educação Médica Academias e Institutos |
topic |
Family Practice Education Medical Academies and Institutes Medicina Familiar y Comunitaria Educación Médica Academias e Institutos Medicina de Família e Comunidade Educação Médica Academias e Institutos |
description |
An incredibly young and vibrant college. Who would not be impressed by the tremendous energy, enthusiasm, and dedication of general practitioner colleagues in Brazil – so many young doctors, so committed to Family Medicine. The Brazilian Society of Family and Community Medicine Conference (11th Brazilian Congress of Family and Community Medicine) was an uplifting experience and unique in its scale, youth, and vibrancy. With 4,000 delegates, it was the largest general practitioner conference I had ever attended and, with so few delegates over 40 years of age, it was the youngest one. Up to 18 parallel sessions came together effortlessly and there was no pharmaceutical involvement. I was also struck by the easy dialogue between speakers and the audience – this was a conversation of equals. I have never seen anything quite like that. Brazilians have the potential to be future leaders in primary care, but I do not think they quite appreciate their own potential.How can you build on this potential? In setting the agenda for the development of General Practice as an academic discipline, McWhinney outlined four principles: a unique field of action; a defined body of knowledge; an active area of research; and an intellectually rigorous training1,2. Of these, General Practice has identified a unique field of action; there is a consensus on the defined body of knowledge – as shown in some textbooks by authors, such as Bruce Duncan. Brazil has some excellent postgraduate General Practice training programmes. Not all general practitioners have undertaken this training and, as it evolves, it is important to integrate those who have not had formal training. The three main cornerstones of the academic discipline are already in place. However, like many academic disciplines, the difficulty is nurturing that final component: the research.Is research really necessary? Most of us are general practitioners because we are interested in people and their illnesses. Spending time in libraries and in laboratories and writing papers were not a priority. But, ask any family doctor if he/she is interested in finding out how illness affects his/her patients, how he/she might best treat them in the community, and how to provide the best healthcare, and he/she would undoubtedly agree. Research asks these very questions. If the discipline of General Practice is to flourish, research is not an option, it is a necessity. Asking how we can improve the healthcare for our patients is part of our discipline.Who should be involved in research? Others are already researching community healthcare in Brazil. A quick literature search shows that a lot of this is undertaken by hospital specialists. Therefore, it is important that general practitioners be part of this work. It is not enough to let others lead the way. It perpetuates the belief that General Practice is a second-class academic discipline and it will delay our acceptance as equals among the medical specialties. If General Practice is to be valued by peers in other branches of medicine, we must compete in the areas that they value. And, although we may not like it, the key criteria against which every academic discipline is measured, are academic endeavour, research publications, and higher degrees. For us to take our place as an academic discipline, there must be a vibrant General Practice research culture, which means that general practitioners will need to undertake university based Master’s and Doctoral level degrees and publish research. Not someone else – that means you.Will it be difficult to create a research culture? Yes, but you have huge advantages. You already have a university academic department of General Practice. Most of the other countries leading General Practice research had to fight this battle before you. You have a superb General Practice infrastructure with real time computerisation of the consultation and a huge strength in numbers. Accelerating to meet current level of international research is possible. But, academic research and publication in peer reviewed journals have their own rules and structure. Those interested in research should be encouraged to link with academic departments, and the College might fund fellowships and studentships to help doctors learn these skills. It is important to build international links through two-way international exchanges. Brazilian general practitioners could spend time at other universities and international academics could be invited to visit Brazil to work with local institutions.Is there anything to avoid? Try not to separate academic General Practice from the clinicians and from patients. Everyone must gain, but not everyone needs to be a leader or to be directly involved. Try to ensure that every general practitioner feels ownership of the research agenda and is proud to be part of it. But, most of all, make sure that the academics ask research questions that matter to patients.Do not focus on the problems, but look at your potential. Brazil could be a world leader. |
publishDate |
2011 |
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv |
2011-09-15 |
dc.type.driver.fl_str_mv |
info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Cartas ao Editor; Letters to Editor |
format |
article |
status_str |
publishedVersion |
dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv |
https://www.rbmfc.org.br/rbmfc/article/view/403 10.5712/rbmfc6(20)403 |
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https://www.rbmfc.org.br/rbmfc/article/view/403 |
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10.5712/rbmfc6(20)403 |
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por eng |
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por eng |
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https://www.rbmfc.org.br/rbmfc/article/view/403/368 https://www.rbmfc.org.br/rbmfc/article/view/403/369 |
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Copyright (c) 2012 Domhnall MacAuley info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
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Copyright (c) 2012 Domhnall MacAuley |
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openAccess |
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Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade (SBMFC) |
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Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade (SBMFC) |
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Revista Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade; Vol. 6 No. 20 (2011); 171-174 Revista Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade; Vol. 6 Núm. 20 (2011); 171-174 Revista Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade; v. 6 n. 20 (2011); 171-174 2179-7994 1809-5909 reponame:Revista Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade (Online) instname:Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade (SBMFC) instacron:SBMFC |
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Revista Brasileira de Medicina de Família e Comunidade (Online) |
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