| Educating For Professionalism: Creating A Culture Of Humanism In Medical Education Subjects: Medical education -- Philosophy; Medical students -- Training of; Humanism; Physicians -- Attitudes; Medicine -- Study and teaching; The thirteen essays in Educating for Professionalism examine the often conflicting ethical, social, emotional, and intellectual messages that medical institutions send to students about what it means to be a doctor. Because this disconnection between what medical educators profess and what students experience is partly to blame for the current crisis in medical professionalism, the authors offer timely, reflective analyses of the work and opportunities facing medical education if doctors are to win public trust. In their drive to improve medical professionalism within the world of academic medicine, editors Delese Wear and Janet Bickel have assembled thought-provoking essays that elucidate the many facets of teaching, valuing, and maintaining medical professionalism in the middle of the myriad challenges facing medicine at the dawn of the twenty-first century. The collection traces how the values of altruism and service can influence not only mission statements and admission policies but also the content of medical school ethics courses, student-led task forces, and mentoring programs, along with larger environmental issues in medical schools and the communities they serve. Contributors:Stanley Joel Reiser Delese Wear teaches at the Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine. She is editor of Women in Medical Education: An Anthology of Experience and Privilege in the Medical Academy: A Feminist Examines Gender, Race, and Power and is current editor of the Journal of Medical Humanities. Janet Bickel has worked for the Association of American Medical Colleges for more than twenty years. In addition to publishing on a broad spectrum of areas in academic medicine, she has created a series of leadership development seminars for women faculty. |