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Fine Wine or Sour Milk
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Fine Wine or Sour MilkWilliam E. Morgan, D.C.
The passage of time is both friend and foe.
Time allows grape juice
to mature into wine, but it can also turn milk sour and cause
bread to become stale.
Time can create master clinicians or, in the case of
chiropractors who do not remain current in their knowledge,
out-of-date chiropractors. Time can make us wise or just make us
older.
There is a general belief that physicians
become better with time and experience.
Most of us have believed that physicians accumulate
knowledge and skill with the passing of years and become better
doctors.
However, research does not support this belief. Surprisingly, a
recent systematic review of 62 studies revealed that in 70% of
the studies there was a negative association between length in
practice and several indicators of good performance.*
(Of course this metanalysis evaluated trends in
medical doctors and
not chiropractors, but the possibility that this trend could
apply to chiropractors should cause chiropractors to take note.)
Doctors who have been in practice longer are at risk of
providing lower quality care and should be targeted for
performance improvement interventions.
Unless you deliberately commit yourself to
remain current in scientific trends and modern standards of
practice, you will most certainly be left behind.
If you do not continually
seek to improve the quality of the care that you provide, then
it may be indicative of the low value that you place on your
patients. It takes
effort to remain current and relevant, and most of us are
resistant to change.
It is easier to reject guidelines and outcome measures than to
take the time to understand why we need them and how they are
created.
Where do you stand?
Are you maturing into a fine wine, or are
you becoming sour milk? Are you using clinical guidelines,
outcome measures, informed consents, and the safest methods
available? Are you
evaluating general health indicators, promoting prevention and
public health, and limiting your patient’s exposure to
radiation? Are you
well-versed in risk management?
How do you measure up?
How can we improve with time?
Seek knowledge. Reject passivity.
If you are interested in improving your practice quality
with each passing year, then you need to have a purposeful plan.
This plan must be flexible and allow for changes in
universal practice standards.
Start by learning what the current standards of care are
in the various aspects of practice, (patient safety, outcome
measures, chiropractic practice, risk management…) and then
critically evaluate your practice, identify shortcomings and
then make a plan to align your practice with modern standards.
Life-Long Learning
If this is the first time that you have
heard the phrase Life-Long
Learning, let me assure you that it will not be the last.
The vast volumes of new information that is becoming
available makes a doctor’s formal schooling obsolete in just a
few years. The education
of everyone in healthcare is destined to be a lifelong pursuit
and gone are the days (if those days ever really existed) when a
doctor could master a topic and then rest on his or her laurels.
Several state boards have already identified the concept
of Life-Long Learning
and are seeking to expand the hours required for re-licensure
and are dictating required topics such as risk management,
x-ray, chiropractic technique and public health. We all need to
work hard to keep up with the ever-expanding body of knowledge
and ever-changing standards of care if we desire to remain
relevant.
*Choudhry
NK, et al. Systematic review: the relationship between
clinical experience and quality of health care.
Annals of Internal Medicine 2005; 142: 260–273
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