Making Management Skills a Core Component of Medical Education.


Invited Commentary


Christopher G. Myers, Peter J. Pronovost
Academic Medicine, vol. 92(5), 2017 May, pp. 582-584


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APA   Click to copy
Myers, C. G., & Pronovost, P. J. (2017). Making Management Skills a Core Component of Medical Education. Academic Medicine, 92(5), 582–584. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000001627


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Myers, Christopher G., and Peter J. Pronovost. “Making Management Skills a Core Component of Medical Education.” Academic Medicine 92, no. 5 (May 2017): 582–584.


MLA   Click to copy
Myers, Christopher G., and Peter J. Pronovost. “Making Management Skills a Core Component of Medical Education.” Academic Medicine, vol. 92, no. 5, May 2017, pp. 582–84, doi:10.1097/ACM.0000000000001627.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{christopher2017a,
  title = {Making Management Skills a Core Component of Medical Education.},
  year = {2017},
  month = may,
  issue = {5},
  journal = {Academic Medicine},
  pages = {582-584},
  volume = {92},
  doi = {10.1097/ACM.0000000000001627},
  author = {Myers, Christopher G. and Pronovost, Peter J.},
  month_numeric = {5}
}

Physicians are being called upon to engage in greater leadership and management in increasingly complex and dynamic health care organizations. Yet, management skills are largely undeveloped in medical education. Without formal management training in the medical curriculum, physicians are left to cultivate their leadership and management abilities through a haphazard array of training programs or simply through trial and error, with consequences that may range from frustration among staff to reduced quality of care and increased risk of patient harm. To address this issue, the authors posit that medical education needs a more systematic focus on topics related to management and organization, such as individual decision making, interpersonal communication, team knowledge sharing, and organizational culture. They encourage medical schools to partner with business school faculty or other organizational scholars to offer a “Management 101” course in the medical curriculum to provide physicians-in-training with an understanding of these topics and raise the quality of physician leadership and management in modern health care organizations.


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