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International Campaign to Promote and Revitalise Academic Medicine

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Title: International Campaign to Promote and Revitalise Academic Medicine


1
International Campaign to Promote and Revitalise
Academic Medicine
2
Sponsors include
  • BMJ Publishing Group
  • Lancet
  • CMAJ
  • Dutch Journal of Medicine
  • Medical Journal of Australia
  • Croatian Medical Journal
  • 20 other journal partners
  • Other international organisations
  • Invitation to readers all over the world to join
    us in this exciting enterprise

3
The Charge
  • What are the roles of academic medicine
    throughout the world?
  • Is academic medicine fulfilling these roles?
  • If not, why not?
  • What needs to be done to permit/force academic
    medicine to fulfill its roles?

4
Why is this different from the many national
reports?
  • Global perspective
  • Can we do better to get the best of the best
    into academic medicine?
  • Money is NOT the prime aim
  • Values driven
  • Customer centred
  • Spectrum Knowledge Creation and
    Translation incl Behaviour Change
  • Forward looking Systems Thinking
  • Appreciation of the crucial importance of
    developing a convincing story re making a
    difference

5
What is the problem challenge?

6
Is the existing structure of academic medicine
still fundamentally sound?
  • Many perceived failures nominated, including
  • Failure to serve the public good Axis of power
    in academic medicine disenfranchises the public /
    patients.
  • Lack of a global perspective / culture of
    science Neglect of millions of preventable
    deaths each year.
  • Unnecessary dichotomy between education and
    research
  • Failing to integrate biomedical approach with
    systems, behavioural, and social scientific
    frameworks.
  • Economic imperatives rather than health needs
    drive governmental and industry investment in
    academic medicine.
  • Various shortcomings in medical education.
  • Inadequate numbers of and career paths for
    well-trained medical academics.

7
Why is academic medicine failing to fulfil its
roles? Many of the reasons will be economic, but
we need to examine ethical and moral explanations
as well
  • Nominated ideas include
  • Inadequate leadership.
  • Failure to translate basic discoveries into
    benefits for patients
  • Inappropriate incentives to take up or maintain
    an academic career (especially among women).
  • Deficient mentoring for aspiring academics.
  • Lack of appreciation of the benefits of academic
    medicine by elected representatives.
  • Poor integration with other health services.

8
What are the alternatives?
  • For each failure, what ought to be done about it?
  • We will identify and develop international
    collaborative strategies for how academic
    medicine can contribute to national and global
    health
  • These strategies will be combined and formulated
    into concrete proposals for action.

9
  • Given current economic constraints in both
    high-income and low-income countries, special
    attention will go to strategies that call for no
    additional funding. We will also welcome
    strategies that call for the reallocation of
    current funding.

10
The approach
  • Our approach will be inclusive and is designed to
    elicit a broad input of opinions and perspectives
  • We aim to build consensus by inviting a wide
    range of global stakeholders to contribute their
    views
  • The focus is on the customers of academic
    medicinepatients, politicians, the public,
    professionals.
  • All will be encouraged to contribute their views
    to the project website

11
International Working Party
  • The pivotal group is an international working
    party
  • 20 members, representing 14 countries, identified
    from over 80 superb applications
  • Composition
  • Junior to mid level clinical scientists nominated
    by influential mentors
  • Global representation
  • Gender balance

12
Working Party
  • Tahmeed Ahmed - Bangladesh
  • Shally Awasthi- India
  • Mark Clarfield - Israel
  • Lalit Dandona - India
  • Amanda Howe - England
  • John Ioannidis - Greece
  • Edwin Jesudason - England
  • Wendy Levinson - Canada
  • Youping Li - China
  • Juan Manuel Lozano - Columbia
  • Ana Marusic - Croatia
  • Idris Mohammed - Nigeria
  • Gretchen Purcell - United States
  • Karen Sliwa-Hahnle - South Africa
  • Sharon Straus - Canada
  • Tessa Tan Torres Philippines, Switzerland
  • Tim Underwood - England
  • Robyn Ward - Australia
  • Michael Wilkes - United States

13
Advisory groups
  • Representing the interests of the customers of
    academic medicine
  • 2-3 co conveners and 8-10 members each
  • Academics group
  • Professionals group
  • Government and policy group
  • Patients group
  • Students group
  • Business/industry group
  • Funders Forum
  • Journal editors group

14
Regional Panels
  • Regional consultations will be coordinated by
    Stephen Leeder
  • Australasia
  • China
  • Europe
  • Latin America and Caribbean
  • Middle East and Northern Africa
  • North America
  • South Asia
  • Southern Africa
  • Or other regional breakdown

15
Enabling committee
  • Influential academic medicine advisors
  • Linked to regional panels
  • Experience with previous academic medicine
    consultations and with key customers and
    stakeholders
  • Will assist with credibility and visibility of
    the campaign
  • Will advise working party and planning committee

16
The process
  • Working Party Retreat 13- 16 JuneInaugural
    Meeting 14 June
  • Both to focus on 4 questions
  • What are the roles of academic medicine
    throughout the world?
  • Is academic medicine fulfilling these roles?
  • If not, why not?
  • What needs to be done to permit/force academic
    medicine to fulfill its roles?

17
What we want to accomplish today Nominate issues
for the working party
  • Morning Session Small group work on nominating
    issues for questions 1 and 2
  • 1. What are the roles of academic medicine
    throughout the world?
  • 2. Is academic medicine fulfilling these roles?

18
What we want to accomplish today Nominate issues
for the working party
  • Afternoon Session Small group work on nominating
    issues for questions 3 and 4
  • 3. If academic medicine is not fulfilling the
    roles identified in the morning, why not?
  • 4. What needs to be done to permit/force academic
    medicine to fulfill its roles?

19
Timeline after this week
  • Working Party Monthly Meetings by teleconference
    for 12 months
  • Advisory group and regional panel consultations
    July through December 2004
  • Special theme issue BMJ October 2004
  • Recommendations Report and Meeting Summer or Fall
    2005

20
I look forward to a productive day!
21
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22
The structure
Regional representation
Representing the customers
23
The structure
Regional representation
Representing the customers
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