Intriguing TED talk on the importance of having team members, colleagues, and friends that have the courage to Dare to Disagree with you. This sometimes uncomfortable disagreement fuels innovation and growth...
Coach Woodenism for the Week: Be true to yourself. Make each day a masterpiece. Help others. Drink deeply from good books. Make friendship a fine art. Build a shelter against a rainy day. This month we are discussing the second Effort cornerstone of legendary Coach John Wooden's Pyramid of Success applied to medical education. As clinicians, we all have the requisite Attitude and work Effort. Bringing out the best in our trainees, first begins with being the example of these cornerstones. Last week, we focused on being an example of the team Effort we expect from our trainees. We made the Effort to get to the bedside with our trainees, teach a pearl on every case, and give feedback on every shift. The days when I practiced these tips with my were far better the when I failed to give my best Effort. How do we bring our "A" game to the bedside everyday? Joshua Wooden gave his sons severn principles to live by. His son, Coach John Wooden gave these same princip...
Coach Woodenism for the Week: "As you strive to reach your personal best, Alertness will make the task much easier". In this series, we're applying Coach John Wooden's Pyramid of Success to medical education and leadership. We began by discussing the foundation of Attitude, Effort, Friendship, Loyalty, and Cooperation. The second row focuses on the mind, beginning with Self Control, followed by Alertness. Alertness is the ability to be continuously "observing, absorbing, and learning from what is happening around you." For the leader, teacher, and clinician alertness is always essential. We must always be alert to our own strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats. Then we must be always aware of these same characteristics for our team, and most importantly, our patients and their families. Often times, the greatest threat to team alertness and ultimately patient safety is the the very culture of medicine itself. As students, clinicians, and suppo...
We only practice medicine. We are each other's coaches and trainees. The attending and his resident. The nurse and nursing student. The fourth year and the third year. The Paramedic and the EMT-B. The patient as both coach and trainee for all. An attitude of Enthusiasm is the first cornerstone of Coach Wooden's Pyramid of Success. We know a positive attitude must originate from our core values as clinicians. Last week we asked our trainees to examine their attitude in relation to the day's successes and failures. I again realized that my own "All In" attitude improves with success, and helps create success. Unfortunately, we all know the opposite is true as well. In my failures this week, my attitude plummeted, and even sabotaged my own success. Typically, enthusiasm drops as the week marches on patient after patient, shift after shift, and meeting after meeting. Although attitude must originate with our core values, sustaining this attitude relies on bein...
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