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Related Experiment Videos

Collegiality: what is it?

J R Mangiardi1, E D Pellegrino

  • 1Lenox Hill Hospital, New York, NY.

Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine
|March 1, 1992
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Academic medical collegium members have privileges like knowledge pursuit and experimentation. Their obligations include patient care and upholding a professional code to protect the collegial environment in academic medicine.

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Area of Science:

  • Medical Ethics
  • Academic Medicine

Background:

  • The academic medical collegium encompasses privileges and obligations.
  • These include freedom in knowledge pursuit, experimentation, and communication.
  • Specific medical obligations involve patient care and ethical covenants.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To define the privileges and obligations of the academic medical collegium.
  • To emphasize the importance of a codified set of duties for medical colleagues.
  • To highlight the role of these duties in preserving the collegial environment in American academic medicine.

Main Methods:

  • This study is a conceptual analysis of the academic medical collegium.
  • It outlines the inherent privileges and responsibilities within this group.

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  • The analysis focuses on the ethical and professional dimensions of medical academia.
  • Main Results:

    • Privileges include freedom of inquiry, therapeutic practice, instruction, and knowledge dissemination.
    • Obligations mirror those of the general academic collegium, with added medical-specific duties.
    • Key medical obligations include patient care, ethical patient relationships, knowledge lifecycle management, academic critique, and adherence to professional codes.

    Conclusions:

    • The relationship among medical colleagues is governed by a codified set of duties.
    • These duties are essential for protecting the collegial environment.
    • Upholding these responsibilities is crucial for the future of American academic medicine.