Copyright
©The Author(s) 2023.
World J Clin Cases. Jul 26, 2023; 11(21): 4966-4974
Published online Jul 26, 2023. doi: 10.12998/wjcc.v11.i21.4966
Published online Jul 26, 2023. doi: 10.12998/wjcc.v11.i21.4966
Original pre-Flexnerian status (proprietary model) corporate model | The Flexnerian revolution (academic model) | Re-emerging pre-Flexnerian status (re-proprietarization model) re-corporatization model | |
The post-Flexnerian regression | |||
Medical school ownership | Private practitioners and hospitals | University-based and academicians | Hospital-based, practitioners-owned |
University hospital (academic medical centre) ownership and affiliations | Privately owned and funded | University-owned, publicly and charity funded | University-affiliated, not owned, or more precisely, the hospital owns the school, which is only nominally affiliated with the university, but operated like a proprietary private practice, an appendage accessory facility to a tertiary center |
Accreditation and standard setting agency | Absent, determined by the practitioners needs | Rigorous, robust, determined by university and regulated by academicians | Paperwork stamping exercise, and determined by practitioners and hospital’s needs and philosophies |
Private practice ideals and standards | University-based ideals and standards | Private practice ideals and standards | |
Faculty status | Full-time private practitioners who part-time in teaching, no interest in research, and no academic interests or identity | Full-time academicians, with clear academic identity and values, high sense of scholarship, and education and research | Full-time practitioners who part-time in teaching, and clinical academicians are fulltime in name only |
Hospital job clinicians given academic titles without contributing to education or investigation (research) | |||
Basic sciences status | Irrelevant, no labs, no cadaveric dissections, pure theoretical didactic teaching, no scientific training or engagement | Mandatory, fundamental, laboratory scientific training, powerful separate disciplines, strong scientific identity formation and engagement | Integrated to the point of irrelevancy, no laboratory training or exposure, no cadaveric dissections, just multimedia theoretical instruction, lack of scientific identity and engagement, which made most students look down on basic science |
Clinical sciences | No clinical exposure, if any it was ambulatory, no in-patient exposure or involvement in caring activities or educational rounds, no observation of the totality of in-patient journey | Extensive clinical exposure, mainly in-patient, patients assigned to students, involved in caring activities and daily educational rounds, observation of the totality of in-patient journey | Poor clinical exposure, especially hospital based, replaced by community based, mostly ambulatory in nature or imaginary patients and scenarios or simulated clinical environment in skill labs |
The profession (clinical practitioners) perceptions of the clinician academician | Negative: waste of talent and time, the clinical mission is the only mission | Positive: the best of the triple worlds (educators, researchers, and clinicians) | Negative: waste of time, irrelevant, postgraduate training is more important than undergraduate education |
Basic scientists and non-medical academicians perceptions of clinical faculty | Negative: Not true academicians, nor scientists, just professional practitioners masquerading as academicians and scientists, imposters | Positive: Academic clinicians are investigators, scientists, and educators | Negative: Clinical faculty are academicians in title only, they are not trained in science, or educational theory and practice, they are practitioners who teach by emulation at best, and by telepathy at worst |
Research status | Absent, no room for inquiry and discovery | Central, fundamental component of the school mission, faculty and students have to be scientists, not just practitioners | Revenue-generation is the primary motivator, students don’t need to be scientists, they just have to be competent and safe practitioners generating revenue |
Student status | Customers, self-learners, no much of instruction | Students were active learners, teacher-centred curriculum, enriched the student-faculty interaction | Customers, student-centred curriculum and learning approach, meant less teaching and more self-learning, which led to low quality interaction between students and faculty, made the faculty redundant and led to disrespect of the faculty |
Teaching is frowned upon and shamed (the T-word), and learning is emphasized instead | |||
Faculty are not allowed to “hijacking” the educational process by daring to teach, and denying students the opportunity for self-learning, and that student empowerment requires faculty to resist the medieval urge to teach and to practice educational restraint and let students learn as an empowerment strategy | |||
Dominant and major sources of revenues | Private clinical practice, student’s tuitions | Research grants, public funding of under and post graduate education, public and private not for profit charities funding of public clinical services | Expanding private clinical practice, escalating student’s tuitions and students enrolments to the detriment of quality |
Aim after graduation | Vocational training and private practice or community hospitals | Academic university based postgraduate education and training, and academic practice | Vocational training and private practice or community hospitals |
- Citation: Alzerwi NAN. Flexner has fallen: Transitions in medical education system across time, a gradual return to pre-Flexnerian state (de-Flexnerization). World J Clin Cases 2023; 11(21): 4966-4974
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2307-8960/full/v11/i21/4966.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.12998/wjcc.v11.i21.4966