Mentoring in Medicine
The Role of Medical Mentors
September 14, 2022Beginning on the first day of medical school, osteopathic physicians practice a “hands-on”
approach to patient care. Learning and developing patient care skills is a process
during which students acquire knowledge and develop an understanding of the context
for applying this medical knowledge to each individual and unique situation.
Mentoring relationships play a vital role in providing “context” for all of the “content”
that students must master in medical school.
“Throughout the millennia of medical arts being passed from one generation to the
next, a key element is the relationship between the physician-teacher and the physician-student,”
explained Michelle Hobson, DO.
According to Dahlin Jackson, medical student and OMM Scholar at PCOM Georgia, mentors are part of the educational process from day one.
“Before even getting into medical school, student leadership partners you up with
a second-year medical student and this second-year medical student will help follow
you along from your first year up until your third year of medical school once they
graduate,” Jackson explained.
The mentors, he added, assist medical students as they begin medical school and acclimate
to the environment.
As a student’s medical education journey continues, mentors can provide valuable insight.
“I think mentorship here is really cool because you get to see a lot of different
levels of medicine being practiced,” said Azalech Hinton, a member of the Doctor of
Osteopathic Medicine Class of 2024 at PCOM Georgia. “You have the students that are
a few classes ahead of you and then you also have residents and then eventually attendings
and our professors, so you get to talk to a lot of different people who are in a lot
of different stages in their medical education and they all have a different perspective
and all have different things that they’d like to encourage you to do.”
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These mentors help shape the mentee’s approach to patient care and can help promote
a desire to pass on knowledge to others.
“As a physician, one becomes part of a legacy of multi-generational learning,” said
William Delp, DO. “We are given the opportunity to ‘pay it forward’ to the next generation
of physicians. We share our successes and caution about our failures, accepting our
limitations, and encouraging others to ’do better’ as we continue to serve humanity.”