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Paul N. Lanken, MD, Professor of Medicine, Appointed
Associate Dean for Professionalism and Humanism at the University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine
(Philadelphia,
PA) – Paul N. Lanken, MD, Professor of Medicine
and Medical Ethics and Senior Fellow at the Center for Bioethics at the
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, has been
appointed Associate Dean for Professionalism and Humanism. The position
has oversight for the courses and classes related to professionalism and
humanism that span the four years of medical education. These educational
components comprise Module 6 – Professionalism and Humanism –
of Curriculum 2000®. Implemented in 1998 at Penn’s
School of Medicine, Curriculum 2000® represents a major
restructuring of the four years of medical student education that is designed
to educate physicians who can successfully meet the challenges of medicine
in the 21st century.
Dr. Lanken will also be responsible for starting and directing a chapter
of the Gold Humanism Honor Society, sponsored by the Arnold P. Gold Foundation,
a public foundation fostering humanism in medicine. “This is a great
opportunity to continue the innovative and groundbreaking work that permits
Penn to provide a comprehensive, quality medical education to its students,”
says Lanken, of his appointment. “By creating this new position,
Penn Medicine has clearly demonstrated the medical school’s strong
commitment to education in professionalism and humanism.”
Since the start of Curriculum 2000®, Lanken has served
as the Module 6 leader. Earlier this year he was responsible for directing
the start of Penn Medicine’s Doctoring Longitudinal Patient-Centered
Experience (DLPCE). This innovative teaching strategy helps students gain
first-hand experience in an ongoing relationship with a patient. DLPCE
partners a pair of first-year medical students with a patient who has
a chronic health condition. The students follow their assigned patient
over the next three years under the guidance of the patient’s physician
and faculty preceptor in the three-year long Doctoring Course, a keystone
in Module 6. The medical students will learn how the patient’s health
condition affects their physical and emotional well-being, their family,
and how patients cope with both illness and problems encountered in the
health care systems, such as paying for their medications. This “patient-centered
learning” aims to help these doctors-to-be learn about illnesses
and diseases from the patient’s point of view. The experience will
focus on events and relationships in the patient’s world, while
they battle a chronic illness. “It aims to help students learn to
view their patients as persons, which in the long run, will help them
be better doctors,” adds Dr. Lanken.
Dr. Lanken has been an attending physician in the Pulmonary, Allergy and
Critical Care Division of the Department of Medicine since 1978. He is
board certified in Internal Medicine, Pulmonary Diseases and Critical
Care Medicine. He previously served as Medical Director of the Medical
Intensive Care Unit and Medical Director of the Department of Respiratory
Care Services at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. His clinical
research interests are numerous and he specializes in randomized clinical
trials involving intensive care patients with sepsis or the acute respiratory
distress syndrome (ARDS). He also is currently the recipient of a STEP
(Strategies for Teaching and Evaluating Professionalism) grant from the
American Medical Association in support of further development of teaching
and evaluation of professionalism in medical education.
As a Senior Fellow in the Center for Bioethics of the University of Pennsylvania
and Professor in the Department of Medical Ethics in the School of Medicine,
Dr. Lanken is particularly interested in areas of bioethics relevant to
intensive care situations, such as withholding and withdrawing life support,
informed consent of critically ill patients, and the allocation of scarce
and expensive resources. As Module 6 leader, he is the lead course director
for four courses in medical ethics and professionalism that form an integrated
curriculum throughout the four years of medical school.
Dr. Lanken’s tireless efforts to create a robust and innovative
humanism and professionalism curriculum have played a key role in the
success of Curriculum 2000® and in promoting professional
values and better bedside manners of hundreds of Penn Medicine students.
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PENN Medicine is a $2.7 billion enterprise dedicated
to the related missions of medical education, biomedical research, and
high-quality patient care. PENN Medicine consists of the University of
Pennsylvania School of Medicine (founded in 1765 as the nation’s
first medical school) and the University of Pennsylvania Health System
(created in 1993 as the nation’s first integrated academic health
system).
Penn’s School of Medicine is ranked #3 in the nation for receipt
of NIH research funds; and ranked #4 in the nation in U.S. News &
World Report’s most recent ranking of top research-oriented medical
schools. Supporting 1,400 fulltime faculty and 700 students, the School
of Medicine is recognized worldwide for its superior education and training
of the next generation of physician-scientists and leaders of academic
medicine.
Penn Health System is comprised of: its flagship hospital, the Hospital
of the University of Pennsylvania, consistently rated one of the nation’s
“Honor Roll” hospitals by U.S. News & World Report; Pennsylvania
Hospital, the nation's first hospital; Presbyterian Medical Center; a
faculty practice plan; a primary-care provider network; two multispecialty
satellite facilities; and home health care and hospice. |