This morning we started the conversation with a few definitions and some ideas that could help us realize our ideas around health care. “Nesting” is the design concept we are exploring at the moment. On the surface, I love the idea of a nest. I remember finding a nest that had fallen out of a tree when I was a kid. I never realized how many bits and pieces go into the construction of a nest. The bird nest I found had been lined with a lot of cotton and soft things scrounged from who know where, but it seemed really strong in the way the branches were all bent and intertwined.
An Afternoon Talk with John Glick, M.D. and Tom Scalea, M.D.
We’ve just spent the early afternoon taking the time to think about things we would like to see in the world.
We all have been meeting in design groups, writing statements of desire for health care: what is not now true that we wish were true, and problems in health care: what is now true that we would like to be true no longer. We tried reframing of problems and nesting of desires, and the theme of day 2 was "It seems like a small change but ... has far-reaching benefits". Then in the aftenoon, we created bouquets of connected statements.
Whenever new arrivals step off the elevator to the 3rd floor they have a dazed look in their eyes: the surreal magnificence of the American Visionary Art Museum—just the taste that you get from the outside of the buildings: giant birdnest balcony, 6-foot mirror-mosaic egg—puts people into a state of beauty shock. The founder and director of the museum, Rebecca Hoffberger, gave a heart-breakingly eloquent welcome, asking us to "blow on the embers of all that is good."
I'm going to be one of the facilitators of "design groups" at the Health Care Systems Design Intensive in Baltimore, Feb 2-5, 2009. The idea of design groups comes from the School for Designing a Society: a small group setting in which participants are invited to think big.
I'm going to be one of the facilitators of "design groups" at the Health Care Systems Design Intensive in Baltimore, Feb 2-5, 2009. The idea of design groups comes from the School for Designing a Society: a small group setting in which participants are invited think big. As a starting point, each participants is asked to write a list of statements about which she or he would say: "While it is not the case, I desire it to be the case." In other words, the assignment is to write a list of statements that are currently false—which the writer wishes were true.
This October the Gesundheit Institute hosted John M Stang MD Medical Elective on the land in West Virginia, under the title "Humanistic Medicine: Constructiing Your Humanism." The eleven participants from four continents were offered inspiring examples from around the world and helpful principles. Together they explored how to incorporate humanism in their own health care careers in service to humanity.
This October the Gesundheit Institute hosted John M Stang MD Medical Elective on the land in West Virginia, under the title "Humanistic Medicine: Constructiing Your Humanism." The eleven participants from four continents were offered inspiring examples from around the world and helpful principles. Together they explored how to incorporate humanism in their own health care careers in service to humanity.
“Few trends could so thoroughly undermine the very foundations of our free society as the acceptance by corporate officials of any social responsibility except to make as much money for their shareholders as possible.”