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JANUARY / FEBRUARY
2006
HARVARD MACY
INSTITUTE
Driving changes in health care delivery and education
The Harvard Macy Institute is accepting applications for the 2006 Program
for Leaders in Health Care Education, to be held June 11-16 in Boston. This
annual program brings together senior faculty from Harvard Business School
and Harvard Medical School to conduct interactive case discussions specifically
designed to help leaders in academic medicine develop strategies for leading
and managing systemic change.
The course is designed for faculty, including those in leadership positions
in schools of medicine, nursing, and pharmacy, as well as medical education
deans, department chairs, and curriculum committee chairs. The program’s
directors emphasize that the course is focused on helping those people address
the relationships between medical education and health care delivery as both
of these areas change. These leaders, said Elizabeth Armstrong, PhD, director
of the Harvard Macy Institute, must approach organizational change with a recognition
of the complexity of the three-part mission of the academic medical center:
education, clinical care, and research.
“This program offers the participating scholars the opportunity to examine
patient care and medical education from a systems perspective, as complex processes
that must be continually monitored, assessed, and revised in order to produce
desired outcomes,” said Armstrong. “The relationships between the
mission to prepare medical graduates, care for patients, and engage in biomedical
research is the major challenge facing these scholars.”
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| Clayton Christensen |
Armstrong serves as co-director of the course along with Joseph B. Martin,
MD, PhD, dean of Harvard Medical School, and Clayton Christensen, DBA, MBA,
MPhil, the Robert and Jane Cizik professor of business administration at
Harvard Business School.
Christensen is a globally recognized authority on innovation management and
organizational change, widely sought after by leading competitors in a range
of industries for his insight and expertise. During the Harvard Macy program,
he utilizes classic management cases and other insight from the business world.
The connections he draws between the challenges in industries like computer
manufacturing and software development and the scholars’ domain of health
care and medical education contribute to an eye-opening experience. In the
2006 program, he plans to introduce participants to theories of innovation
and show how these ideas are applicable to the challenges present in the academic
medical environment.
Asked to summarize what his knowledge and experience bring to the course, Christensen
spoke instead of the benefits he receives from entering a domain outside of
his milieu. “I have gained many important insights through my participation
in the Harvard Macy Institute about the future of health care around the world.
In particular, I have learned about the role leading medical schools need to
play in shaping the future,” he said recently. This openness to explore
outside of one’s regular paradigm is a perspective that the course encourages
in the participants.
Christensen added, “The interdisciplinary collaboration and interaction
that occurs during this program is unsurpassed anywhere else.”
The deadline for applying to the 2006 Program for Leaders in Health Care Education
is January 21. For more information, please visit the Harvard Macy Institute
website at www.harvardmacy.org.
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Copyright 2006 Harvard Medical International
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