‘I’m exhausted. I can’t do any more …‘
These could be the words of very many of us, as our profession deals with some of its most profound challenges to date. But can adversity stimulate creativity?1 Our profession is at a crossroads — we have reached our very own Reggie Perrin moment.2 It is time for us to leave behind our Scientific Bureaucratic Medicine3 chains (policed referral pathways, mandatory measurement …) on the proverbial beach. And instead to reimagine ourselves, our job, and our role within the context of an intellectual profession leading the highest standards of person-centred health care. It is time to embrace our inner scholar.
‘But I’m too busy seeing patients …’
At the 2016 RCGP Conference, we traced the path in the sand for this new way of thinking by tackling three myths about academic general practice:
Myth #1. I haven’t got time for academic work
Yet scholarship is an integral part of daily clinical practice. Every time we …