Abraham Flexner was a reformer of education, particularly in the area
of medicine. He devoted much of his life to education, attempting to
gain a better understanding of its place in society.1 It could be said that he changed the face of medical education in America with his 1910 report Medical Education in the United States and Canada: A Report to the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.2 I would like to explore results on both sides regarding Flexner's impact on medical policy and as a result, medical care.
Good as it was, Flexner's report also may have been a part of the
reduction of natural products in the U.S. healthcare environment between
1910 and the 1960s. That gap became obvious to policy makers when David
Eisenberg's study, Unconventional Medicine in the United States -- Prevalence, Costs, and Patterns of Use,
demonstrated the amount of money that Americans spent out of pocket on
"complimentary and alternative healthcare." We will explore this after
considering Flexner's work in more detail.
The Background
If one considers the centennial commemorative of Flexner's work in a 2010 special edition of Academic Medicine,
medical education improved. In it, Dr. Steven Kanter, the
editor-in-chief, gave summary of the essays reflecting upon the past 100
years of a post Flexnerian world.3 Kanter's summary focused
upon balance as a common feature among the essays. Dialectics ranged
from curricular content and the length of medical training, to the
contrast between a "disease management" and "population-based health
improvement."4 Other areas of balance included professional
or scientism and humanism, rural and urban care, lab time and patient
time, and "the integration of formal knowledge of the basic, clinical,
and social sciences with clinical experience."5 Refreshingly, Lambert et al. argued for a balance between "standardized" and "personalized" scientific knowledge.5
The fundamental message was that Flexner was focused upon balance, as
were the "Neo-Flexnerians" who published essays in the Centennial
Celebration in Academic Medicine.
But, was Flexner balanced in his approach to seeking balance and
improving education according to his worldview? Notorious for his harsh
descriptions, Flexner also took rather extreme positions. Consider this
section of the report, this one justifiably addressing the Georgia
College of Eclectic Medicine and Surgery of Atlanta:
"The school occupies a building in which, in respect to filthy
conditions, has few equals, but no superiors, among medical schools. Its
anatomy room, containing a single cadaver, is indescribably foul. The
pathological and histological "laboratory" contains a few dirty slides
and ordinary microscopes . . . nothing more disgraceful calling itself a
medical school can be found anywhere."2
The Turn
Carnegie Foundation published and funded the 1910 Flexnor Report,
which carved out and cleaned up national healthcare policy with respect
to education and the medical profession, but at what cost? It was
devastating for some. They were those who used competing medical models
often with better results and stronger economics than the
chemical-surgical focus of the medical schools supported by the report.
Medical care in the U.S. was altered in such a way that indigenous
knowledges as employed by eclectic physicians who used Native American
traditional medicine were deleted from the standard of care.
Five criteria for evaluating schools were used by Flexner in order to
develop his work. Here are those criteria: a) entrance requirements
and adherence to them, b) the size and training of the faculty c) the
sum and allocation of endowment and fees to support the institution d)
the adequacy and quality of the laboratories as well as the training and
qualifications of the laboratory instructors, and e) the relationships
between the school and its associated hospitals. There were other
criteria used to develop the Flexner Report such as full-time teaching
faculty, pathological analysis of the human body and a physiochemical
analysis of the human body.2 There are no records of who was involved with the process for developing the criteria.
What we know is that Flexner, an educator with no background in
medicine, investigated 69 schools in 90 days. Here are the results of
his work. Within three years of the release of the Flexner Report, 25
medical schools closed. Altogether, because of the earlier efforts and
then the release of the Flexner Report the number of medical schools
dropped from 650 to 50. Private hospitals declined in number from an
estimated 2,441 in 1910 to 1,076 in 1946. 6 The 22 homeopathic medical
schools that flourished in 1900 dwindled to just two in 1923. By 1950
all schools teaching homeopathy were closed. If a physician did not
graduate from a Flexner approved medical school, he couldn't find a job.
New licensing laws required that medical schools be certified. Further:
- Schools that admitted Afro-Americans did not pass (except for two that admitted only Afro-Americans).
- Schools admitting Jews got lower than average grades (resulting in a 30 percent reduction in Jews graduating)
- Schools that admitted women got lower than average grades resulting in a 33 percent reduction in women graduating7
- Schools that were "commercial institutions" (able to function entirely by student fees) did not pass.
- By 1925 10,000 herbalists were out of business.
While Flexners ideals are espoused in reflection pieces upon him, it
is also clear from the reults how the document was used. Conventional
medical systems in America effectively excluded indigenous forms of
medical knowledge from 1910 until the 1960s.
The ReTurn
The Eisenberg's study, Unconventional Medicine in the United States -- Prevalence, Costs, and Patterns of Use
8, showed that the US had began to recover from the losses created by
the Flexner report. In 1990, there was an estimated 425 million visits
to providers of unconventional therapy exceeding the 388 million visits
to primary care physicians. Moneys spent were approximately $13.7
billion, three quarters of which ($10.3 billion) was paid out of pocket.
$12.8 billion was spent out of pocket annually for all hospitalizations
in the United States.8 The nation awoke from the sedating slumber of a Flexnerian ideal that had clouded the critical thought sphere.
Not long after Eisenberg published his landmark study, on Friday,
December 6, 1996 the FDA announced the reclassification of acupuncture
needles from class III (premarket approval) to class II (special
controls). They identified the acupuncture needle as "a device intended
to pierce the skin in the practice of acupuncture. The device consists
of a solid, stainless steel needle. The device may have a handle
attached to the needle to facilitate the delivery of acupuncture
treatment."9 Thus, the experimental status was removed from acupuncture needles.
Growth and change continued. On March 7, 2000, President William
Jefferson Clinton gave executive order 13147, forming the White House
Commission on Complimentary and Alternative Medicine Policy.10 Medical schools began including a consideration for nutrition and natural products.
The Summary
Flexner is arguably the grandfather of the "site visit" in medical
education and higher education. The benefits of his work are clear, the
U.S. has one of the strongest medical education systems in the world.
The American public was divested of a more rich a plural form of medical
care. Powers that be noticed in 1990 after Eisenberg's study that
people have mode complex needs than the corporate-technological forms of
medicine. That trend was present all along and gained momentum during
the sixties. Later studies that Eisenberg conducted have demonstrated
that the growth of a plural medical system continues.
References
- Abraham Flexner [cited 2011 August 5]: Available from: www.ias.edu/people/flexner.
- Flexner A. Medical Education in the United States and Canada: A
Report to the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. .
Boston, MA1910.
- Kanter SL. A Letter to Those Who Read This Issue in 2110. Academic Medicine. 2010;85(2):181-2 10.1097/ACM.0b013e3181cfbf6f.
- Prislin MD, Saultz JW, Geyman JP. The Generalist Disciplines in
American Medicine One Hundred Years Following the Flexner Report: A Case
Study of Unintended Consequences and Some Proposals for Post-Flexnerian
Reform. Academic Medicine. 2010;85(2):228-35
10.1097/ACM.0b013e3181c877bf.
- Irby DM, Cooke M, O'Brien BC. Calls for Reform of Medical Education
by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching: 1910 and
2010. Academic Medicine. 2010;85(2):220-7 10.1097/ACM.0b013e3181c88449.
- Mark D. Hiatt MD, M.S., M.B.A. and Christopher G. Stockton, M.S.M.
The Impact of the Flexner Report on the Fate of Medical Schools in North
America After 1909. Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons.
2003;8(2).
- Starr P. The social transformation of American medicine. New York: Basic Books; 1982.
- Eisenberg DM, Kessler RC, Foster C, Norlock FE, Calkins DR, Delbanco
TL. Unconventional Medicine in the United States -- Prevalence, Costs,
and Patterns of Use. N Engl J Med. 1993 January 28, 1993;328(4):246-52.
- FDA. Medical Devices; Reclassification of Acupuncture Needles for
the Practice of Acupuncture. Federal Register [serial on the Internet].
1996; 61(236): Available from: www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-1996-12-06/html/96-31047.htm.
- CAM WHCo. White House Commission on Complementary and Alternative Medicine Policy 2002: Available from: www.whccamp.hhs.gov/finalreport.html.