Catherine Reinis Lucey, MD, is the vice dean for education and executive vice dean for the School of Medicine at University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). She directs the undergraduate, graduate and continuing medical education programs of the School of Medicine and the Office of Medical Education. Dr. Lucey is on the executive management team for the School of Medicine’s Differences Matters Initiative and oversees other strategic initiatives for the School and the Campus. Read her full bio.
Interview with Catherine Reinis Lucey of UCSF
Q: What research are you or your lab focusing on and why, and what problem(s) are you trying to solve?
A: My work involves designing, implementing and studying innovations in medical education that allow our medical schools to fulfill our social contract to improve the health of our communities and reduce the suffering of our patients. This involves predicting how changes in biomedical, data and social and behavioral sciences will evolve and impact both how physicians care for patients and how they will learn throughout careers that may span 30 or more years. Our new curriculum for medical students focuses on helping physicians master emerging areas of competency such as data science and technology, team based continuous quality improvement, and continuous learning to address the complex problems facing health care and communities today while still holding onto the enduring qualities that people need to see in their physicians: competence, caring, and trustworthiness.
Q: What makes your research unique? Can you share with us some recent findings?
A: In this setting, my work is unique because it involves organizational change and mining data from living laboratories—the education and health systems of our medical schools. We study phenomena of humans interacting in these complex system. We work to understand barriers to achieving the high quality health system that all of us need and then design, implement and study educational interventions to address those barriers.
One example of work that we have done. Health care disparities persist, in part due to biases and stereotypes about disease states and patients that physicians pick up (or fail to let go of) in medical school and residency. Addressing this problem requires (among other things) diversifying both the physician workforce and the faculty who design the curriculum for our education programs. And yet, there is a dearth of faculty from groups underrepresented in medicine in the nation’s medical schools. We sought to understand why that may be. One finding we identified is that students who come from groups underrepresented in medicine are consistently rated slightly lower than their well represented in medicine peers. Because of institutional policies, these minor changes in ratings translated into major changes in honors designations, which interferes with students’ abilities to pursue the types of residency programs that lead to faculty positions. We are working on a number of initiatives that address these issues
Q: What excites you about your work?
A: I am excited about our ability to leverage education of the next generation of physicians to address persistent health care challenges such as health care disparities related to race and ethnicity, non infectious epidemics such as obesity and type 2 diabetes, and optimizing healthy aging. Solving these and similarly complex challenges requires physicians who are able to collaborate effectively across a wide variety of disciplines to seek population insights using big data and translate that into better care for patients.
Q: When thinking about your research and the field you are working in, what are some recent breakthroughs that are propelling the field forward and how will they impact healthcare?
A: We know more today about how young physicians learn than at any time in the history of modern American medicine and medical education. There are two critical areas of focus in education today. One is the emerging paradigm of competency based, time variable education that may provide a better way to design educational programs and support life-long learning than the traditional fixed time educational programs. This paradigm may allow us the flexibility to shorten training for some, optimize outcomes for all, and more readily enable career shifts. The second is a focus on the importance of creating exemplary environments for both learning and patient care. Focusing on the ability of all within the health care system to learn, grow and thrive while at work will be critical to solving the challenges of burnout.
Q: What are the short-term challenges that your scientific field is facing?
A: Health professions education is where high quality health care begins. Despite this, there is no national funding mechanism for educational research in the health professions. This limits advances in the field that might give us critical insights into how best to educate and support the continuous learning of the health professions workforce that we need.
The Precision Medicine World Conference (PMWC), in its 17th installment, will take place in the Santa Clara Convention Center (Silicon Valley) on January 21-24, 2020. The program will traverse innovative technologies, thriving initiatives, and clinical case studies that enable the translation of precision medicine into direct improvements in health care. Conference attendees will have an opportunity to learn first-hand about the latest developments and advancements in precision medicine and cutting-edge new strategies and solutions that are changing how patients are treated.
See 2019 Agenda highlights:
- Five tracks will showcase sessions on the latest advancements in precision medicine which include, but are not limited to:
- AI & Data Science Showcase
- Clinical & Research Tools Showcase
- Clinical Dx Showcase
- Creating Clinical Value with Liquid Biopsy ctDNA, etc.
- Digital Health/Health and Wellness
- Digital Phenotyping
- Diversity in Precision Medicine
- Drug Development (PPPs)
- Early Days of Life Sequencing
- Emerging Technologies in PM
- Emerging Therapeutic Showcase
- FDA Efforts to Accelerate PM
- Gene Editing
- Genomic Profiling Showcase
- Immunotherapy Sessions & Showcase
- Implementation into Health Care Delivery
- Large Scale Bio-data Resources to Support Drug Development (PPPs)
- Microbial Profiling Showcase
- Microbiome
- Neoantigens
- Next-Gen. Workforce of PM
- Non-Clinical Services Showcase
- Pharmacogenomics
- Point-of Care Dx Platform
- Precision Public Health
- Rare Disease Diagnosis
- Resilience
- Robust Clinical Decision Support Tools
- Wellness and Aging Showcase
See 2019 Agenda highlights:
- Five tracks will showcase sessions on the latest advancements in precision medicine which include, but are not limited to:
- AI & Data Science Showcase
- Clinical & Research Tools Showcase
- Clinical Dx Showcase
- Creating Clinical Value with Liquid Biopsy ctDNA, etc.
- Digital Health/Health and Wellness
- Digital Phenotyping
- Diversity in Precision Medicine
- Drug Development (PPPs)
- Early Days of Life Sequencing
- Emerging Technologies in PM
- Emerging Therapeutic Showcase
- FDA Efforts to Accelerate PM
- Gene Editing / CRISPR
- Genomic Profiling Showcase
- Immunotherapy Sessions & Showcase
- Implementation into Health Care Delivery
- Large Scale Bio-data Resources to Support Drug Development (PPPs)
- Microbial Profiling Showcase
- Microbiome
- Neoantigens
- Next-Gen. Workforce of PM
- Non-Clinical Services Showcase
- Pharmacogenomics
- Point-of Care Dx Platform
- Precision Public Health
- Rare Disease Diagnosis
- Resilience
- Robust Clinical Decision Support Tools
- Wellness and Aging Showcase
- A lineup of 450+ highly regarded speakers featuring pioneering researchers and authorities across the healthcare and biotechnology sectors
- Luminary and Pioneer Awards, honoring individuals who contributed, and continue to contribute, to the field of Precision Medicine
- 2000+ multidisciplinary attendees, from across the entire spectrum of healthcare, representing different types of companies, technologies, and medical centers with leadership roles in precision medicine