Showing posts with label blogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogs. Show all posts

Thursday, May 25, 2017

The sound of silence (Musings on why it's key to criticize TM professionals / organizations)


Updated: 25 May 2017 
(Major revision from the blog initially posted.)

May's blog was stimulated by recent experiences I've had on a transfusion Twitter account. It deals with concerns about professionals speaking their minds versus being silent. As such it's a personal blog but I hope transfusion professionals everywhere will be able to discern the issues involved and how they may relate to their professional lives.

The blog's content is the type of thing folks don't usually discuss except perhaps with their trusted best friends (or in social media speak, their BFF).

Executive version: The blog is about decisions made on Twitter and on transfusion-related blogs like this one, which occasionally make me persona non grata with fellow tweeps and colleagues. The blog's focus is about the need for transfusion professionals to speak out and discuss the things that bug them, instead of remaining silent.

The blog's title comes from a Simon and Garfunkel song, circa 1965.

BACKGROUND
So readers can appreciate the context of where I'm coming from and what has shaped my views, some background.

In brief, I'm a lifelong medical laboratory technologist who began my career as a 'kid' at Canada's then national blood supplier (Canadian Red Cross) in Winnipeg in the pre-AIDS era that blood bankers often call the 'golden age of serology'. CRC is where I grew up professionally and the Canadian Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service (CRC-BTS) staff became my beloved blood banking family. The learning opportunities were abundant because Winnipeg's CRC-BTS was, and remains, the only combined blood supplier-transfusion service in Canada. Many of the staff became lifelong pals.

Later I lucked out by getting a teaching position as a lecturer, then professor, in the MLS program at the University of Alberta in Edmonton and a clinical instructor for the UAH blood bank, positions held for 22 years. I called these positions the best transfusion science teaching job in Canada, maybe the world, before choosing to give up a tenured university position to embark on new adventures.

With this background I've seen many changes, some I judge as good, some as bad, and been a keen observer of our profession for decades. Transfusion medicine remains a lifelong love affair.

It's obvious, but please be aware that what follows is my perspective and, as such, shows my biases.

CRITICIZING A RESPECTED ORGANIZATION
As noted earlier, my TM career began with Canada's blood supplier CRC-BTS, now CBS. After being a med lab tech, lab supervisor, and clinical instructor at CRC-BTS, decades later I was privileged to obtain many consultant jobs with CBS - I loved them all - and briefly served as a lab manager of a CBS patient services lab. It's an organization Canadians can be proud of but, like any large organization, is not perfect.

Over the years I've criticized CBS on Twitter and in blogs for what I perceive as deception, hypocrisy, use of hackneyed business jargon, and more.

Some tweets I've made often occur on the spur of the moment and constitute errors in judgement. Some are because, as a bit of a contrarian, I see things differently than many or choose to reveal my true feelings on issues that others do not for whatever reason.

Reminds me of advice I'd give to Med Lab Science students:

Explaining how feedback is an indispensable tool to help both instructor and learner improve, and modelling appropriate responses such as, "Thanks for telling me that." When MLS students enter their clinical internship year, I'd explain that constructive criticism is their best friend. They can improve only if supervisory staff tell them when they are doing something wrong or doing something that needs to be improved.
That said, does CBS even want feedback from the likes of me, especially when it's often critical of their practices or constitutes a send-up? Perhaps not.

Sad but tweets about CBS could potentially cause folks I respect to unfollow me on Twitter. I know of at least one in the UK who has done so.

The blogs are a different matter. They're not spontaneous but a way to get something that bugs me off my chest. In a way they're therapeutic. I blog about an issue and feel better because I've said my piece and haven't remained silent. Often I wonder how the heck I've had the chutzpah to criticize a respected organization and its leaders.

So the question arises, is it preferable to keep silent or continue to challenge CBS to be even better? Or are blogs and tweets similar to pissing in the wind?

Fact: Most transfusion professionals choose to keep silent and not criticize organizations such as national blood suppliers for several reasons. First and foremost, the organization may be their employer. Or perhaps they interact with the blood supplier as a hospital client and want to maintain a cordial relationship. 

But the result is that the blood supplier often never knows where they need to improve because no one dares to tell them. Certainly rank-and-file employees usually don't. Reality is many employees outside an inner circle at head office, or not in management positions in blood centres, have long since given up offering feedback about policies because it's invariably ignored. At least it seems that way to 'trench workers'.

Directives and self-congratulatory missives emanate from CBS head office that staff in the far flung regions sometimes consider a joke, often so hypocritical that the missive is the exact opposite of reality. I could write a lot more on this from my experiences as a CBS lab manager but won't now.

LEARNING POINTS
Why should we offer honest feedback to TM colleagues and organizations? Because it's the only way they can improve. If we only promote what a great job they do, they will NEVER improve. And I want the organization I grew up in and love to improve.

As to errors in judgement, those mistakes are what I must learn from. If I've inadvertently offended colleagues, I apologize unreservedly. Being passionate about a subject can sometimes push me to say dumb things.

Does any of this resonate with your experiences? Are you deep into the 'sound of silence' as many, perhaps most, transfusion professionals are? Food for thought that I hope is palatable and doesn't cause you to choke.

FOR FUN
This Simon and Garfunkel song fits this blog. TM professionals and organizations who might improve - if only colleagues would speak inconvenient truths - never can improve if the Sound of Silence reigns in the TM community.

Saturday, February 08, 2014

We are the world (Musings on sharing TM resources)

Updated: 10 Feb. 2014
February's blog is on transfusion medicine resources, including blogs and twitter. [Like all blogs, please check again as revisions invariably occur.]

The blog's title derives from a 1985 song written by Michael Jackson and Lionel Ritchie for 'USA for Africa.'

The blog's theme was triggered by discovering that CBS had removed the Vein to Vein section of its transfusionmedicine.ca website, a site that Kathy Chambers and I developed for CBS in 2001-2003. CBS assessed that some content had become outdated and some was now well covered by other resources. Both true.

The V2V site went up in 2004, ~10 years ago, a long time in transfusion medicine. It's possible that some elements may be revised based on community needs and re-published on the site, but that's just a maybe.

You can still see snapshots of the V2V site because organizations exist that archive websites. This link is the archived site from Sept. 2012.
[Note: Literature references and other external links are still active but don't work on web archives.] 
But that got me thinking about TM resources and who uses them. As explained in January's blog - 'Mommas don't let your babies grow up to be lab techs' -  in reply to Robina's comment (#2 in Addenda), fewer and fewer medical laboratory technologists read TM journals. The same may be true for physicians and nurses.

About online TM resources, I encourage you to ask and answer these questions for yourselves:
  • What resources exist? Who created them and why?
  • Who uses them and why? 
  • Are they useful in your practice?
Perhaps most importantly, should industrialized nations share resources with those in the developing world? In a way, it's similar to whether we in the West should focus on 'Charity begins at home' and give less or nil in foreign aid to poorer nations. And what's the right balance on that continuum?

What follows is my take and I've selected only a few of many useful online resources. Many more exist and your choices may differ from mine.

Please let me know if I've missed an exceptional resource and specify why.

Criteria I use to assess online TM resources:
  • Is content created by credible health professionals, preferably acknowledged experts?
  • Are references to scientific literature included?
  • Is content current and, if older, still relevant today?
  • Even if country specific, is content generalizable to other locales?
  • Who's behind the site? [Usually in About Us
  • Who funds the site? Do they have an agenda? If yes, what is it?
  • Does the site follow the entire Swiss HON 'Code of Conduct'?
 A few useful TM resources, in no particular order:

WEBSITES 

CANADA
Canada has many websites that share incredible resources that took much time, expertise, and funding to create. In each case, developers could have hogged the resources, kept them secret on an organization's intranet.

But, like Australia, the UK, and others, they bravely and generously decided to make them public via the Internet so all could see, share, offer feedback on, perhaps even criticize.

For those who know these sites, bear with me. I'll try to feature a few goodies that may be new to you.

1. BC PBCO 

BC's Provincial Blood Coordinating Office was the first PBCO created in Canada (1997). Among other things, that's reflected in them having the vision to snap up the generic domain name, pbco.ca. [Couldn't resist the joke.]
Sorry!
Sorry, PBCO pals!
Seventeen years later, BC PBCO remains a leader in blood utilization management, information management, and quality management, as well as in sharing educational and other resources via its site and TraQ's (see below). For example:
2. TraQ
Disclosure: I'm TraQ's content coordinator and webmaster.

TraQ has several unique strengths, including:
3. ORBCoN

Among its many exceptional resources, ORBCoN hosts
AUSTRALIA
Australia has long been a leader in developing and sharing blood safety educational resources. Some examples:
UK
The UK too has always generously shared its TM resources and they've led in many key areas. For example:
USA
The best transfusion resources in the USA are the AABB's. I've been a member since 1975 (Yikes!). Please consider that when I criticize the organization. It must be doing something right.

Many of AABB's best resources are restricted to members. But some are available to all, e.g.,

SOCIAL MEDIA
Many of today's 'mature' health professionals diss social media as being sound and fury, signifying nothing, as Shakespeare had Macbeth say about life:
Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
And then is heard no more: it is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing. 
Still, I recommend blogs and Twitter, if they meet criteria as above, as being worthwhile resources for TM professionals.

Social media are democratic, meaning anyone can spout off (I'm a prime example). But health professional bloggers and tweeps shouldn't, and do not, get an audience without earning the respect of peers for the content of the offerings.

Unless they're celebs like Justin Bieber and Katy Perry, who each have over 46 million followers on Twitter. Celebs can be total ______ (fill in the blank with an appropriate word) and still have millions of followers eagerly gobbling up their drivel.

A significant characteristic of social media is that, unlike the websites mentioned above, individual blogs and twitter accounts can be created by anyone for free. The only cost is the time and effort of the people (bloggers and tweeps) who participate and contribute.

BLOGS
1. Musings on transfusion medicine (You are here)
Granted, it's shameless self-promotion to include my own blog. This blog began in 2004 and will have its 10th year anniversary in October. This entry is the 119th individual blog. [As is obvious, I'm long-winded with many rants inside just waiting to be released.]

Many blogs exist (although, not many on TM). Blogs should be taken with a huge grain of salt because they represent one person's biased perspective. Blogs can be thought of as short compositions on a single subject written from the author's personal perspective.

In essence blogs are like newspaper editorials, which represent an individual or group's opinion, e.g., that of the owner, publisher, editor, or editorial board.

Musings on TM represents my opinions alone. A natural tendency is to go against prevailing orthodoxy. To me so much of what people believe, including transfusion professionals, results from speaking to the same people, perhaps a few dozen, day in and day out.

What inevitably results is 'group think'. Spending time in an echo chamber, where you constantly hear your views parrotted back to you, leads to believing your views are conventional wisdom, i.e., Doesn't everyone think that?

In revolt, I'm an iconoclast and this blog provides the medium to oppose what most of us accept as 'truth'.

Still, I hope the blog's ideas are more than a 'nutball sounding off' and represent
  • Constructive criticism
  • Fresh perspective
  • Sound reasoning (Well, mostly...)
If not, the Comments section of the blog (~ Letters to the Editor in newspapers) allows readers to counterbalance my often biased views.

2. A few other transfusion blogs exist but they don't turn my crank using the criteria above. If you know of a good one, please let me know.

TWITTER
Created in 2006, Twitter is a late comer to social media and initially was much ridiculed for its limit of 140 characters and some users tweeting trivialities, e.g., what they ate for breakfast, etc.

But gradually people realized the power of Twitter and saw how it could changed media, politics, business, and more.

I love Twitter for its ability to share news and resources. If you're curious about the world and an information junkie, beware! It's addictive.

1. Cyber Bloodbanker @transfusionnews

Again, forgive the self-promotion. I've 7 Twitter accounts, 4 of them serious (well, relatively so), especially the one above, and 3 spoof accounts strictly for fun. Two are transfusion-related with few followers (only tweet when CBS actions warrant a humorous response):
For transfusion news judged useful or interesting to others, I'll immediately put a link to it on @transfusionnews.

For those new to Twitter, you can register and never tweet, just follow others. Or, if that's too much, a simple approach is to bookmark the account's page and visit it when the mood strikes.

2. Other Twitter accounts
Many of the major TM players tweet and are worth following. Some examples:
LEARNING POINTS
  1. Did you notice that most recommended websites were from countries with publicly funded health care and blood systems? Sharing is good.
  2. All resources on TM websites in Australia, Canada, and UK are available to anyone with Internet access. In a way, it's a version of foreign aid.
  3. Social media is in its infancy but will become ever more powerful as it transmogrifies who controls the message.
FOR FUN

No one says World Wide Web anymore but the web allows us in the West to share resources with those less fortunate around the globe.

Which led me to this month's music choice:
Also see
As always, comments are most welcome.


Thursday, February 09, 2012

Wasted Days & Wasted Nights? (Musings on transfusion professionals use of the Internet)

This month's blog muses on whether the Internet for health professionals is over-hyped. I'm particularly suspicious of applications that are meant to be interactive, not just users passively consuming information provided by others. 


Today's Internet is presumably about the interactive sharing of experiences that supposedly happens on blogs like this one, as well as on discussion forums and mailing lists. 


The blog's title comes from a 1959 song by Freddy Fender.


Based on my experience, Internet users  - meaning you - are definitely passive. Me too when visiting other blogs but I try to participate, at least occasionally, since working in cyberspace is a lot like this cartoon illustrates.

EXAMPLES - INTERACTIVE RESOURCES


1. Musings on Transfusion Medicine: This blog is written just for fun. A review of comments made on earlier blogs reveals very few, and mainly by kind-hearted colleagues who take pity on a friend. (Bringing out a big hanky now....)


Even the controversial blogs specifically designed to stimulate thinking get few, if any, comments, e.g., the last two on bullying and calling Canada's blood supplier vain. Yet, 1000s of transfusion professionals know about the blog via TraQ's monthly newsletter.


2. AABB's "Communities" open to members only (previously AABB forums): Just took a look and there's little activity and often by the same people. Why? AABB  has 1000s of members.


3. Canada's Transfusion Safety Officer "transfusion" mailing list: 200+ subscribers but few post questions.


4. CBBS e-Network Forum: Over the past year, discussion on e-Network Forum, a truly quality resource, has decreased significantly. 


Also, there's a request for new Associate Editor/Moderators, which suggests that long-time editor and founder Ira Shulman may have retired or is about to. 


5. BloodBankTalk - BB Talk is an active discussion group based in the USA. Unfortunately, participation is limited to a core of contributors, including an active UK contingent, whose contributions are uniformly of high quality.


OTHERS? If other web-based forums or mailing lists exist for transfusion medicine physicians or nurses, I'm unaware of them. Why don't they exist?


WHY THE LACK OF PARTICIPATION?
About mailing lists and web-based discussion forums, many possible reasons exist for the lack of participation. Some of the most obvious include


1. Too busy to use Internet resources for work purposes (most health professionals are stretched to the max). But we still spend time on Facebook, on conducting marginally productive Internet searches, on watching sports, and the like.


2. Fear of revealing weakness about not knowing. I suspect this is a biggie. Some may feel embarrassed to request help, thinking, "I should know this." Others may feel their employers may not appreciate an external request for advice.


3. Prefer to network privately since it offers more privacy and less risk of public exposure.


4. Distrust of sources whose qualifications and experience may be uncertain (even though many acknowledged experts now offer help via the Internet).


5. Lack of confidence in computer skills to use Internet effectively (perhaps more prevalent in older professionals?).


6. Boring content, not stimulating enough interest to participate.


If you can suggest other reasons, please add them in a comment below.


So the question arises, "Is today's Internet past its prime as a mechanism to ask and answer questions and participate in as a community?"  


FOR FUN


As I muse about why the silence, the song that comes to mind from a personal perspective is 
If you read this blog, please suggest topics to cover, keeping in mind that content should appeal to technologists, nurses, and physicians working in transfusion medicine. Controversy is okay and ideally should be food for thought. 
As always, comments are most welcome BUT, due to excessive spam, please e-mail me personally or use the address in the newsletter notice.