Why Advocate?
What Is Advocacy?
Types of Advocacy
- Professional Self-Advocacy: the resources, safety, and well-being necessary to provide high-quality care.
- Individual Advocacy: Speaking up on behalf of another person and/or navigating complex systems to ensure their needs, rights, or interests are met.
- Systems Advocacy: Advocacy aimed at influencing policies, laws, and practices at a systemic level.
The ACGME Program Requirements for Graduate Medical Education in Family Medicine state that family physicians must “advocate for high-quality, cost-effective, and high value care which improves health outcomes and patient satisfaction” and “advocate for all patients and work to remove barriers to care for all populations. They advocate for their patients through the development and promotion of health policy by working with local organizations and partnering to promote better health within the intricacies of the health care system.”
- Advocacy as a professional responsibility — PubMed
- Why Physician Advocacy Matters for Patients, Physicians, and the Health System — PubMed
- Formal Advocacy Curricula in Family Medicine Residencies — Family Medicine
- Professionalism in Family Medicine Education — STFM initiative
Questions?
If you have questions about advocacy or how to participate, contact Nina DeJonghe, CAFM director of government relations, to let us know how we can advocate for you and to find out how you can be an advocate for your profession.
CONTACT STAFF WITH QUESTIONS