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Behind every great achievement stands a hero—someone with a vision
and the focus to see it through. The recent breakthrough of Continuing
Medical Education credit for doctors who attend special seminars on the
Transcendental Meditation technique is just such an achievement—and the
hero behind it is Sarina Grosswald, Ed.D.
Sarina is the Director of Continuing Medical Education (CME) at
InforMed, an organization nationally accredited to offer CME programs. In
the United States, most state medical boards require physicians to take a
specific number of hours of CME courses each year to renew their license
to practice. Typically, the courses provide u dates on
medical therapies, such as new medications or treatment a roaches, which
doctors can then recommend to their patients.
Sarina’s vision was to create new courses showing doctors the solid
science behind the TM technique. "I worked with Dr. Barry Charles to
create an extensive proposal for the board of InforMed," says Sarina.
"We were lucky because just at that time there was a survey in USA
Today reporting that 86 percent of physicians thought there should be
instruction on meditation in medical school, and that they would like to
be able to use it in their practices. So we were able to show an
identified need as well as all the compelling scientific data."
As an instructional designer, Sarina worked with a content committee
including physicians Robert Schneider, Barry Charles and Caesar Molina,
along with David Lonsdorf. She developed the course participant booklets
with scientific charts, literature references, and faculty manuals.
Sarina, who is also a teacher of the Transcendental Meditation
technique, was in a unique position to act as a bridge between the TM
program con tent and the accreditation requirements. To be a roved for
credit, the courses and faculty have to meet the objective standards set
by CME’s national accreditation council and by the American Medical
Association.
Sarina’s hard work has aid off. Now physicians can earn CME credit in
three different ways:
- a special medically-oriented seminar entitled Stress and
Cardiovascular Disease: Research and Applicability of the
Transcendental Meditation Technique for Managing Cardiovascular Risk.
(1.5 hours credit)
- a course entitled Optimizing physician Health and patient Care: The
Transcendental Meditation program, offered in conjunction with the
physician's personal instruction in the TM technique. The course is
also available for doctors who have already learned the TM technique.
- the introductory session of the 12- day Special Training Course in
Maharishi Vedic Medicine. (3 hours credit)
Sarina focused the first course on cardiovascular disease because it is
the single greatest killer among Americans, even greater than all cancers
combined. Reducing the costs of this disease— over $117 billion dollars
per year for treatment, medication, lost time at work, nursing and
physician costs—is high on the list of priorities of the medical
establishment.
"Ultimately," says Sarina, "we’d like insurers to pay
for patients to learn the TM technique. Research has already shown that
people who practice TM have lower blood pressure, require less medication
and fewer doctor visits. If the doctors who take these courses recommend
TM to their patients, then we can show that our courses for doctors result
in better patient outcomes and lower healthcare costs."
Asked about her personal experience in creating this program, Sarina
laughs, "This project was tailor-made for me. It’s been my joy to
be able to do this. It took a lot of energy and focused attention, I can
tell you. It took three years to get it through. But the medical content
is so compelling, so strong—all the positive effects on health and on
healthcare costs—we just have to get this information out to the
doctors. When they look at it they say, ‘Yes, this makes perfect sense.’"
Cynthia Goldstone is an editor of Enlightenment magazine. For more information on CME courses, call 888-349-8192
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