
The four winners - along with brief excerpts from their essays - are as follows:
Some things, as doctors, we cannot fix. But trust is an exception. It is earned by remaining present, even when the bridge gets shaky. As a student, I didn't need to make any grand gestures. I simply needed to stay. We can ask, "Can you tell me about her?" And then, we can listen. Because while some words are heavier than others, trust has a weight of its own that can be powerful enough to help carry people through.
Medicine once demanded distance, reserve, polished shoes, and practiced hands. But the children I met did not care how many white coats you owned. They cared if you remembered their favorite color. If you sat cross-legged on a tile floor to help shape a piece of their heart.
For many patients I have met as a medical student, health care is not simply about receiving treatment; it is also about feeling heard, respected, and understood. This shift is especially vital in communities where cultural differences shape health beliefs and generational divides influence faith in providers. I strive to be a physician who embodies this vision of professionalism - one who builds trust through humility, listening, and respect. By combining empathy with expertise, I hope to provide care that honors both the vulnerabilities and values of those I serve.
In a town where everyone knew each other, the traditional boundaries between physician and patient blurred. My first lesson in trust came when I realized that my patients weren't just patients. They were my neighbors, the people I saw at the grocery store, the barista who made my morning coffee, and the family that invited me to dinner.
"Medical professionalism has long been a guiding compass, but in today's shifting health care landscape, its meaning is being reimagined," said Jessica Perlo, MPH, Executive Vice President of the ABIM Foundation. "Trust and professionalism are inseparable, and these essays remind us that trust isn't earned through perfection, but through presence, vulnerability, and empathy. They also offer a powerful reflection on the ongoing journey of becoming more worthy of the trust we seek to uphold."
Honorable mentions were awarded to five essayists:
Essays submitted by current and future physicians, nurses, physician assistants, and others from more than 80 institutions across the U.S. were reviewed and scored by panel of judges representing a wide swath of the health care system.
Criteria included the (1) connection to the topic of trust, (2) quality of writing, (3) novelty of the message, and (4) opportunity for others to learn.
Essay Contest Judges:
Full essays can be read here.
*Adil Hassan is a pseudonym used at the request of the author.
About the ABIM Foundation
The ABIM Foundation's mission is to advance medicalit l professionalism to improve the health care system by collaborating with physicians and physician leaders, medical trainees, health care delivery systems, payers, policymakers, consumer organizations and patients to foster a shared understanding of professionalism and how they can adopt the tenets of professionalism in practice. To learn more about the ABIM Foundation, visit www.abimfoundation.org and connect on LinkedIn.
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Jaime McClennen
ABIM Foundation
http://www.abimfoundation.org
You can see the original version and more on PRLeap here: http://www.prleap.com/pr/305130/beyond-the-white-coat-future-physicians-share-personal-stories-about-how-theyve-earned-and-kept-patient-trust-