G. Gayle Stephens, MD, who is roundly regarded as one of the founders of family medicine, gave his talk “Family Medicine as Counterculture” at the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine annual conference in 1979, 10 years after the specialty’s establishment.
The speech was then published, republished 10 years later, and, like many of Dr. Stephen’s other essays and articles, remains very much alive in the minds of practicing family physicians, in the teachings of FP academicians, and in the Google searches of budding FPs.
The late Dr. Stephens saw family medicine as a counterculture within medicine, rooted in social change. In his speech he examined these roots – in reform initiatives in the 1960s, and in certain philosophies and “minority” movements such as agrarianism and the preservation of rural life, utopianism, humanism, consumerism, and feminism.
He also looked forward, challenging the specialty to remain true to itself and its roots – to its belief in “uninhibited access” to medical care for everyone, for instance, and to continual whole-person and family-oriented care – and cautioned against moving to resemble the “rest of the medical bureaucracy.”
“Clearly we have been on the side of change in American life. We have identified ourselves with certain minorities and minority positions ... [and] been counter to many of the dominant forces in society,” Dr. Stephens said in his talk. Family practice “succeeded in the decade just past because we were identified with reforms that are more pervasive and powerful than ourselves.”
The family practice movement has “more in common with [the] counterculture than it does with the dominant scientific medical establishment,” he said.
A teacher and founder of medical education programs
Larry A. Green, MD, who was pursuing his own residency training as Dr. Stephens was leading a department of family practice, said
“It was from this philosophical position that he became a synthesizer and observer and interpreter of what was going on in the development of family medicine,” said Dr. Green, Distinguished Professor and Epperson Zorn Chair for Innovation in Family Medicine and Primary Care at the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora.
Dr. Stephens, who died at home in 2014 at the age of 85, was “probably the most important person in exposing what I now consider to be a fact – that family medicine was the product of social changes ... of social movements related to women’s rights, civil rights, and social responsibility,” Dr. Green said. “He could recall lessons from the past and forecast the challenges of the future. And there was no one more effective in clarifying the importance of personal [doctor-patient] relationships in family medicine.”
After years of general practice in rural Wichita, Kan., his wife Eula Jean’s hometown, Dr. Stephens founded and led one of the first family medicine residencies at Wesley Hospital in Wichita in 1967. His core principles, as described on today’s Wesley Family Medicine Residency website, included that a family physician consider the whole person, be honest, have a full scope of training including behavioral and mental health, and be “reflective about him/herself ... [learning about] his/her assets, liabilities, foibles, and idiosyncrasies.” Dr. Stephens, who had grown up in rural Ashburn, Mo., later became the founding dean of the School of Primary Medical Care at the University of Alabama in Huntsville and then chaired the department of family practice at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.