Teaching. Coaching. Advising. Mentoring. Mentoring is, and should be, different. Mentoring should reflect a gift of time that for some may span decades. Mentoring is about more than "giving advice," it should encompass motivation and empowerment that stems from truly understanding the mentee. It can be an opportunity to hold up a mirror for another to see themselves and who they can become. As leaders in academic family medicine, we are concerned with the decreasing tenure of senior leaders and unfilled junior faculty positions. The transition of talent from education to corporate leadership can be alarming. How are we as a profession going to pass on the wealth of expertise? How will we ensure our oral history survives the technology generation? Research in academic medicine indicates that mentoring has an important impact on career choice and guidance, faculty retention, as well as personal development. 1 Though the research is limited, less than one-half 2 of faculty nationally report having a mentor. These studies don't discriminate between formal and informal mentoring, nor the length of these relationships. The reasons for the paucity of mentoring in academic medicine are varied. The demand for increasing revenue generation increases demands on clinical time, resulting in less time for professional development. Faculty researchers and faculty administrators are also finding more of their available time claimed by the demands of funders and sponsoring institutions, leaving professional development as a passing priority. Fewer than 50% of physicians self-identify as having a formal mentor. Yet, most family physicians can reflect on the teachings of an adored teacher, advisor, or coach. In fact, most of us chose the path of family medicine because of these experiences. Information can easily be passed on by books or through electronic media, but the real value of who we are as a profession is much more than what we know; it is what we do. To
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