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Derek Smith 
Mentoring Activity 
08/06/2014   
The Role of a Mentor in HealthCare and Medical Dosimetry 
Mentor, guide, supporter, advisor, teacher are just a few words that describe someone who can 
truly impact the life of a student by sharing their knowledge. Medical Dosimetry is a continually 
evolving and incredibly intricate field of work. The role of a mentor in a medical dosimetry 
program is exceptionally crucial. A mentor is someone who has the patience and dedication to 
communicate their skills and knowledge to a student. There are many aspects however that help 
a mentor and mentee relationship to be successful. Sometimes managing the balance of 
professional and personal relationships can be difficult. A poor relationship between the mentor 
and the mentee can lead to problems such as disregard, abuse of power, and an overall poor 
education. Both an advantageous and an inadequate education can impact the medical dosimetry 
profession remarkably. What you learn here in the clinic is so much more useful than reading a 
textbook Its a different world.
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  Molding a student through personal experience and knowledge requires a well-rounded 
and dedicated mentor. A mentor must have the ability to guide a student in the right direction to 
eventually allow the student to discover their own answers.
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 A mentor has the difficult task of 
being a practical educator that is willing to listen, accessible, constructive, specific, and 
supportive.
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 It sounds like a daunting task when described in such a way, but this is why being a 
mentor is such an admirable role model to the student. We want you to be comfortable and 
competent enough to enjoy the field.
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 A mentor significantly must have the best intentions to 
teach a student and all the other traits of a successful mentor can come naturally.  
  The impact a mentor has on a student can be potent. The mentor can open opportunity, 
inspire, and inform. Youre always going to have a lifetime resource.
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 These words ring truth 
to the fact that a mentor can make a lifelong impact. The mentor-mentee bond is an intricate 
balance between professionalism and friendship. To have a successful relationship the mentee 
needs to feel comfortable enough to ask questions and accept constructive criticism. A medical 
dosimetry student is lucky enough to be exposed to numerous personalities and its important for 
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the student to find the mentoring style they are most comfortable with to yield maximum results.
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The role of the mentor-mentee relationship in medical dosimetry is crucial to the future impact of 
the career. If we can produce another good dosimetrist in the field thats satisfaction to be able 
to produce a well-rounded student. We want you to feel comfortable and enjoy it, and not feel 
overwhelmed. We want you to be happy about being in the field in the end.
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  The field of medical dosimetry requires a student to know every aspect of the profession 
to understand the clinical implication of each plan. I think you have to learn how to do 
everything. Simulation, treatment, bookwork, you have to know it all because when you leave 
we want you to be able to do everything on your own and go into a clinic and be an asset to them 
by being able to jump in with asking questions about the flow of the department rather than 
planning questions like how to treat a breast or prostate.
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 The field of medical dosimetry faces 
many variables in software, planning techniques, treatment machines, physician constraints, and 
patient anatomy. It is important for a student to gain the important underlying details that are 
involved in using dose modifying tools that produce an ideal treatment plan. Managing a full 
time medical dosimetry job while mentoring a student can become quite a task. While managing 
time for a mentee is just one difficulty in mentoring, the other problems that can arise from 
mentoring are unfortunately vast.  
  Mentoring can be a very successful form of education when the right aspects are put 
forth, but too often there are situations where manageable problems form a barrier between the 
mentor and student. These barriers can stem from ethnicity, language, gender, generation, or 
status. 
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If a problem results from the mentor-mentee relationship the student unfortunately can be 
impacted in an enormously negative way. The solution to these problems may not always be met, 
but the impact can force a student to quit or seek another profession which in turn depletes the 
future contribution of those students to any profession involved.  
    The role of a mentor will always be important to bridge the gap between didactic 
definitions and clinical competencies. The mental and social science behind a mentor-mentee 
relationship is what can either produce a successful apprentice or a scholar lost in the 
multifaceted transition from student to professional. Medical dosimetry is a very involved career 
that requires the full participation from both the mentor and the mentee. Textbooks dont always 
reflect the variables that every patient presents. Like many healthcare professions, the medical 
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dosimetry career entails a knowledge from the beginning phases of a patient treatment to the end. 
This deeper knowledge often requires the student to experience the patient emotions, treatments, 
and kind-heartedness. This tool can not only benefit a student conceptually but also 
psychologically. The mentor has the purpose of guiding the mentee to that realization with their 
patience, knowledge, and compassion. The purpose of a mentor has long been the tool to 
enhance the future of a profession. Were always learning from each other
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Most professionals 
at some point will serve as a mentor to colleagues, family, friends, or even superiors. The impact 
of a strong mentor-mentee relationship is evident in the research, technology, and healthcare that 
has evolved from primitive to progressive as the mentor continues to influence a curious 
scholars ambition just one step further.  
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
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References 
1.  Discussion with Doug Vaughn, CMD Medical Dosimetrist at the McLaren-Flint Cancer Care 
Institute. August 5, 2014. 
2.  Lenards N. Professionalism & Mentoring. Mentoring. [SoftChalk]. La Crosse, WI: UW-L 
Medical Dosimetry Program; 2014.  
3.  Richardson, J. What makes a good mentor. UCLA Web site. 
http://polaris.gseis.ucla.edu/jrichardson/documents/mentor.htm . August 2005. Accessed 
August 3, 2014.  
4.  Baerlocher M, OBrien J, Newton M, Gautam T, Noble J. The mentor-mentee relationship in 
academic medicine. European Journal of Internal Medicine. 2011; 22(6); 166-167. doi: 
10.1016/j.ejim.2011.05.018 . 
5.  Discussion with Renee ONeal, CMD Medical Dosimetrist at the McLaren-Flint Cancer Care 
Institute. August 5, 2014. 
6.  Straus SE, Chatur F, Taylor M. Issues in the mentor-mentee relationship in academic 
medicine: a qualitative study. Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges. 
2009; 84(1); 135-139. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e31819301ab  
7.  Bickel J, Rosenthal SL. Difficult issues in mentoring: recommendations on making the 
undiscussable discussable. Academic Medicine. 2011; 86(10): 1229-1234. doi: 
0.1097/ACM.0b013e31822c0df7 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Appendix A 
Derek Smith 
Interview with Doug Vaughn, CMD (transcript) 
August 5, 2014 
 
Q: What do you feel is an effective form of mentoring? 
A: Being honest and full disclosure so you understand what youre getting into, Id appreciate 
that if I were mentored 
Q: When you are Mentoring what are goals that you hope to meet? 
A: Helping you learn little intricacies like how a wedge will affect your plan, opening MLCs 
thing the software wont be able to tell you what to do. Knowing this is probably as important if 
not more important than just learning the software. 
Q: What do you feel you gain from mentoring? 
A: We like you and we want you to be successful, so we gain personal satisfaction if you leave 
competent and comfortable enough in the job to enjoy it as well. 
Q: Do you feel that providing your own perspective of a definition or technique is more useful 
than what would be found in a textbook? Please Explain. 
A: Textbooks wont include the various expectations of physicians. What you here in the clinic 
is so much more useful than reading a textbook Its a different world 
Q: How do you feel mentoring effects a student? 
A: Youre always going to have a lifetime resource. 
 
 
 
 
 
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Appendix B 
Derek Smith 
Interview with Renee ONeal, CMD (transcript) 
August 5, 2014 
 
Q: When you are mentoring what are goals that you hope to meet? 
A: I think you have to learn how to do everything. Simulation, treatment, bookwork, you have to 
know it all because when you leave we want you to be able to do everything on your own and go 
into a clinic and be an asset to them by being able to jump in with asking questions about the 
flow of the department rather than planning questions like how to treat a breast or prostate.  
Q: What do you feel you gain from mentoring? 
A: Personal satisfaction. If we can produce another good dosimetrist in the field thats 
satisfaction to be able to produce a well-rounded student. We want you to feel comfortable and 
enjoy it, and not feel overwhelmed. We want you to be happy about being in the field in the end.  
Q: Why do you feel mentoring is important to a medical dosimetrist? 
A: It helps us continue to learn 
Q: Do you feel you still need a mentor at times?  
A: Oh Definitely! Were always learning from each other