- Pathologists can combine their diagnostic and interpersonal skills to become curators of population health
- Unmet needs in utilization management, patient tracking, and telemedicine can all be met by pathologists who choose to take on such tasks
- We can also help educate other healthcare providers to optimize patient care on a large scale
- New technologies mean that modern population health management is at the very beginning of its evolution – and pathologists have a vital and exciting role to play going forward
When attempting to dispel the myth of the pathologist locked in a basement – friend only to the microscope and the tissue section – many of us turn to examples of patient interactions. It’s certainly true that there is a place for us in face-to-face conversations with patients, just as there is a place for us in medical education, and in community outreach. But these interpersonal interactions aren’t the only place outside the laboratory where our skills have value – and one oft-overlooked arena is, in my opinion, among the most important places where we can make a contribution; I see us as curators of health – not only for individual patients, but for entire populations.