1. If you give a bunch of medical students pagers, many of those pagers will go off during the very next lecture. Oh, and we have to write something about the patient, too. 7. A hospital tour by a doctor who helped design the hospital will be much more engaging than a tour by an administrator who is reading the signs on the walls.
2. If you train and test medical students in anatomy, physiology and pathology for two years, when you give them a schedule saying "Monday - On Call" they will likely have no idea what this means or what they are supposed to do. Or if they should bring their pagers.
3. Lectures by fourth-year students explaining what "being on call" means and what to do when on call are very helpful. Lectures by senior faculty describing the abstract, theoretical concepts of effective learning aren't so much.
4. Rounds are not to be confused with rounding. Rounds come in two types, teaching and grand. While teaching is done on grand rounds, it is not the same as teaching rounds. Likewise, teaching rounds are not necessarily grand, though I suppose they could be, in the same way that nice people can be jolly. Of course, the internet phenomenon Grand Rounds is entirely different and could be considered a third type.
5. Properly scrubbing for surgery as a medical student simply involves making sure you scrub your hands for longer than any of the other surgeons or residents.
6. Every time we need to write in a patient chart, we need to write the following:
9. The summer is plenty of time to forget all the things medical you learned in the first two years of medical school.
10. Even if you remembered everything from the first two years of medical school, you would still know pretty much nothing compared to what a doctor knows.
Monday, September 08, 2008
Top 10 List: Ten things I learned in the first week of third year medical school
Posted at 22:52
Labels: clerkship, third year, top 10 lists
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
4 comments:
Full of what a medical student blog should have; humour.
I laughed out loud.
Absolutely fantastic! Had me laughing the entire way through. Keep it up!
Love it.
Re Number 8 - nothing will ever prepare you for suturing the heel of someone who has not worn closed shoes in 10 years. The force it will take to pierce his skin (with the best of needles) will cause the instruments to bruise your thenar eminence causing you to freak out the next day that you accidentally stabbed yourself.
And re Number 10: - I often think that it I learn more basic science stuff now through the clinical lens. I certainly learned more immunology when doing honours where I took blood from patients who I also got to talk to a number of times, than from lectures and cartoon animations about T cells.
95 percent of patients will heal on their own, anyway, even if a medico is involved.
Post a Comment