Showing posts with label Internal Medicine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internal Medicine. Show all posts

Nov 6, 2012

An Update About Internal Medicine

Remember back in September when I did THIS post about our first weeks in IM?  Well, we are in the home stretch people.  Josh takes his shelf exam on Thursday afternoon and then we have a break!  Okay, maybe it's not much of a break, really just a long weekend before 12 weeks of surgery start on Tuesday, but still, we're excited. 

So how have the last 8 or so weeks gone you ask?  Well, pretty much like the first four.  Josh worked, a lot (one week over 100 hours).  He learned, a lot.  And we are still happy with our decision to come to ARMC. 

Last week, he had his oral exam (20% of your grade) given by the attendings at Arrowhead.  This was much like a "round-robin" type of question and answer session.  Each student was asked a couple of questions by the attending in front of their fellow students.  The students were given a list of topics that they could be asked beforehand.  He said it went well, the questions were not meant to be tricky, and he knew the answer to every question asked. 

So Thursday is the shelf exam and the students have had this week off to study which they all appreciate, but unfortunately, they are required to study in the library at ARMC.  Which personally, I think is kind of silly, but I guess if you are a procrastinator then this forces you to prepare for the exam. 

What else have we learned?

Well, a few weeks ago, SGU's Office of Career and Guidance held a lengthy meeting about what to expect during the next year and a half as far as applying to residency, scheduling 4th year electives, and all that jazz.  It was helpful and if you are interested, most of the information talked about at the meeting can be found on their website. 

Also, as soon as you start 3rd year, consider writing your CV or Curriculum Vitae.  It's basically a resume that you give to attendings to use as a guide when writing your Letters of Recommendation and you also have to include it in your Master File at SGU.  There are guidelines on the OCG website for how to write it.

I say this because you may end up like Josh and want a LOR from your very first rotation and if you are a slacker too busy to think about writing it early, then your wife ends up writing it for you during your last week of the rotation while you are studying for your shelf exam. 

Wife of the Year Award right here. Just sayin.

Just get it done early.  Save yourself  your wife the stress.

Also, sign up at www.sguclinicals.com for up-to-date information regarding the clincial years.  It has definitely been a great resource for us me.

So that's it.  IM is almost over and what a great learning experience it has been for both of us!  Can't wait to tell you guys the details about surgery!



Sep 11, 2012

Internal Medicine

Josh is now well into his 12 week Internal Medicine rotation and I know that as an SO during his first and definitely during his second year of school I had so many questions about the clinical years.  It seemed that while there was an over abundance of information on how the basic science years went, there was an equally large lack of information regarding 3rd and 4th year.  I feel like we started year three blindly.  Yes, SGU had a couple of meetings during 5th term to inform us of the health criteria that needed to be met and the names and locations of hospitals that we could choose from but there was little to no information that explained what the day to day life of an MSIII might look like.

While I can't speak for every hospital that SGU is affiliated with, nor can I speak for different clinical rotations within each hospital, I can tell you some information about Internal Medicine at ARMC (Arrowhead Regional Medical Center). 

First of all, Josh is really enjoying the hospital.  He likes every intern, senior resident, and attending that he has worked with thus far.  At ARMC, students are placed on a "team" consisting of four student physicians (some may be 4th years), two interns (first or second year residents), a senior resident, and an attending.  If you are keeping track, that's an eight person team.  Four students, four MD's.  Pretty darn good ratio of students to MD's which is especially good for learning.

At the meetings during 5th term, SGU hammered into the heads of the students that what makes or breaks your time during clinicals is not so much the hospital, but the attending/residents that you are working with.  But, maybe you are thinking to yourself small teams are great but what if my student hates their attending, maybe your husband just got lucky.  Well, the good thing about IM at ARMC is that every four weeks, you switch teams.  So you get to be on a total of three teams.  You rotate with the same students, but your attending/resident team changes.  That way, if for some reason you didn't get along with your attending on Team 1, your grade isn't solely determined by that attending. 

Which brings me to grading.  How does it work?  And this can be said for all hospitals during clinicals.  Your final grade is broken up into categories.

80% of your grade is based on your attending(s):
          -20% medical knowledge
          -20% clinical skills
          -20% professional behavior
          -20% performance on end-of-clerkship oral exam (given by attending)
For the oral exam, the students at ARMC were given a list at the beginning of the clerkship with all the topics they could possibly be tested on.

The last 20% of your grade is the NBME clinical subject exam or shelf exam as you will hear it referred to.  This exam is the same for every SGU student in every hospital for each clerkship.

SGU expects that many/most students will get A's and B's in their clerkships. 

So how much will your student have to study?  Well, I suppose that all depends on your student.  So far, Josh has had mini assignments from his attending where he has come home to read up on certain topics or if there have been things he has seen in the hospital that he feels he is lacking knowledge in, he has come home to read about them.  But overall, his nose hasn't been in the books like it was first and second year.  Hallelujah!  At ARMC, in Internal Medicine, the students will get one week off at the end of the 12 weeks to study for the shelf exam. 

Okay, so he doesn't study much, but really, how BUSY is he?  The answer to that, extremely.  The students at ARMC in IM work A LOT.  Maybe more so then most SGU students at other hospitals.   Josh is taking two 28 hour call nights a week (about every 4 days) and when he's not taking call, he's going in at 7am and getting done around 3 or 4pm.  Those days aren't half bad, but when you are still lacking sleep from your last call night, it can be rough.  He's averaging about 80 hours a week in the hospital. 

I suppose you can look at this as a negative, but Josh and I are seeing it as a positive.  He has his own patients (since day 1) that he sees.  I'm talking Josh goes in the room by himself, no doctor, no resident, and sees patients and then chiefs it (reports to the attending).  It's actually pretty darn cool.  And because he is in the hospital so much, he is learning a ton!

We know that not every rotation will be this intense.  We can expect that Internal Medicine and Surgery will be especially time consuming, but that Family Medicine and Psychiatry will be a little less stressful.  Thankfully, we already know his schedule for the whole year.  Twelve weeks of IM, followed by Surgery, Pediatrics, OBGYN, Family Med, and then Psych.  I'm sure I'll be able to post the some information on those as they happen.  For now, we are taking one rotation/one week at a time.  Over two years in and this medical school thing is still a learning process!



Aug 23, 2012

One week down...

...almost.

Welp folks, you know how when  you are in the midst of first and second year and everyone tells you, "just get to 3rd year and it will get so much better?"  Ha!  They lied.

Josh is almost done with week one of Internal Medicine.  And I use the term "done" loosely because he still has to work tomorrow and is on call (call does NOT mean you have a pager and may get called in, it means you are at the hospital all night and you are working).  He will go into the hospital at 7am tomorrow and will not be back until 7am Saturday.  That's 24 hours straight people.  His week has looked like this:

Monday: 28 hours (overnight call)  That's day numero uno!
Tuesday:  get home at 10am and sleep allllllllll day
Wednesday: 9.5 hours
Thurs: 9.5 hours
Friday: 24 hours (overnight call)
Saturday: get home at 7am and sleep allll day
Sunday: off (hopefully this will be a spend time with wifey who has been neglected all week day!)

So, that's a grand total of 71 hours during week one. 

I suppose it could be worse.  It could be 90 hours a week, which we have heard happens.

He is exhausted, has been underfed all week, and his feet are swollen from being up on them all day.

But, it's not all bad. :)  He is learning...A LOT!  He is admitting patients, taking historys, performing physical exams like DRE's (google it!), and taking care of his own patients each day.  He is enjoying it, but to suggest that MSIII (at least in IM) is going to be anything but extremely exhausting would just be a total lie.

So what have I been doing with all my time? 

Well, working, working out, laying out, cooking, cleaning, laundry, and decorating my home!
The living room is coming along!
I definitely need to find a hobby.  Or get a dog. :)





Aug 20, 2012

Third Year...


...has officially begun.

Josh headed off this morning bright and early to Arrowhead Regional Medical Center where he is starting his 12 week Internal Medicine rotation. 

He looked very Doctor-like in his tie, short white coat (not to be confused with a long white coat, those are for MD's, not students), and stethoscope.

I can't help but feel so proud of him.  He's come so far and I know that third year will present it's own new challenges, but I also know he's plenty capable of handling anything that's thrown at him.  In fact, he welcomes the challenges and he's excited about them.

It's the first day of school for many, including our nephew Caleb who starts Kindergarten today.  And for us, it's the first day of a new chapter in this journey of medical school.
Looking Spiffy!