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This would be plausible to me, if it wasn't the case that knowledge used daily moved away from Step 1 material over time. Medicine shelf has a lot of Step 1 in it. Step 2 CK had a decent amount of overlap. Step 3 felt like a very different set of knowledge, way more geared towards management decisions. I'm at the tail end of an inpatient-only IM year now, and looking back at Sketchy slides, I honestly couldn't tell you even half of that info anymore, but I feel far more comfortable making decisions about my patients' care. I do believe the wards used to beat important info into clerks much more than modern times. But I really don't think that info was the kind of stuff we cram and re-memorize during Step 1 dedicated to move our scores up 30 points. It was all about management decisions, telling you what you messed up in your planned orders, or missed on history and exam, things that would make you a better intern - things that attendings actually know a lot better than their med students.We have a much more comprehensive knowledge of physiology than attendings who were in school at that time. We have way more meds and way more treatments. In the 90s we didn’t give beta blockers in heart failure and you essentially always admitted uncomplicated pneumonia. We’re expected to hit wards knowing a ton of physiology and pharm that was poorly understood then or (in the case of pharm) didn’t even exist. So yeah, I think the knowledge bar is higher now for what we’re expected to know when we hit wards. The standard is higher.
We definitely learn clinically irrelevant minutiae, but as I’ve already said, no one’s failing based on that if they know the important stuff. As an aside, the micro minutiae was nothing on step 1 compared to comlex.
Now something we’ll both likely agree on is that when someone hit wards in 3rd year 20 years ago with knowledge deficits, the information was drilled into them. That’s not the case anymore. So I firmly believe our attendings knew the phys and pharm they we’re supposed to know by the end of med school. But they learned it during rotations instead of showing up with it all memorized as is the norm now.
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