Search
Search engine:
XenForo Search
Threadloom Search
Search titles only
By:
Search engine:
XenForo Search
Threadloom Search
Search titles only
By:
Menu
Forums
What's new
New posts
Latest activity
Search forums
Members
Articles
Interviews
Professions
Rehab Sciences
Dental
Medical
Pharmacy
Podiatry
Optometry
Psychology
Veterinary
Resources
Interview Feedback
Essay Workshop
Application Cost Calculator
MD Applicants
DDS Applicants
LizzyM Application Assistant
Moonlighting.org
About
About the Ads
Our History
How We Moderate
Vision, Values and Policies
Support for Black Lives Matter
Log in
Register
Search
Search engine:
XenForo Search
Threadloom Search
Search titles only
By:
Search engine:
XenForo Search
Threadloom Search
Search titles only
By:
Forums
Popular Categories
Pre-medical
Medical Student
Dental (DDS/DMD)
Optometry
Pharmacy
Physical Therapy
Other Links
Members
New posts
trending
Search forums
Support SDN
Donate
Contact us
Main Links
Forums
Articles
Interviews
Professions
Fields
Dental
Medical
Optometry
Pharmacy
Podiatry
Psychology
Rehab Sciences
Veterinary
Support SDN
Donate
Contact us
Main Links
Forums
Articles
Interviews
Resources
Applicants
MD Applicants
DDS Applicants
LizzyM Application Assistant
Application Cost Calculator
Essay Workshop
Interview Feedback
SDN Wiki
Other Resources
Glossary
Medical Specialty Selector
Scutwork
StudySchedule
Review2
Support SDN
Donate
Contact us
Main Links
Forums
Articles
Interviews
About
Organization
Our History
Vision, Values and Policies
How We Moderate
Newsroom
About the Ads
Help
Support Us
Become a Partner
Sponsor SDN
Donate to SDN
Writing for SDN
Support SDN
Donate
Contact us
Main Links
Forums
Articles
Interviews
What's new
New posts
Latest activity
Search forums
Members
Forums
Medical Student Forums
Medical Students - DO
Benefit to Rotating with Residents?
Reply to thread
Search
Search engine:
XenForo Search
Threadloom Search
Search titles only
By:
Search engine:
XenForo Search
Threadloom Search
Search titles only
By:
Install the app
Install
Hi Guest: Check out our new article here:
It Pays to Be an Early (Financial) Bird
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
About the Ads
Message
<blockquote data-quote="fldoctorgirl" data-source="post: 22299204" data-attributes="member: 830955"><p>I think about this all the time. I want to do IM and I'll have one outpatient month and one month with a hospitalist. Apparently the hospitalist rotation is <em>the</em> one you want to have if you want to do IM-- supposedly you practically run his service, round on the patients, write all the notes and come up with your own plan and he will sign off or amend it. Butttttt, I don't believe either of these will have residents. So I'm super excited for the rotation and think I will learn a lot, but every time I read SDN it makes me nervous that I'll look like an idiot come sub-Is/intern year.</p><p></p><p>I've been with residents for a couple of other rotations. I agree with others that I have noticed the attendings are far better teachers than when I've been preceptor-based. It was also definitely nice to see the role of the resident. However, and this is probably just because I haven't rotated at a big academic center?, I haven't noticed much of a difference besides that. Don't know why. </p><p></p><p>Regardless, I'm planning on doing several months of sub-Is in IM, so I hope that will fix any deficiencies. Does anyone have any other tips for bridging the gap you claim to see? I've worked with residents who graduated from my school and haven't noticed them seeing more or less proficient than their co-residents, but I don't know. I tried really hard to get an IM rotation with residents (my school has one at a big academic center), but my clinical coordinator told me they didn't care and couldn't take requests lol. Makes no sense to me but just another example of schools trying to sabotage us <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite201" alt=":rolleyes:" title="Roll eyes :rolleyes:" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":rolleyes:" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="fldoctorgirl, post: 22299204, member: 830955"] I think about this all the time. I want to do IM and I'll have one outpatient month and one month with a hospitalist. Apparently the hospitalist rotation is [I]the[/I] one you want to have if you want to do IM-- supposedly you practically run his service, round on the patients, write all the notes and come up with your own plan and he will sign off or amend it. Butttttt, I don't believe either of these will have residents. So I'm super excited for the rotation and think I will learn a lot, but every time I read SDN it makes me nervous that I'll look like an idiot come sub-Is/intern year. I've been with residents for a couple of other rotations. I agree with others that I have noticed the attendings are far better teachers than when I've been preceptor-based. It was also definitely nice to see the role of the resident. However, and this is probably just because I haven't rotated at a big academic center?, I haven't noticed much of a difference besides that. Don't know why. Regardless, I'm planning on doing several months of sub-Is in IM, so I hope that will fix any deficiencies. Does anyone have any other tips for bridging the gap you claim to see? I've worked with residents who graduated from my school and haven't noticed them seeing more or less proficient than their co-residents, but I don't know. I tried really hard to get an IM rotation with residents (my school has one at a big academic center), but my clinical coordinator told me they didn't care and couldn't take requests lol. Makes no sense to me but just another example of schools trying to sabotage us :rolleyes: [/QUOTE]
Your message may be considered spam for the following reasons:
Your new thread title is very short, and likely is unhelpful.
Your reply is very short and likely does not add anything to the thread.
Your reply is very long and likely does not add anything to the thread.
It is very likely that it does not need any further discussion and thus bumping it serves no purpose.
Your message is mostly quotes or spoilers.
Your reply has occurred very quickly after a previous reply and likely does not add anything to the thread.
This thread is locked.
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Forums
Medical Student Forums
Medical Students - DO
Benefit to Rotating with Residents?