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- Sep 10, 2009
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After touring a couple of well-known programs and talking to countless residents at a couple of meetings, I am surprised at how varied the educational experience in PRS is. It might be this way for most surgical specialties and I could just be betraying my lack of knowledge on surgical education in general. Although, there seems be a large disconnect between programs with reputations of being elite but offering a paucity of hands on surgical experience. Is it better to get a great name and improve surgical skills on the fellowship end or is it better to graduate with strong surgical skills and fight your way into an elite academic institution or fellowship?
On another note, our institution was visited by a very well-respected craniofacial/vascular anomalies surgeon who did nothing but rail against the current surgical competence of both general surgery PRS guys and integrated PRS guys. His thoughts were that most general surgery guys are only being taught to take care of sick patients and hold cameras; while the integrated guys are missing the basic principles of surgery which is evident in their handling of almost any PRS case. He finished by saying that it was okay because most of these guys will make their living with "fillers." Were his gripes legitimate? Or was it am instance of one of the Gods of PRS venting that surgery had become too soft with to much emphasis on lifestyle. I asked him if there was any way to escape surgical mediocrity, his response. "No, the system is set-up to deliver average."Curious as to what some of the vets on the forum think.
On another note, our institution was visited by a very well-respected craniofacial/vascular anomalies surgeon who did nothing but rail against the current surgical competence of both general surgery PRS guys and integrated PRS guys. His thoughts were that most general surgery guys are only being taught to take care of sick patients and hold cameras; while the integrated guys are missing the basic principles of surgery which is evident in their handling of almost any PRS case. He finished by saying that it was okay because most of these guys will make their living with "fillers." Were his gripes legitimate? Or was it am instance of one of the Gods of PRS venting that surgery had become too soft with to much emphasis on lifestyle. I asked him if there was any way to escape surgical mediocrity, his response. "No, the system is set-up to deliver average."Curious as to what some of the vets on the forum think.