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I'm still a medical student (IMG), but I can easily tell how good a doctor is in non-surgical specialties. I can simply look up what they are saying and see if it makes sense.
When one of my IM teachers said "End diastolic volume decreases in systolic heart failure" and stuck with that assertion after I questioned it, I knew that I should stick to a textbook for instruction.
I'm rewatching a cell phone video of a foot amputation we got to see and I'm wondering how "correct" the surgical technique is. The surgeon is saying something about how clean the cut is affecting phantom limb pain and I see him figuring the distance to make the flap and where to saw. I have no idea if this is good surgery I'm seeing or bad. We usually have 5 minutes notice before we go see an operation so we can't read up much on it beforehand.
Generally, how can you make watching surgeries a more useful learning experience? What do you look for in a surgeon's technique?
When one of my IM teachers said "End diastolic volume decreases in systolic heart failure" and stuck with that assertion after I questioned it, I knew that I should stick to a textbook for instruction.
I'm rewatching a cell phone video of a foot amputation we got to see and I'm wondering how "correct" the surgical technique is. The surgeon is saying something about how clean the cut is affecting phantom limb pain and I see him figuring the distance to make the flap and where to saw. I have no idea if this is good surgery I'm seeing or bad. We usually have 5 minutes notice before we go see an operation so we can't read up much on it beforehand.
Generally, how can you make watching surgeries a more useful learning experience? What do you look for in a surgeon's technique?
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