- Joined
- Sep 17, 2017
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TL;DR-I’m overwhelmed on my first rotation and I want to know if things improve. The worst is that I don’t have much time to read about patients and think about diagnosis and treatment. You can honestly skip the rest lol
Our school is 1 year preclinicals, so I’m an M2 two weeks into my first rotation of family medicine, which ends in 2 weeks. I get lukewarm feedback from my preceptors at best. Some say “yeah you’re fine” or “I think you’re meeting expectations,” while others are like “you need to keep reading” and “you need to get better at knowing the patients.”
It’s been hard because most patients are like 50+ with a lot of past history, and some specialists on their cases, and I’m given like 5 minutes to prep for each patient beforehand. Every patient of course comes in with a few concerns on top of their HME. I never see the same problem twice except like diabetes.
The worst part is my assessment and plan. I honestly don’t know anything. I don’t know common from uncommon conditions and their presentations. I had a 1 year old come in and his mom said he’s always thirsty and pees a lot. I told my preceptor I’m worried about maybe T1D. He looked at me like I was crazy and said “no I think he’s just a growing boy.” I don’t know how to treat a lot of things. NSAIDs and ice or an X ray and brace? I don’t know. The issue is because it’s outpatient, I need to come to a diagnosis and provide a solution in 20 minutes or less, and the doctors don’t give me time to digest and look up some info. I know it’s because they’re doubly constrained for time, it’s *my* failing.
I’m trying case files and uworld, but of course almost nothing is textbook.
Our school is 1 year preclinicals, so I’m an M2 two weeks into my first rotation of family medicine, which ends in 2 weeks. I get lukewarm feedback from my preceptors at best. Some say “yeah you’re fine” or “I think you’re meeting expectations,” while others are like “you need to keep reading” and “you need to get better at knowing the patients.”
It’s been hard because most patients are like 50+ with a lot of past history, and some specialists on their cases, and I’m given like 5 minutes to prep for each patient beforehand. Every patient of course comes in with a few concerns on top of their HME. I never see the same problem twice except like diabetes.
The worst part is my assessment and plan. I honestly don’t know anything. I don’t know common from uncommon conditions and their presentations. I had a 1 year old come in and his mom said he’s always thirsty and pees a lot. I told my preceptor I’m worried about maybe T1D. He looked at me like I was crazy and said “no I think he’s just a growing boy.” I don’t know how to treat a lot of things. NSAIDs and ice or an X ray and brace? I don’t know. The issue is because it’s outpatient, I need to come to a diagnosis and provide a solution in 20 minutes or less, and the doctors don’t give me time to digest and look up some info. I know it’s because they’re doubly constrained for time, it’s *my* failing.
I’m trying case files and uworld, but of course almost nothing is textbook.