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- Mar 29, 2016
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At my school we learn the basic sciences in excruciating detail. All the steps of heme synthesis, all the specific sugars added to proteoglycans and the sequence they are added in, etc. I'd say 80% of my study time is devoted to absorbing all this minutiae.
But at the end of the day, what do I remember about heme synthesis? I know it's got a bunch of steps and that depending on which enzyme is messed up, you can have different diseases which manifest with different symptoms. I have completely forgotten the names of the enzymes and of the diseases and am just left with this high level understanding that I could have as easily achieved if somebody had told me, verbatim: "yo, heme synthesis involves a bunch of enzymes and messing up an enzyme gives you a different disease." In other words, hours and hours of my life wasted on temporarily storing useless information that I have no hope in hell of retaining more than a week after the exam, let alone recalling years down the line when starting residency.
So what is the point of medical school? We cover the same stuff as the PAs do but in much more detail. But it is precisely that detail that we completely purge our minds of in just a few weeks after each exam. By the time I start my surgery (or whatever) residency, I will probably remember less basic sciences crap than your typical PA does at the end of PA school since I will be further removed from my basic sciences years at that point than the PA.
Agree? Disagree?
But at the end of the day, what do I remember about heme synthesis? I know it's got a bunch of steps and that depending on which enzyme is messed up, you can have different diseases which manifest with different symptoms. I have completely forgotten the names of the enzymes and of the diseases and am just left with this high level understanding that I could have as easily achieved if somebody had told me, verbatim: "yo, heme synthesis involves a bunch of enzymes and messing up an enzyme gives you a different disease." In other words, hours and hours of my life wasted on temporarily storing useless information that I have no hope in hell of retaining more than a week after the exam, let alone recalling years down the line when starting residency.
So what is the point of medical school? We cover the same stuff as the PAs do but in much more detail. But it is precisely that detail that we completely purge our minds of in just a few weeks after each exam. By the time I start my surgery (or whatever) residency, I will probably remember less basic sciences crap than your typical PA does at the end of PA school since I will be further removed from my basic sciences years at that point than the PA.
Agree? Disagree?