calflowergirl said:
Does anyone know any resources available that will teach/guide you on how to present to attendings. My preceptor has been so busy this year and I never got to present to him.
If you can give me some advice I'd really appreciate.
Thanks!
Hi there,
Your presentations will vary from specialty to specialty and under different circumstances. There are the longer formal presentations and the teaching rounds presentations where attendings are usually present.
A good guideline for the formal presentation is to look at the Case Reports from Massachusetts General Hospital that can be found in every issue of The New England Journal of Medicine. These presentations are superbly done and very complete.
If you are presenting on teaching rounds, you want to give a brief introduction: This is Mr so and so who is a 50-year-old gentleman on hospital day 3 admitted through the emergency department where he presented with acute onset abdominal pain etc...
Again, there are different guidelines for different circumstances. As a rule, surgery attendings want to hear less and medicine attendings want to here more including a complete differential diagnosis. If you are presenting an ICU, a systems by systems presentation is a good guideline.
Learning to present is a great skill to have and you will get loads of practice during third and fourth year. By the time you graduate, you will be a pro. This is also good because your daily notes should somewhat mirror your presentations too.
There is a brief outline of presenting to both housestaff and to attendings in the little book called "How to be a truly EXCELLENT Junior Medical Student" by Robert J. Lederman, MD. This book contains thousands of pearls that will help you shine on any rotation. It costs about $7 and will easily fit in your lab coat pocket.
Good luck!
njbmd
🙂