- Joined
- Dec 20, 2006
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- Attending Physician
"I think if a medical student is going to be a doctor they should start thinking that they are the doctor as soon as possible. That means doing what they can for their patient. If they want to view it as not their job then nobody is going to shoot them but how can you expect people to respect them for that attitude?"
well stated, for my field where we take only 2 people per year and everyone has to pull their own weight. team dynamics are important and therefore resident evaluations are also. we look critically at how students perform on the service, judging aptitude and attitude. a 240+ and AOA means nothing if you are not proactive. I also do recognize that this may be different for other fields. i can only say that if our intern was told by a rotating student (and our field is elective to rotate on..so in theory you want to be there)that they felt the intern should do the H+P/help with patient data collection (film/labs)/not feel the need to take call etc. because they got paid, they would not make our rank list. there are plently of other programs and fields that they may be a better fit at.
well stated, for my field where we take only 2 people per year and everyone has to pull their own weight. team dynamics are important and therefore resident evaluations are also. we look critically at how students perform on the service, judging aptitude and attitude. a 240+ and AOA means nothing if you are not proactive. I also do recognize that this may be different for other fields. i can only say that if our intern was told by a rotating student (and our field is elective to rotate on..so in theory you want to be there)that they felt the intern should do the H+P/help with patient data collection (film/labs)/not feel the need to take call etc. because they got paid, they would not make our rank list. there are plently of other programs and fields that they may be a better fit at.
Again, you generalize. I never said that it's always busy at all the places I've been. The majority, yes, waiting room always has patients to see. Some ED's I've been to do have lulls. But the ones that weren't as busy were set within the community. And as for places that I haven't been too...I'm dead sure there are ED's that mirror what you speak of, and plenty that aren't (I do know people in ED's around the country as I went to medical school with them so it isn't surprising that they have busy ED's as well). 
