D
deleted393595
Now that I'm a M2 and have had some patient exposure via SPs and hospital patients, I don't understand how MMI at all correlates to actual practice.
First, you have significantly more time to prepare ahead of time for patient encounters. Second, patient encounters have several portions that are linear to them, such as the opening for instance. Indeed, several texts such as Silverman et. al's "Skills for Communicating with Patients" have broken down the patient encounter into several portions that can be scripted and that have been verified by studies examining doctor-patient communication.
Third, my experience with the MMI interview process has been a mixed bag. There have been several questionable instances: At a prominent school (that may or may not be in NYC), an interviewer sharply criticized me halfway through for not addressing the prompt - only to realize that she herself had misread it (And I was the 3rd kiddo in the rotation that she had talked to). At another school (that may or may not be in North Carolina), another interviewer was munching on a juicy burger during my discussion, and was obsessed with shaking out the last of his fries that had fallen into his takeout bag.
Perhaps I'm missing out on something here. Can someone offer anything in support of MMI?
First, you have significantly more time to prepare ahead of time for patient encounters. Second, patient encounters have several portions that are linear to them, such as the opening for instance. Indeed, several texts such as Silverman et. al's "Skills for Communicating with Patients" have broken down the patient encounter into several portions that can be scripted and that have been verified by studies examining doctor-patient communication.
Third, my experience with the MMI interview process has been a mixed bag. There have been several questionable instances: At a prominent school (that may or may not be in NYC), an interviewer sharply criticized me halfway through for not addressing the prompt - only to realize that she herself had misread it (And I was the 3rd kiddo in the rotation that she had talked to). At another school (that may or may not be in North Carolina), another interviewer was munching on a juicy burger during my discussion, and was obsessed with shaking out the last of his fries that had fallen into his takeout bag.
Perhaps I'm missing out on something here. Can someone offer anything in support of MMI?