1. Did you having any notable moments during any of your rotations?
2. Do you believe that you are a different person in regards to morals and ethics from when you entered medical school until now?
3. What was your favorite class during medical school, if any?
4. Where classes heavily lecture based or did you do a fair amount of group work?
5. Did you work at all during medical school?
6. Did you read any books for fun, if so what book? Did you read any interesting informative medically related books that you would recommend to a premed?
7. Thanks for answering all my questions! 🙂
Tough questions, but I'll do my best.
1. Absolutely, many notable moments. Once I ran into a former patient on the street outside the hospital. She said that she thought I was her most favorite member of the team. I realized that the reason probably was that, as a student, I had the most time to sit and hear her out. As the year went on I came to realized that one of the most common complaints patients have about their inpatient stay is that no one seems to pay enough attention and they feel neglected. A bunch of docs come in in the morning and ask them rapid fire questions and tell them they'll come back later and tell them the plan.
2. Not sure what you're getting at here. Do you mean specifically medical ethics, or in general. My general outlook on life changed, but for reasons that aren't directly related to med school.
3. My favorite preclinical class was M2 pathology and my favorite rotation was my subinternship. More details above.
4. My classes were split pretty even between lecture and small groups. I believe it's like that these days at most schools.
5. I used to own a small business before med school. Over the course of the first year it kind of petered out, though it didn't really have to. I could have continued during less rigorous classes/rotations.
6. Since most of the day during M1/2 I'd be reading, I didn't read as much for fun. Instead I used to relax in other ways.
There are tons of books out there, but one that comes to mind is "How Doctors Think." Also, anything by Atul Gawande.
7. I was in your position not too long ago
🙂