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I hate previewing. The rest of the world disagrees with me, but I think it is of limited utility for junior residents.
I hate previewing. The rest of the world disagrees with me, but I think it is of limited utility for junior residents. I think it's more appropriate for senior residents who can generate a differential diagnosis. When you are a clueless junior resident, previewing is just too grossly inefficient when there's 60-80 cases to see. Another problem, which may be unique to my program, is that preview time sometimes supplants time at the scope with the attending. They think the resident has already seen the cases, so they can just sign them out. Personally, I think this is their way of being able to sign out faster without having to sit there and teach you or entertain your questions. They come back to you and tell you what they changed, but I do not think this is an effective way to learn. Ideally I think PGY-1s and 2s should not have preview time beforehand but reading time afterward, and PGY-3s and 4s should preview. Again, I know the rest of the world disagrees and thinks previewing is the most sacred thing ever, but I disagree.
I hate previewing. The rest of the world disagrees with me, but I think it is of limited utility for junior residents. I think it's more appropriate for senior residents who can generate a differential diagnosis. When you are a clueless junior resident, previewing is just too grossly inefficient when there's 60-80 cases to see. Another problem, which may be unique to my program, is that preview time sometimes supplants time at the scope with the attending. They think the resident has already seen the cases, so they can just sign them out. Personally, I think this is their way of being able to sign out faster without having to sit there and teach you or entertain your questions. They come back to you and tell you what they changed, but I do not think this is an effective way to learn. Ideally I think PGY-1s and 2s should not have preview time beforehand but reading time afterward, and PGY-3s and 4s should preview. Again, I know the rest of the world disagrees and thinks previewing is the most sacred thing ever, but I disagree.
Well, I for one really like preview time and as I have posted about in other threads, would not train at a place without it, knowing what I know now. I did my PSF at a place that didn't have preview time the majority of the time (although i usually found time for it) and I learned a ton more when I previewed.
You learn a ton by previewing, +/- dictating diagnoses ahead of time. You are often forced to make decisions and consider things that you wouldn't normally do in the context of a normal signout (because they don't come up or the attending blows by them). Many times I spend a lot of time focusing on something during previewing that turns out to be nothing, and I would never know it if I just saw it at signout. But when I was on my own, I sure as heck would notice it and I am likely to remember more if I thought about it a lot during preview time and then had signout. Education is not being told what is or is not true - it's figuring it out for yourself.
Previewing does take up more time commitment than just going to signout, or quickly perusing cases before signout, but it is very much worth it.
I also think it is important at all stages of your training. At the start of training, it's important because you can spend time on things and learn different trends, associations, etc. And yes, signout can then go fast afterwards but I have never sat with an attending who didn't answer every single question I brought up and take time to discuss anything I wanted to (and I ask lots of questions). As a senior, it is advantageous because you start refining your own diagnostic abilities, and you can see how efficient and how correct you actually are. As for the argument that you can spend too much time during previewing focusing on insignificant things, that's the idea. How do you know it's insignificant? Do you take someone's word for it or do you learn about it yourself and figure out why?
Previewing is a vastly different world and learning opportunity then just observing signout. Sure, you see the same cases and you get a lot of the same teaching, but you don't learn as well, IMHO.
As far as it supplanting time at the scope with the attending, that I disagree with, and that is a potential big gripe that I would raise a stink about. Do they tell you when your previewing dx was wrong? Do they know what you thought? Do they even know that you previewed or do they just trust you to do it? If, as you say, it is a way for them to get signout done in as minimal time possible, they should not be at a teaching hospital, and I would complain about this too (residents don't complain enough).
Yaah, you said exactly what I knew you would say. 🙂 But I think part of the reason you got more out of previewing as a junior resident is that you did a PSF. For an average PGY-1, it's a couple of months of path electives and what you remember from histology to get you started on that stack of 60 cases. There is simply not enough time to QUALITY preview everything starting from ZERO knowledge, in addition to proofreading the gross description/paperwork and assigning the billing codes.
I understand your points, I still disagree though. As was said above, the purpose of previewing will vary depending on your stage and level or training. At the beginning, it's more getting a general opinion (is it cancer or not, can you tell what organ you're in, etc). While some attendings may be unreasonable in their expectations of new residents, most understand that it is a steep learning curve. Here, for example, we are told if we don't have enough time to preview everything, that's fine.
The other paperwork stuff, I agree, is time consuming, but it has to be done. If you wait to do it during signout, it just makes signout longer. A lot of making previewing more efficient comes from good instruction from senior level people - i.e. what should you be paying attention to, what is less important, etc.
And IMHO, you become a lot better quicker at pathology if you are previewing and trying to figure things out on your own. You will stay later, yes, but it will be worth it in the end. And as said above, worrying about the exact right answer is not as important. Think about basic things - for example if it's a liver tumor, is it cancer? And what are the important things for signout? Well - margins, size, etc (see template). Focus on those.
This whole debate is rather silly. How much preview time is optimal will depend on your level of training, personal style of learning, and the idiosyncracies of your attending du jour. There is no one-size-fits-all solution.
This whole debate is rather silly. How much preview time is optimal will depend on your level of training, personal style of learning, and the idiosyncracies of your attending du jour. There is no one-size-fits-all solution.
When on surgicals, I receive specimens every 3 days. On those days, I get anywhere from 7-15 specimens.Hey guys
On an average how many specimens do you gross on a daily basis and are you able to preview the slides for all of them before you sit down for the signout
I'm now learning a second way of grossing a prostate since the only way I've ever known is to "entirely submit". I'm looking forward to seeing one-tray prostates the next day.Of course, I think it's OK to entirely submit every breast with a history of DCIS...I loooove looking at 400 slides of boob every day!
I'm now learning a second way of grossing a prostate since the only way I've ever known is to "entirely submit". I'm looking forward to seeing one-tray prostates the next day.
Ideally I think PGY-1s and 2s should not have preview time beforehand but reading time afterward, and PGY-3s and 4s should preview. Again, I know the rest of the world disagrees and thinks previewing is the most sacred thing ever, but I disagree.
You're opening your mouth but all I hear is "bla bla bla..."Baby want her bottle?
Well, I for one really like preview time and as I have posted about in other threads, would not train at a place without it, knowing what I know now. I did my PSF at a place that didn't have preview time the majority of the time (although i usually found time for it) and I learned a ton more when I previewed.
You learn a ton by previewing, +/- dictating diagnoses ahead of time. You are often forced to make decisions and consider things that you wouldn't normally do in the context of a normal signout (because they don't come up or the attending blows by them). Many times I spend a lot of time focusing on something during previewing that turns out to be nothing, and I would never know it if I just saw it at signout. But when I was on my own, I sure as heck would notice it and I am likely to remember more if I thought about it a lot during preview time and then had signout. Education is not being told what is or is not true - it's figuring it out for yourself.
Previewing does take up more time commitment than just going to signout, or quickly perusing cases before signout, but it is very much worth it.
I also think it is important at all stages of your training. At the start of training, it's important because you can spend time on things and learn different trends, associations, etc. And yes, signout can then go fast afterwards but I have never sat with an attending who didn't answer every single question I brought up and take time to discuss anything I wanted to (and I ask lots of questions). As a senior, it is advantageous because you start refining your own diagnostic abilities, and you can see how efficient and how correct you actually are. As for the argument that you can spend too much time during previewing focusing on insignificant things, that's the idea. How do you know it's insignificant? Do you take someone's word for it or do you learn about it yourself and figure out why?
Previewing is a vastly different world and learning opportunity then just observing signout. Sure, you see the same cases and you get a lot of the same teaching, but you don't learn as well, IMHO.
As far as it supplanting time at the scope with the attending, that I disagree with, and that is a potential big gripe that I would raise a stink about. Do they tell you when your previewing dx was wrong? Do they know what you thought? Do they even know that you previewed or do they just trust you to do it? If, as you say, it is a way for them to get signout done in as minimal time possible, they should not be at a teaching hospital, and I would complain about this too (residents don't complain enough).
I agree with yaah. I've been making diagnoses, filling out synoptics, and measuring margins since my very first sign-out. There's just no substitute for struggling with cases and agonizing over unimportant things. For example, in the beginning, examining lymph nodes for metastases would almost kill me, b/c I would be scrutinizing every germinal center or funny looking histiocyte. Now, I can buzz through lymph nodes without making a mistake.
I am finishing up my first year and I am now getting a vast majority of my cases correct, I order immunos up-front while I'm previewing, and the attendings will listen to my opinion if I don't completely agree with their diagnosis. None of that would be possible if I hadn't been thrown into the fire from the very beginning. I can't imagine just starting to preview as an upper level.
cjw, do you not sit down and sign out with the attendings? I find that unacceptable. My previewing may be detailed, but I always look at every case with the attending.
I'm heading for high-volume private-practice surg path next month as a resident, so we'll see how things go there. I know residents dictate the finals there.
Yesterday I did a prostate (entirely submitted), a simple and a radical mastectomy, a coupla explanted lungs, a prophylactic TAH/BSO and a colon. Average, for a day that had two hours of conferences.