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- Apr 3, 2007
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I heard of program directors talking about separating AP from CP training. I think one reason being the overwhelming amount of material. In my opinion, it seems as if most programs don't train residents well in CP unless you are at a large academic center. I also agree that the information is overwhelming. C'mon AP you have to master ALL the subspecialties (knowledge base and diagnostic skills) as well as CP (micro, BB/TM, Cytogenetics, chemistry, immuno, hemepath)...
Seems like byt the time you finish training, you are a jack of all trades, master of none....I mean if anything MASTER AP because that's where you can make serious errors. Most pathologists really forget CP as they go along in their career and really just know what they do on a daily basis like signing out electrophoreses, etc. As I watch fellow residents study for boards, they are just memorizing thousands and thousands of factoids (CP) and I wonder how much these ppl will remember years out in practice. I'm not even sure most of the stuff tested in CP boards is practical?
What do you guys and gals think about this?
Seems like byt the time you finish training, you are a jack of all trades, master of none....I mean if anything MASTER AP because that's where you can make serious errors. Most pathologists really forget CP as they go along in their career and really just know what they do on a daily basis like signing out electrophoreses, etc. As I watch fellow residents study for boards, they are just memorizing thousands and thousands of factoids (CP) and I wonder how much these ppl will remember years out in practice. I'm not even sure most of the stuff tested in CP boards is practical?
What do you guys and gals think about this?