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You do rotations because you learn everything there is to know about medicine from reading books. If you spent 4 years reading about patients, then jump into patient care after you graduate, you would be clueless as to how to actually approach and manage a patient.
Though I am a year away from rotations, I am pretty sure these years are NOT harder than residency. In med school you're not really counted on to make final decisions, and you have residents and attendings there to back you up. In residency, you still have attendings there but you become more and more autonomous as you go on, so that you can be ready to be that attending when you graduate.
As for why you spend so much time in the hopsital, how much time do you recommed being in the hospital?
I'm still an undergrad and I see people regularly posting about 20 hour days/100 hour work weeks during their 3rd year rotations. Just curious about it. Serious tags on this, I really want to know.
I have a couple questions:
Are these years harder than residency? That seems to be how they are made out?
Why are medical students forced to be in a hospital for 16 hours straight? Is there any value or learning that comes out of this that is different from what you get shadowing a random physician?
Is any knowledge obtained in rotations ever relevant for...anything???
Man, people are pretty touchy about this subject...you'd think for all the bitching they do about it that it was less useful.
Apparently none of them have ever had to deal with a coach...Personally I like the challenge of doing right by someone who is really hard on me. Makes it worthwhile even though it feels like they do not care about you.
Apparently none of them have ever had to deal with a coach...Personally I like the challenge of doing right by someone who is really hard on me. Makes it worthwhile even though it feels like they do not care about you.