since the main goal of the preclinical courses is to pass step 1, why are the in class lecture notes way more detailed than what we need to know for step 1?
The main goal of the prelinical courses is to prepare you with a fundamental knowledge of disease. To learn the pathogenesis, pattern, and prevelance of disease. To walk in understanding physiology and what goes wrong so that you can understand intervention.
Understanding is what separates a physician from every other mid level practitioner that just does because they are supposed to.
i thought that the knowledge needed on step 1 is more than enough to be prepared for the wards. so why not teach to the boards?
I think in that regard the carrib schools are good in that sense. The problem is sometimes the students they accept which don't have the motivation or drive to get through the material, but the curriculum itself sounds good. I hear there is one carrib school that uses BRS books as their required reading for their preclinical years except for path in which they use baby robbins. that sounds like an excellent way of teaching for the boards imo.
You have to decide what your
vision of a physician is, what is the purpose to their education, what is their purpose to patient care. This is not just you, or me, its the nation.
Consider if the vision is simlpy to
deliver patient care. We develop tools to do this well. we make premade order sheets, checklists. In this case, strict memorization without understanding makes sense. In fact, it not only makes sense, but it might actually be BETTER than thinking physicians. But what do you give up? You give up free thinking, deep understanding. What the means practically, is that you try to fit things into boxes, even if they don't fit. "CHF Admit orders" for the guy with Shortness of Breath, even though he doesn't fit perfectly with CHF, and you miss the pneumonia.
In fact, this is what mid level providers do. Its why they work so well in clinics. Its also why they do so poorly on nebulous tasks like "admit this patient, his complaint is chest pain." The point is, if all you do is memorize, that is "study for the boards," then you become a mid level provider, nothing more than an NP. Some people may be happy with that. After all, some NPs provide better care than MDs.
But if your vision of the physician is to
lead the medical team, this vision I share, than it is not about the 80% of cases that fit into the box, its the 20%. You do extra work so you don't miss anything. You work harder and learn more so you can be better. The reason why you are better is because you can
reason, you know
how and why things happen, not just what.
This is why basic science curricula are more in depth than they need to be. Do some people do too much? Of course. Do you need to learn every detail you get taught? No. It is not about memorizing every little detail. Its not about memorizing for jeopardy at conference, its about fundamental understanding of the material.
What some students do is simply
memorize everything, then forget it all after the test is over. The "diarrhea" method of learning. These are the students who are frustrated by Step 1, frustrated by the volume, and usually end up saying "why do I have to learn this?" or "you don't need that after step 1."
I'm rlly going with the notion u learn things in excruciating detail so for step1 ull remmeber the high yield facts about it. There is a lot of bs in my lecture notes as well.. things that won't even be tested on our exams let alone step1.. like tx regiments for...
I agree with Doxy, even if his english pains my eyes to read.
What some students do is
learn the details, making what you actually need to know
stick better. What do I mean? I mean that in order to learn the small details, in order to fit them into compartments, in order to get the nuance question right, there has been a fundamental involvement of the core concepts until you it is part of you.
Let me give an example: In paramedic school, I confused "renal" and "hepatic." The words. Think about how absurd that confusion is. Hepatic artery goes where? Hepatocytes are where? Hepatocellular Carcinoma is whcih organ? DUH! But when I wasn't a doctor, that trivial detail was actually HARD. Well, not hard, just it wasn't part of my soul, the way hepatic is now part of me; it will never be lost. But why? Because I dealt with all the details. the same thing happens in basic science; not everything sticks, but in trying, important things stick.
You can't possibly manage someone with heart failure if you don't understand cardiac physiology. Sure, beta block and ace-inhibitor for the guy with Grade I dysfunction with an EF of 45%. ANYBODY can do that. What about the CHF exacerbation? Preload, Afterload, Contractility, Starling Forces. These matter in choosing which intervention to take. You do that by actually learning the knowledge you needed to.
Bottom Line: review courses help you perform well on the step 1. Performing well on Step 1 helps you get into residency, not being a good physician.