this post was submitted on 06 Sep 2023
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[โ€“] TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

That's really good, you'll have an edge in your residency. We're a teaching hospital, so I typically will have at least two residents in my department at any given time. The biggest predetermining factor I've seen over they years for those who do really during residency is prior working experience.

You would be surprised how many young providers struggle with dealing with the general public. Lots of the residents we've had in the past went to private highschools and then private colleges, never having to deal with the underserved community.

Good luck with your schooling, and try not to worry yourself too much. The process can be daunting, but it's completely doable. Persistence is more important than raw intellect, I've met and taught plenty of idiots with MDs after their names.

Ps don't let them freak you out about neuroanatomy, it's not as bad as they say.

[โ€“] medgremlin@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I'm in DO school, and in my first year, the neuroanatomy course was my highest grade for some reason. As in, the only in-class exam I got an 'A' on was the one that covered all the basics that one would need to know for neurosurgery. I'm still a little confused about that one.

For the overly sheltered K-MD kids, my belief is that working for a year as an EMT/CNA/RA/etc. should be a pre-requisite to application. The fact that people are allowed to apply to medical school without a history of hands-on professional patient care experience is actually quite galling. You can always tell which doctors have never had to clean up human poop (not counting infants).