- Amazing voice! We love you <3 – Canadian accent helps
- Good signposting – LOL, trust a medical student to say that! Thanks
- What were the best things about the session? You!
- What were the worst things about the session? When we have to go
– haha nice - Do you have any suggestions for improvement? Trade in polo-shirt for skin-tight, see-through one piece – LOL okay?
- You could become our anatomy lecturer in LT1 – promotion?
- "Humerus" – LOL good pun there (I was covering the humerus bone of the upper arm and made a few jokes along the way)
- Do you have any suggestions for improvement? Become invisible so we could see the board! – I'm working on it!
Category: thoughts and ideas
Young doctors learn bad habits from TV medical dramas
Tom Blackwell, National Post Published: Monday, March 23, 2009
Handout A recent study shows that medical dramas like ER have actually been influencing how real life doctors perform procedures.
When physicians at an Alberta hospital asked why so many medical students and residents were using a faulty technique for inserting life-saving breathing tubes in patients, they received an unexpected answer: It’s television’s fault.
Many of the doctors in training said they had learned the procedure from watching medical dramas. And a subsequent analysis of the show ER revealed its fictional MDs and nurses performed intubations incorrectly almost every time.
The findings, just published in the journal Resuscitation, revive an intriguing debate over whether entertainment TV has an obligation to portray medicine accurately, and underline what some see as chronic flaws in the system of training Canada’s physicians.
“We were a bit shocked,” said Dr. Peter Brindley, the critical-care specialist at the University of Alberta Hospital who discovered the students’ extra-curricular secret. “The important lesson here is that we can’t leave medical education to chance alone.”
Intubation is the insertion of a tube down the windpipe, usually so a patient can be hooked up to a mechanical ventilator when they are unable to breathe properly on their own.
The first step is to position the head properly so the tube can be quickly and easily installed.
Dr. Brindley said he and his colleague, Dr. Craig Needham, noticed that many students and residents – medical-school graduates training in specialities such as anesthesia, surgery and emergency care – positioned the head incorrectly.
Such a slip-up can make bad outcomes more likely when time is of the essence and “it’s a matter of life and death,” he said.
To find out where the faulty knowledge was coming from, the physicians surveyed 80 students and residents. Many said they learned through “trial and error,” but a large proportion indicated they had picked up tips from white-coated TV characters.
ER was the program most commonly cited by the students, so Drs. Brindley and Needham analyzed a season of the show. Some aspect of the head positioning was wrong in all 22 intubations that could be fully viewed on screen, their paper says.
Dr. Brindley said his findings are more evidence that the traditional approach to teaching doctors needs improving. Medical students typically learn about procedures such as intubation in a lecture hall, then find themselves practising on a real, perhaps critically ill patient, often with minimal supervision. Later, the same doctors sometimes train others.
Known as “see one, do one, teach one,” the concept does not work so well in an era when the population is ageing, hospitals see more patients with complex health problems and doctors are chronically over-worked, Dr. Brindley said.
He promotes the use of simulators, computer-assisted dummies that provide life-like practice for medical students before they start working on real people. In general, there needs to be a move to evidence-based medical education: testing teaching techniques the same way that drugs and other treatments are evaluated, Dr. Brindley said.
Producers with ER could not be reached for comment on Monday.
One resident in emergency-medicine, however, said he was surprised to hear that some of his colleagues might be learning from television.
Dr. Alim Pardham, a resident at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont., said intubation in his experience is taught to students and residents under close supervision by experienced physicians.
Medical shows are popular with doctors in training, but most take the content with a grain of salt, he said.
“People just enjoy it as good TV,” Dr. Pardham said. “They’re not particularly accurate in terms of what the hospital is like in real life.”
There has been heated debate, though, about how the shows affect the non-medical public. A 1996 study in the New England Journal of Medicine found that 75% of the patients who went into cardiac arrest on three shows – ER, Chicago Hope and Rescue 911 – were revived, compared to the real rate of six to 15%.
Such small-screen successes “may encourage the public to disregard the advice of physicians and hope that such a miracle will occur for them as well,” the authors argued.
Neal Baer, a doctor and producer on ER, later argued in the same journal that the show takes pains to be accurate, with scripts vetted by multiple experts. The action, however, is deliberately made fast-paced and dramatic, Dr. Baer admitted.
“Real life in an emergency room is often quiet, even boring,” he wrote. “If we were to re-enact a minute-by-minute account of actual events … we would not have 35 million viewers each week.”
National Post
Vaibhav Gupta | Sent with my BlackBerry
Last week I had a day which seemed perfect. I didn't wake up early or sleep too late, but it felt like there was tons of extra time because I did a bunch of things…and it was fun because there was a good balance/variety:
- Started off with a pretty cool session, learning how to examine the peripheral nervous system. This involved those hammers doctors use on your knee to test the knee jerk reflex, pricking and poking (more like torturing) your model to test for feeling in their arms and legs. One test involved the person touching their nose then touching your finger as you moved it around quickly, which…I'm not going to lie…looked REALLY funny from my perspective (right Paul? lol)
- Came back around midday and needed to cook…called some friends over to chill while I cooked as well, which was good because it was no longer a task!
- Went to see Avatar - it was amazing! I loved the story, the message paralleling how humans have "destroyed" their own planet was quite good, and the graphics were really nice! I haven't seen many 3D movies before but I remember sometimes an object would disappear for a few seconds as the camera zoomed…here it was solid, crisp filming, just like we expect in 2D, except coming out onto you! Really subtle to be honest, but amazing if you think about it.
- After the movie, went straight to a "team practise" of sorts for this Indian game called Kho, which I've never played before. It was basically a fusion of Duck, Duck, Goose and Tag…and it was a lot of fun!! It was nice to play a game like that…haven't done it in years
- Came back home finally, ate, and chilled on the computer, reading random articles and Twitter.
- Topped off the day with a bit of reading and making some notes for lectures earlier in the week. This was probably what made the day worthwhile, because I had loads of fun, did things you don't do on a typical day, and still fit in a bit of work to round it out!
- scrunch it up into a ball for an entertaining basketball game with your garbage can when you don't want to study
- make a paper airplane and throw it at your friend so he can't study
- draw something, fold it up and make it into a card, and give it to someone for no reason
- revise (oh god.)
- make a shopping list (or a wish list, and stick it up in front of you like i did – 3 out of 4 things crossed out, one to go!)
This comment I submitted to the StudentBMJ, a monthly publication for medical students, was published in the October 09 issue!
I've been running a business for 19 years. When I started it off, progress was slow…most of my time was spent researching my market and learning about how things work. 10 years into the business, things started picking up, and 4 years later, it just took off. Suddenly everyone wanted to do business with us! Our turnover was great and in a matter of time, angel investors came knocking on our door. This is the story of Me, Incorporated.

