Archive for February, 2010


Today at the Anatomy teaching session I do weekly for first-year medical students, I handed out feedback forms to get an idea for areas that I can improve in.  Some common suggestions were to get a bigger room because there are lots of people that cram in, and to go slower because sometimes I go through things too quickly.  Fair enough.

Now for the more colourful comments!  Reading the feedback was quite funny – some people just wrote funny things and some other comments made me smile.  

Here is a sample (feedback questions in green, comments in black, my responses in blue):
  • Amazing voice!  We love you <3 – Canadian accent helps :P
  • 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!
Overall the feedback was very positive but also contained some useful suggestions.  I'll try to slow down the sessions a bit more and maybe that will give students enough time to copy down what's on the board as well.  As for the rooms?  Well, can't exactly rebuild the med school!

Thanks guys, and keep the suggestions coming in!

Posted via email from Vaibhav Gupta, put simply.

Check out this article I found at healthzone.ca

I’ve only posted a link to the article and not the article itself here because it’s simply massive. But trust me, this one is worth a read.

It’s a Toronto Star article about a Canadian Lung Transplant surgeon who is developing some astounding novel techniques to improve transplant surgery and increase the supply of usable tissues.

Posted via web from Vaibhav Gupta, put simply.

Google is being targeted by lawsuits and governments around the world with potential privacy invasions, so perhaps it wasn’t the best choice of words when Google CEO Eric Schmidt told the Mobile World Congress in a keynote address a few days ago: “We can literally know everything if we want to.”

Schmidt was absolutely right in what he had to say. The amount of information available about people is mind-boggling, particularly when people use social networking sites to post information about themselves. Just consider the site Please Rob Me. It scans Twitter streams for people who say they are not at home, and then publishes that information on the site. Why does the site do it? To let people know just how dangerous it is to publicly post information about themselves that is best left private.

Google has the capability to scan not just Twitter streams, but information from all social networks, and combine that with your search history, and information about you on the Internet. So Schmidt was not guilty of overkill when he spoke to the Mobile World Conference.

I don’t think Google quite yet understands just how dangerous many people think its power to invade people’s privacy is. But eventually, prodded by governments, I think they’ll get it.

 

Wow, check that out. What do you think about this “Please Rob Me” site?

It’s true, not only can you find out a lot about a person, with social media you can know things about them in real time. The other idea that is still difficult for me to comprehend the implications of is that information on the internet never dies – it can always be pulled up.

Whether we are conscious of it or not, we are always changing the things we want people to know about us and things we don’t. The internet puts a quick stop to that because once a thought or opinion is published, it’s on the record.

This doesn’t mean we should all get scared and run away from new technologies. We should embrace them with the implications in mind.

Posted via web from Vaibhav Gupta, put simply.

In a competitive world where everyone is trying to get ahead and people are pushing the boundaries of achievement, one of the greatest resources we have at our disposal are the people ahead of us.  Someone who had our aspiration when they were our age will be reminded with fond memories of days where they struggled to get where they are today.  Such a person will be able to give us the guidance we need to move towards our goal.

I've seen a great example of this in medical school.  It became obvious to me early on in the course that medicine is really a band of brothers and sisters when I was assigned a "medic parent" on the first day of school – someone to go to for any sort of help you might need.  Since then, I've expanded my circle of senior students to include 3rd/4th/5th years and first-year doctors (called F1s).  Anytime I've approached them for career advice or to find out what's in store for me in the future, they have gone beyond what I've expected and given me lots of useful information.  Just yesterday I asked a 4th year friend of mine what his schedule was like at that stage in his training, and not only did he give me his perspective, he showed me the log books we have to get signed off, told me about the choices we have to make with our time, and gave me tips on some of the 'extras' you can do to be ahead of the game.  

Isn't that amazing?!  I'm really glad that we've got this support network between students, and I'm happy to participate in it by giving guidance to the 1st year students that I come across in my anatomy teaching.

Now, if the whole point is to "get ahead" and do things that other students might not be doing, why am I standing on the roof top of the medical school via this blog and publicizing the idea?  Because I would much rather have everyone around me strive for this type of excellence and raise the bar in terms of what we expect of ourselves as medical students, and what I expect of myself relative to everyone around me.

I don't believe in secretive competition – the type which fosters sabotaging others for your benefit.  I much prefer every student openly trying to be their best, and encouraging the people around them do to the same.  The most important tool for success is to surround yourself with the type of people you want to be like.  So maybe I'm writing this because while it might help you, it will help me too!

@vgupta11

Posted via email from Vaibhav Gupta, put simply.

Young doctors learn bad habits from TV medical dramas

Tom Blackwell, National Post Published: Monday, March 23, 2009

A recent study shows that medical dramas like ER have actually been influencing how real life doctors perform procedures. 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

tblackwell@nationalpost.com

Posted via web from Vaibhav Gupta, put simply.

Check out this article about how some Haitian hospitals have started charging for medical care post earthquake, though free care was announced.

http://bit.ly/dazqA8

Sent from TIME Mobile.
Vaibhav Gupta | Sent with my BlackBerry

Posted via email from Vaibhav Gupta, put simply.

I had 4 medical interviews in a span of a week when I applied to UK universities. After giving my Nottingham interview on Tuesday, I went to stay with my sister in Southampton and give an interview there the following day. She and her friends brought me to the mall, and we went to the Apple store…and this is where I found out I got into Medicine at Nottingham, a day later!!

So I had to take a picture of the store and share it with you! Good times :)
Vaibhav Gupta | Sent with my BlackBerry

Posted via email from Vaibhav Gupta, put simply.

Amazing picture, eh?

Share photos on twitter with Twitpic

Took this a few summers back with my friend Zena. Inspired by my photographer friend Muntaka Shah (Shah Studios).

Posted via web from Vaibhav Gupta, put simply.

Nottingham city centre

They’re a bit fuzzy…that’s what happens when you take a picture through a dirty window on a moving bus!
Vaibhav Gupta | Sent with my BlackBerry

Posted via email from Vaibhav Gupta, put simply.

Nottingham train station

Contrast to Canadian train stations, this one has so much more character.
Vaibhav Gupta | Sent with my BlackBerry

Posted via email from Vaibhav Gupta, put simply.

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