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@labasworld
Step 1 part 1...
⊠is here! Boards part 1 (aka usmle) will start in about two and a half hours. Then I have the rest of the day off, will do some OPP tomorrow, then Wednesday I have my COMLEX. Then I move to Rotations city on Friday to start third year on tuesday!
Letâs do this.
Donât let the darkness of others dim your light
Ever
eunoia / a relaxing mix that will help you to get focused + motivated while studying
[ listen here ]
Justin Trudeau doesnât want a cookie for being a male feminist. So maybe the Twitterverse should stop with these reactions.
make me choose: anon asked: the haunting of castle malloy or the silent spy?
you, with the naivete of a child - âinstitutions are inherently corruptâ
me, sagely - âhave you never heard of old friends senior dogs sanctuaryâ
Almost 7 hours of instrumental magic for your favourite nook in the library, couch with a book, or chair at your desk.
Day 1 of dedicated and Iâm already totally overwhelmed with how much I have to get through even just this week. But, this playlist (and a literal ton of tea) got me through undergrad, and itâll help get me through this now.
Occasionally
I learn something about medicine that makes me feel like I have been lied to my whole medical educational career.
Examples:
Realizing the PPV for a really commonly used medical test is actually really lowâŠ.
Realizing there are well studied alternative remedies that can perform as well (or out perform) certain medicationsâŠ
I think that information gets misrepresented sometimes. Or maybe itâs just one of those âthe more you understandâ type things where I just misunderstood things in the beginning because I didnât have all the pieces to put together.
Anyone else have this feeling of being lied to at some point about medical info?
ANYWAY This is a great example of late night blogging from my phone. sweetheart needs to stop working nights so I can actually fall asleep at normal people times instead of lying in bed and thinking about weird stuff.
Sorry in advance for piggybacking on your post, @ladykaymd. But I have this feeling every day of my life! That I guess is where the advantage of growing up with a hippie mother with a lot of healthcare skepticism comes in.
Medicine lies just like any other giant, homogenous group of people does â itâs made up of a lot of people who donât know everything, and donât question authority quite enough.
This is the danger of scientism and dogma. Thinking that knowledge must be correct or true because it comes from a place of authority is the definition of dogma, and the institution of medicine is just another opportunity to be dogmatic. Except this time with a lot of social clout, and peopleâs lives in your hands.
Most of the time itâs no big deal. e.g. Doctors are NOT trying to kill you when they give vaccines. e.g. We DO need to treat your diabetes even though you donât have any bothersome symptoms right now.
But there are many many times when doctors trusting their med school education, or a biased set of evidence, or what their mentor told them to do, hurts patients. Like when we told women not to breastfeed, or that C-sections are just as safe as vaginal births. When we told families that there was no risk in prescribing antidepressants to adolescents. When we bolstered the idea that âthe more tests the betterâ, and werenât thoughtful about when to test and when not to. And this is not to mention the more clear-cut, and historic (widely publicized), examples, like Tuskegee, lobotomies, and Henrietta Lacks.
The point is, medicine is susceptible to dogma just like anything else and I think itâs our responsibility as doctors to do the math (like ladykay did) and keep our ears pricked for times when institutionalized bias, obscure motivations, and misinterpreted numbers are misleading us.
Itâs also why I hate the distinction between âtraditionalâ and âalternativeâ medicine â because it encourages us to dismiss on the whole an entire set of practices as ineffective, or non-evidence-based, when the distinction between these practices and the ones we use are more or less arbitrary. There are practices within traditional medicine that are dangerous or ineffective, and ones which are safe or effective. There are practices within alternative medicine that are dangerous or ineffective, and ones which are safe or effective. In both cases, we should use our brains to figure out which is which rather than somebody elseâs labels.
This whole conversation is also why I really want all doctors and future doctors to read The Structure of Scientific Revolutions by Thomas Kuhn. Itâs a philosophy of science book that discusses the formation of new ideas within the scientific world, and how the whole process is based on certain dogmas he calls normal science, and that progress depends on someone paying attention to when anomalies build up so that a paradigm shift can occur. I think this whole concept is so important for doctors because being the dinosaur that holds onto old ideas just because âthatâs how itâs always been doneâ means hurting patients.
Okay, yâall. I think Iâm finished with my rambling rant. JustâŠquestion everything, medblr bbs. Please?
Piggiebacking on a piggie back- in ND school we had a âhow to analyze researchâ class first quarter of first year because âalternative medicineâ research is often so poorly done. While I try to be as moderate as possible both because conventional medicine has saved my life and because I risk being dismissed as a âwitch doctorâ the instant I say something too counter to the establishment, I find that the dogma is very strong about even tiny things. So yes. -Keep your eyes open -Remember that statistics can say whatever you want them to say unless youâre also a whiz with raw data and numbers -RCT isnât god, and an appalling number of practice setting decisions are based on RCT that no one has been able to replicate - and most of the research is done on a population you arenât treating. Polypharmacy, female patients, a patient that isnât reacting the way you expect them to reactâŠ.the list goes on. - so donât forget about skepticism, art, and tradition while you evaluate these things.
Iâm blogging ( more like surfing tumblr) way past my bedtime, and I unfortunately donât have enough time to read all the fascinating comments, so iâm reblogging for my futur self to read.Â
And also for the people to whome I will appear in the dashboard.Â
by georgj007
You donât have to want it every second of every day. It doesnât have to consume your mind. Itâs ok to not work towards your goals 24/7. It doesnât make you any less dedicated, it just makes you human.
- Why me? - That is a very Earthling question to ask, Mr. Pilgrim. Why you? Why us for that matter? Why anything? Because this moment simply is. Have you ever seen bugs trapped in amber? - Yes. - Well, here we are, Mr. Pilgrim, trapped in the amber of this moment. There is no why.
Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut, 1999 (via 1000bestbooks)
I know youâre sad, so I wonât tell you to have a good day. Instead, I advise you to simply have a day. Stay alive, feed yourself well, wear comfortable clothes, and donât give up on yourself just yet. Itâll get better. Until then, have a day.
What to do when you just feel blah
1. Accept it; donât fight it. Trying to understand and fight those heavy painful feelings, will usually weigh you down and drain away your energy. 2. Be nice to yourself. Donât make things worse by beating yourself up. You didnât choose your feelings. Itâs already tough enough! 3. Do that one thing thatâs nagging on your mind the most. It will help to boost your feelings and release some energy. 4. Think about the little things that help to bring you pleasure â like walking in the sunshine or smelling fresh spring flowers. 5. Remind yourself that this will pass, and something will get better. You just need to hang in there, and wait it out for now.