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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Not today Justin
Xuebing Du

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★
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Claire Keane
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@wolffyluna
ahhh my anatomy exam is on the 21st so it's a good idea if I get started now, yeah? Nerves are always really fun, but the mnemonics can get so dirty...
Drawings of the vertebrate storage room.
Last week’s spread was my favorite so far, and this week’s is coming along just as well!
[06.10.16] feeling so sluggish and very unproductive today
this is my amaths notes for my eoy exam that was two days ago, probably gonna flunk it though
Just some really, really old notes. (Pls excuse my sloppy writing; it was when i first tried out my brush pen HAHA) I managed to finish reviewing all the math papers i’d done for the past few weeks… boy that took such a long time ;-; only 18 more days to my O level science practical and 19 more days to my math paper! Press on everyone 🤗💪🏻
[1st october 2016] here are some biology notes i rewrote today. my friend got me zoella’s ‘life is sweet’ pouch and the color is so adorable. even the color of the inside is a pretty shade of light pink <3
Working on an essay or a paper? Looking for feedback, help or editing support but have no idea where to turn for unbiased, constructive criticism and professional advice? Here are some great resources to help get you going!
General
Harvard’s Strategies for Essay Writing
Queen’s University Online Thesis Manager
How To Write A Great Essay About Anything
How to Write Dazzlingly Brilliant Essays: Sharp Advice for Ambitious Students
University of Cambridge - How to Write a Paper
Purdue OWL: Writing a Research Paper
Microsoft Research - How to write a great research paper
Georgetown University - How to Write a Research Paper
University of South California - Organizing Your Social Sciences Research Paper: Guide
Abstract Writing
Berkeley - HOW TO WRITE AN ABSTRACT: Tips and Samples
Purdue OWL - Writing Report Abstracts
University of Toronto - The Abstract
How to write a good abstract for a scientific paper or conference presentation
Introductions and Conclusions
Columbia University - Writing a Good Introduction
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill - Introductions
Birmingham City University - Writing Introductions
University of Toronto - Introductions and Conclusions
Purdue OWL - Writing a Developed and Detailed Conclusion
Harvard - Ending the Essay: Conclusions
Editing
Paper Rater
Ginger’s Essay Checker
Hemingway Editor
ProWritingAid
editMinion
After the Deadline
Slick Write
Grammarly
GrammarBase
Citation
Citation Machine
BibMe
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RefMe: APA
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Cite This For Me
University of South California - Citation Guide
You’ve Been Pimped! Again!
What exactly is pimping? If you have ever been a medical student or resident in any discipline, you probably already know. It’s ostensibly a form of Socratic teaching in which an attending physician poses a (more or less) poignant question to one or more learners. The learners are then queried (often in order of their status on the seniority “totem pole”) until someone finally gets the answer. But typically, it doesn’t stop there. Frequently, the questioning progresses to the point that only the attending knows the answer.
So how did this time honored tradition in medical education come about? The first reference in the literature attributes it to none other than William Harvey, who first described the circulatory system in detail. He was disappointed with his students’ apparent lack of interest in learning about his area of expertise. He was quoted as saying “they know nothing of Natural Philosophy, these pin-heads. Drunkards, sloths, their bellies filled with Mead and Ale. O that I might see them pimped!”
Other famous physicians participated in this as well. Robert Koch, the founder of modern bacteriology, actually recorded a series of “pümpfrage” or “pimp questions” that he used on rounds. And in 1916, a visitor at Johns Hopkins noted that he “rounded with Osler today. Riddles house officers with questions. Like a Gatling gun. Welch says students call it ‘pimping.’ Delightful.”
So it’s been around a long time. And yes, it has some problems. It promotes hierarchy, because the attending almost always starts questions at the bottom of the food chain. So the trainees come to know their standing in the eyes of the attending. And they also can appreciate where their fund of (useful?) knowledge compares to their “peers.” It demands quick thinking, and can certainly create stress. And a survey published last year showed that 50% of respondents were publicly embarrassed during their clinical rotations. What portion of this might have been due to pimping was not clear.
Does pimping work? Only a few small studies have been done. Most medical students have been involved with and embarrassed by it. But they also responded that they appreciated it as a way to learn. A 2011 study compared pimping (Socratic) methods to slide presentations in radiology education. Interestingly, 93% preferred pimping, stating that they felt their knowledge base improved more when they were actively questioned, regardless of whether they knew the answer.
So here are a few guidelines that will help make this technique a positive experience for all:
For the “pimpers”:
Make sure that the difficulty level of questions is reasonable. You are testing your learners’ knowledge, not spotlighting your own mental encyclopedia
Build the level of difficulty from questions that most can answer to one or two that no one knows, then switch to didactice teaching of the esoterica
Don’t let one learner dominate the answers; gently exclude them and solicit answers from others so they get a chance to participate
Provide positive reinforcement for correct answers, but don’t resort to negative reinforcement (insults) when they are wrong
Go Socratic when the answer is not known. Step back and review the basic concepts involved that helps your learners arrive at the correct answer.
For the “pimpees”:
Read, read, read! You are in this to learn, so study all the clinical material around you.
Talk to your seniors to find out your attending’s areas of interest. There’s a lot of stuff to learn, and this may help you focus your rounding preparation a bit. It still doesn’t absolve you from learning about all the other stuff, though.
Don’t be “that guy (or gal)” who tries to dominate and answer every question
If all else fails, and it’s one of those “percentage” questions, use my “85/15 rule.” If the issue you are being asked about seems pretty likely, answer “85%.” If it seems unlikely, go with “15%.” It’s usually close enough to the real answer to satisfy.
Bottom line: Pimping is a time-honored tradition in medicine, but should not be considered a rite of passage. There is a real difference in attitudes and learning if carried out properly. Even attendings have a thing or two to learn about this!
Reference: The art of pimping. JAMA. 262(1):89-90, 1989.
Regardless of your opinion of pimping, pimp happens – and this is the first time I’ve seen tips for helping attendings be “good” pimps!
We… don’t call it pimping. Otherwise this seems pretty universal. I think the key is in how it’s done.
Haha I never really think of how weird it is that we call it pimping until my roommates boyfriend mentioned how confused he was the first time he heard us talking about it.
I heard pimp stands for “put in my place”….
The more I study, the dumber I feel.
Currently in neuro block: this has never been more accurate.
[2/100] Embryo and neuro exam review. I love my neuro prof, he’s clear, concise, and eloquent. I got drenched today (rainy day…) and there are few better pleasures in life than changing into dry, warm clothes when you’re soaking wet.
Some Abnormal Coagulation Pathology
#pathology #blood #coagulation #hematology #physiology #usmle #usmlestep1 #usmlestep2 #doctor #doctordconline #nhs #nurse #nursing #hospital #patient #mbbs #md @doctordconline
I have bagel-bagel syncope.
Patient telling me about his vasovagal syncope.
Things that will haunt my nightmares
Dead people groan.
Yes. You read that right. Dead people can make noises. And I don’t mean a little grunt. They can make ten second long “uggggghhhhhhhhhhhhhh” noises that sound way too much like a live person in pain for my comfort.
I had been on the forensic rotation two weeks without hearing this and without anyone telling me it could happen.
So we go to put one of our bodies on the autopsy table like normal. After we are done taking our external photos and undressing them, we roll them from the transfer table to the autopsy table so that they are facedown. I had been up close and personal with this guy and knew for sure he was 100% dead. But then.
Then as soon as we get done rolling him he starts groaning. I went into instant fight or flight mode, with flight winning by a landslide. My heart started pounding and I started unconsciously backing away while frantic thoughts spun through my head like “holy shit guys he’s alive he’s fucking alive omg what do we do why isn’t anyone doing anything I didn’t fucking sign up for this!”
Meanwhile the doc asks, “Is that him making that noise?”
And I respond, “Yes, DOES THAT HAPPEN??!!!!!”
She shrugs and goes, “Yeah sometimes.”
Cool I’ll just faint now. And never sleep again.
Truly nothing in my almost 4 years of med school has ever affected me like this. I found my limit.
#MOTIVATIONALPOSTERMONDAY
Could this be the end of superbugs?
A 25-year-old student has just come up with a way to fight drug-resistant superbugs without antibiotics.
The new approach has so far only been tested in the lab and on mice, but it could offer a potential solution to antibiotic resistance, which is now getting so bad that the United Nations recently declared it a “fundamental threat” to global health.
Antibiotic-resistant bacteria already kill around 700,000 people each year, but a recent study suggests that number could rise to around 10 million by 2050.
In addition to common hospital superbug, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), scientists are now also concerned that gonorrhoea is about tobecome resistant to all remaining drugs.
But Shu Lam, a 25-year-old PhD student at the University of Melbourne in Australia, has developed a star-shaped polymer that can kill six different superbug strains without antibiotics, simply by ripping apart their cell walls.
“We’ve discovered that [the polymers] actually target the bacteria and kill it in multiple ways,” Lam told Nicola Smith from The Telegraph. “One method is by physically disrupting or breaking apart the cell wall of the bacteria. This creates a lot of stress on the bacteria and causes it to start killing itself.”
The research has been published in Nature Microbiology, and according to Smith, it’s already being hailed by scientists in the field as “a breakthrough that could change the face of modern medicine”.
Before we get too carried away, it’s still very early days. So far, Lam has only tested her star-shaped polymers on six strains of drug-resistant bacteria in the lab, and on one superbug in live mice.
But in all experiments, they’ve been able to kill their targeted bacteria - and generation after generation don’t seem to develop resistance to the polymers.
Continue Reading.
Yes. All the yes. Women in STEM deserve ALLLLLLLL the applause. All of it. And cake. All the cake, too.
THIS IS HUGE!!!
2/10/2016 Nothing screams Canadian Sunday more than biomechanics and Tims tbh. I'm stressing for my midterm on Thursday but honestly if I can work through the problems just fine, I should be okay, right? I'm also trying this whole pomodoro thing and it's pretty effective! I find it's less stressful than sitting down and working for hours at a stretch. Anyway! Happy Sunday!