A woman who has been accepted by a few medical schools and
is trying to decide which one to choose asks
What
extent of involvement should be expected for medical school surgery rotations?
I have enjoyed shadowing general surgery and feel that a field involving some
procedure may end up being my fit, or at the very least something to enjoy in
medical school. I am curious as to the type of participation in procedures
(suturing/closing for example) that is typically allowed as a student versus
that allowed and expected as a resident.
In most third-year surgery rotations, students can do some
suturing of skin and maybe lacerations in the ED provided the student has
practiced knot-tying and using instruments outside of the OR. Opportunities to suture
in the OR are fewer these days because of skin stapling and the use of glue,
which are both faster than suturing. Hardworking and interested students are
far more likely to be rewarded with things to do by residents.
Otherwise, there's a lot of camera holding for laparoscopic
cases and retracting for open cases. Students used to do H&Ps and write
postop orders but the electronic medical record has curtailed those activities
greatly.
Medical school has changed a lot over the years. As a
fourth-year student in the early 1970s, I placed many subclavian central venous
catheters—some of which were unsupervised. Six years ago, I was about to let an
intern place a subcutaneous chemotherapy port in the OR. It was halfway through
the academic year. I asked her how many subclavian catheterizations she had
done. She said she hadn't done any but had seen one.
I can't say whether that lack of experience is common to
most current med students, but I think it may be.
Of course, residents get to do much more as they progress through the years. Residents in community hospital programs tend to do more cases during their first 2 years and often will have performed more cases over the 5-year course of residency training than those in pure university based programs. Of course, there are exceptions.
If this is really a major factor in your decision-making process, I suggest you try to talk to some students at the schools that you have been accepted by and see what they have been able to do during their third-year surgery rotations.
Of course, residents get to do much more as they progress through the years. Residents in community hospital programs tend to do more cases during their first 2 years and often will have performed more cases over the 5-year course of residency training than those in pure university based programs. Of course, there are exceptions.
If this is really a major factor in your decision-making process, I suggest you try to talk to some students at the schools that you have been accepted by and see what they have been able to do during their third-year surgery rotations.
You will probably find that students who do third-year
clerkships at community hospitals affiliated with med schools get to do more
hands-on work too.
The same goes for those applying to residency. If you really
want to know what goes on, talk to some of the residents who weren't chosen to meet the applicants on
interview day.
I hope some of our readers will comment.