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Ernest N. Curtis's avatar

During my internship an attending told us about a technique he frequently employed when giving a presentation in a conference. If your presentation includes x-rays or scans, always hang one upside down or backwards. There is always someone in the audience who is dying to make a comment and/or criticism. By getting that out of the way at the beginning one can often satisfy that need and allow you to complete the presentation without further interruption.

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Sensible PCP's avatar

I did IM residency over 15 years ago at a respected California program known to be collegial and not malignant. Even then, Dr. Cifu’s wonderful principles, all which reflect a growth mindset, were not systemic. I have not been in academic medicine since, so I am curious if today’s programs reflect these principles?

Looking back I realize only a handful of the best attendings indirectly promoted them. The rest, their teaching styles highlighted those who had the most esoteric book smarts and embarrassed those who were (rightfully) struggling during the most challenging years of their lives. Dr. Prasad’s criticisms of current medical education seem to favor this style, concerned that today’s doctors are “weaker” and not learning critical thinking skills in a “woke” environment. I can’t see how this is true if principles similar to Dr. Cifu’s form the foundation of today’s programs.

My fear is they do not, and remain hidden, only to be experienced by chance when residents are assigned their teams.

If true, I’d argue THAT is the failure of medical education, not Dr. Prasad’s overweighted concerns about vaccine mandates and masking 2 year-olds.

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