Greetings and salutations. I have finished my whirlwind first two weeks of lectures. They were doozies (they were a doozy? hmmmm. apologies to grammerians reading this.) Generally 7 hours of lecture a day, covering reproductive physiology, embryology, birth, neonatal health, neonatal ill-health, parental ill-health, psychiatry, ENT, opthamology... probably some others I'm forgetting. For a complete rundown feel free to read my schedule which is linked to the side of the blog. Most of it was really interesting and well taught. The obstetricians were so enthusiastic and such good lecturers that a number of us started wondering if maybe we were interested in that after all. Not likely for me, but good stuff. I'm looking forward to my time in the maternal hospital.
Monday I start my 2 weeks in emergency. We are the first class to get a dedicated rotation in emergency (in Cork, I mean. It's quite normal in the States.) which is exciting. The schedule they've given us ahead of time doesn't make too much sense so I'm not sure exactly what I'll be doing, but at the very least will include some casting and wound management. From what I can gather the clinical teachers in the hospitals are prepared to make us work hard, which is great. It seems like rather than simply letting us loose unsupervised all the time we will have more tutorials and practical teaching along side the patients and house staff.
After emergency (or A&E as it's called here) I will have two weeks to work on my research project. This project was traditionally done in final med, but do to years of feedback and a new faculty member in charge, it is being split into two tears and actually assigned credit and dedicated time. I'm not sure what I'll be researching yet, let me know if you have any ideas! After that I'll have a mixed month of special surgery (neuro/plastic/orthopaedic),opthlamology, dermatology, and anaesthetics, with a week for each. Then another couple of weeks of classes and a month of renal medicine and neurology to take me through til Christmas. Should be a good, busy term.
Thanks for stopping by!
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