Thursday, July 30, 2009

The leg bone's connected to the thigh bone...

A 2-hour anatomy practical really doesn't get you into the mood for a 2-hour statistics lesson (Yes, Statistics, you may be thinking wtf? in Medicine, but believe me it has it's purposes) straight afterwards. Add to that a lecture in the afternoon (which half the grade dozed off in) and I think Wednesday was a pretty long day...

I actually enjoy anatomy, to be honest; it's wonderful to know where everything's connected (actually we were looking at the abdomen this week, not the leg as the title so subtly implied), and wonderful to have some really great teachers of anatomy (we have this fairly old surgeon who's awesome at teaching, I think everything he taught went right into my head and displaced something else), and the cadavers themselves were (today, at least) far from obese, which was nice. It's just that learning anatomy, for me at least, requires intense concentration, somewhat alike to playing chess. Although I've played a four-hour chess game, a 2-hour anatomy prac seems just that much more tiring and satisfactory. So all that intense concentration took me right out of the zone when we started on database analysis in Statistics. *zzzz*

And oh dear, my computer just restarted after Automatic Updates. Thank heavens for Blogger's autosaving of drafts ^^

We were also meant to do our 'Interviewing of a Patient' (not official name) assignment, our first one so far (Yes, come to UWS if you don't like assignments!) yesterday. This is part of our PPD segment in the course, and the aim of this particular assignment is to interview a patient and give a recount of his/her experience, and empathise with the patient via means of a written response and a presentation. Our patient had his son come over to visit him, so he was busy, and as such we decided to reschedule the meeting, probably to next Wednesday. It's quite nice to have friends that can drive; Camden isn't exactly the most accessible place via public transport.
We were about to skip our last lecture so we could interview our patient, but since that didn't go to plan, we had the enormous privilege of dozing off through our lecture; I think I should go and look at the lecture notes/synopsis now. And probably revise anatomy... and probably write up my clinical ICM notes...and probably revise the statistics stuff as well... arggh.

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