(no subject)
May. 10th, 2006 06:34 amTeaching of basic anatomy in Australia's medical schools is so inadequate that students are increasingly unable to locate important body parts - and in some cases even confuse one vital organ with another. Senior doctors claim teaching hours for anatomy have been slashed by 80 per cent in some medical schools to make way for "touchy-feely" subjects such as "cultural sensitivity", communication and ethics. The time devoted to other basic sciences - including biochemistry, physiology and pathology - has also been reduced.
Several senior consultants have told The Weekend Australian they have been "horrified" to encounter final-year medical students who do not know where the prostate gland is, or what a healthy liver feels like. When asked by a cardiac surgeon during a live operation to identify a part of the heart that he was pointing to, one group of final-year students thought it was the patient's liver.
A coalition of senior doctors appealed this week to the federal Government to step in, claiming public safety was at stake and that national benchmarks for teaching the basic medical sciences were urgently needed.
========================
Now, I'll point out that it's IMPORTANT for doctors to demonstrate cultural sensitivity, communication, and ethics - but, really, given the choice between
A) a doctor who'll mumble unintelligibly at me about being a sheepfucking cracker while hitting on me
and
B) one who can't tell me if that's a rib or my spleen,
I'll take the first one.
Really.
No, it's okay.
Several senior consultants have told The Weekend Australian they have been "horrified" to encounter final-year medical students who do not know where the prostate gland is, or what a healthy liver feels like. When asked by a cardiac surgeon during a live operation to identify a part of the heart that he was pointing to, one group of final-year students thought it was the patient's liver.
A coalition of senior doctors appealed this week to the federal Government to step in, claiming public safety was at stake and that national benchmarks for teaching the basic medical sciences were urgently needed.
========================
Now, I'll point out that it's IMPORTANT for doctors to demonstrate cultural sensitivity, communication, and ethics - but, really, given the choice between
A) a doctor who'll mumble unintelligibly at me about being a sheepfucking cracker while hitting on me
and
B) one who can't tell me if that's a rib or my spleen,
I'll take the first one.
Really.
No, it's okay.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-05-10 01:41 pm (UTC)eegh.