Increasing Medical Student Exposure to Pathology by Creating an Integrated Rotation During Surgery Clerkship

Following a nationwide trend, the University of Michigan Medical School has restructured its curriculum to facilitate integration of basic science curricula and early inclusion of clinical experiences, resulting in a truncation of a 19-month didactic-based preclinical curriculum to 13 months. Becaus...

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Main Author: Madelyn Lew MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-05-01
Series:Academic Pathology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/23742895211015344
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spelling doaj-2354a6a049bc4725a01c75e323b51f442021-05-11T21:33:30ZengSAGE PublishingAcademic Pathology2374-28952021-05-01810.1177/23742895211015344Increasing Medical Student Exposure to Pathology by Creating an Integrated Rotation During Surgery ClerkshipMadelyn Lew MD0 Department of Pathology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USAFollowing a nationwide trend, the University of Michigan Medical School has restructured its curriculum to facilitate integration of basic science curricula and early inclusion of clinical experiences, resulting in a truncation of a 19-month didactic-based preclinical curriculum to 13 months. Because preclinical didactic and lab sessions formed the bulk of pathology contact hours, the curriculum overhaul significantly reduced student exposure to pathologists. This reduction in exposure may decrease student understanding of how pathology integrates into the larger picture of healthcare delivery and could also decrease the pipeline of students interested in pursuing pathology as a career choice. To ameliorate these concerns, a mandatory 1-week rotation through the Pathology Department was integrated into the surgery clerkship. This brief report outlines the process of creating a new, unique pathology rotation for surgery clerkship students that includes observation in autopsy and surgical pathology sign-out, small group sessions focused on foundational concepts in microbiology, chemistry, and transfusion medicine, and access to online case-based modules. Available qualitative student feedback indicates that students appreciate how this rotation granted them a “behind the scenes” look at pathology but also noted that the fast pace of clinical sign-out sessions and length of small group sessions were suboptimal for student learning. This feedback and future survey data will serve as a platform on which curricular improvements can be made to enhance the learning environment for both learners and educators.https://doi.org/10.1177/23742895211015344
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Madelyn Lew MD
spellingShingle Madelyn Lew MD
Increasing Medical Student Exposure to Pathology by Creating an Integrated Rotation During Surgery Clerkship
Academic Pathology
author_facet Madelyn Lew MD
author_sort Madelyn Lew MD
title Increasing Medical Student Exposure to Pathology by Creating an Integrated Rotation During Surgery Clerkship
title_short Increasing Medical Student Exposure to Pathology by Creating an Integrated Rotation During Surgery Clerkship
title_full Increasing Medical Student Exposure to Pathology by Creating an Integrated Rotation During Surgery Clerkship
title_fullStr Increasing Medical Student Exposure to Pathology by Creating an Integrated Rotation During Surgery Clerkship
title_full_unstemmed Increasing Medical Student Exposure to Pathology by Creating an Integrated Rotation During Surgery Clerkship
title_sort increasing medical student exposure to pathology by creating an integrated rotation during surgery clerkship
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Academic Pathology
issn 2374-2895
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Following a nationwide trend, the University of Michigan Medical School has restructured its curriculum to facilitate integration of basic science curricula and early inclusion of clinical experiences, resulting in a truncation of a 19-month didactic-based preclinical curriculum to 13 months. Because preclinical didactic and lab sessions formed the bulk of pathology contact hours, the curriculum overhaul significantly reduced student exposure to pathologists. This reduction in exposure may decrease student understanding of how pathology integrates into the larger picture of healthcare delivery and could also decrease the pipeline of students interested in pursuing pathology as a career choice. To ameliorate these concerns, a mandatory 1-week rotation through the Pathology Department was integrated into the surgery clerkship. This brief report outlines the process of creating a new, unique pathology rotation for surgery clerkship students that includes observation in autopsy and surgical pathology sign-out, small group sessions focused on foundational concepts in microbiology, chemistry, and transfusion medicine, and access to online case-based modules. Available qualitative student feedback indicates that students appreciate how this rotation granted them a “behind the scenes” look at pathology but also noted that the fast pace of clinical sign-out sessions and length of small group sessions were suboptimal for student learning. This feedback and future survey data will serve as a platform on which curricular improvements can be made to enhance the learning environment for both learners and educators.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/23742895211015344
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