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Matched Now What?
#11
(03-16-2021, 11:50 PM)Guest Wrote: Junior faculty here.

Forget reading anything cover to cover. Reading Rhoton is fine, if you expect you'll be assisting/performing in major skull base cases as a PGY-1. For almost all of you, your time is better spent doing something else. If you're interested, by all means, it's a fantastic atlas, but I don't understand why this is commonly recommended. Ditto with Greenberg. It's designed to be used as a reference while on call. You won't understand much of what you read as a med student, let alone remember it. You have no context for any of it.

Most importantly, much of your intern year won't even be neurosurgery. What will cause you anxiety is not what type of condylar fracture you're looking at (your seniors will be making those decision and teaching you), but just HOW you are going to get everything done. Most of your first few months will be spent figuring out the ins and outs of doctoring. How to round, how to consult, what level of suspicion to have for patients going south. How to help your team take good care of patients. As others have said above, your focus needs to be on building efficiency. How you prioritize and handle the tasks handed down to you will define how good everyone thinks you are.  Med students assume they are already good at this. They are almost always wrong.

Figure out a way to stay healthy. Establish good sleeping, eating, and exercise routines after your post-Match lifestyle throws it all to the wind. Find a place to live so that the "must-dos" like groceries, laundry, and cooking are achievable easily even when post-call. If you have a family, find schools, friends, carpool buddies, etc. early on because they will be your lifesavers when you're stuck in the OR until the early morning for a case and your kid needs to go to the pediatrician. Most of you younger folks will think this stuff is bullshit, but I promise your abilities as a resident will suffer if you don't address it.

If you REALLY want to read, find the old Boot Camp presentations online for interns. They're a great guide for things you need to know for your first nights on call, and a good starting point if you want to guide your reading of Greenberg or other sources.

And don't forget to enjoy yourself. You won't get the chance every again.

This is the 1% of posts that makes this site worth it. Thank you!
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#12
(03-17-2021, 12:31 AM)Guest Wrote: Thanks for that thoughtful writeup. Anyone know where we can find those presentations?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AjuSH7x35YY

You can find them on YouTube. The SNS website used to have all these up in an organized way, but they're going virtual so the links are not there anymore.
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