Category: Career
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The Hidden Curriculum: The Lessons of Microaggressions
“He didn’t mean anything by it when he did that.” “She only said it because she doesn’t know any better.” “Don’t take it personally. They didn’t mean it that way.” Microaggressions refer to everyday, subtle, intentional, or unintentional interactions and behaviors that communicate some sort of bias toward historically marginalized groups. The term is not…
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Gifts for Residency Graduation
Graduating from residency is no small feat, and one that deserves the perfect gift.
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Stop Giving Luck The Credit
We do learners a disservice when we frame our success with luck. Stories that credit happenstance rather than our own doing teach that circumstances have more control over our success than we do.
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The Hidden Curriculum: Non-Negotiables
What we as teachers can do is take an interest in the non-negotiable of trainees and help them understand how we, ourselves, integrate our non-negotiables into the demands of life.
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The Hidden Curriculum: Specialty Disrespect
Specialty disrespect is a pervasive behavior in medicine. And, with the worsening of healthcare silos and the decline of face-to-face interactions, specialty disrespect is only getting worse.
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Gifts for Medical School Graduates
Gifts for the favorite medical student in your life, about to graduate!
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Overcoming Alcohol Addiction in Residency
We hope that Dr. D’s story can inspire others to seek help or treatment and encourage those who see physicians struggling to speak up and lend a hand.
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The Hidden Curriculum: Asking Permission
“Do you mind if I sit on your bed?” It was my third year of medical school during my internal medicine rotation. My attending asked this question to a patient we were seeing on the wards. The question itself struck me as interesting.
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The Hidden Curriculum of Medical Training
While we train students and residents to be experts in clinical knowledge, patient care, and medical research, it may be coming at the expense of another curriculum – the hidden curriculum.
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Advice for Residents Taking Their First Attending Job
It felt like a death; I went through the bereavement process for months. I had never “given up” on anything in my life, and it was very difficult to let it go.