Uncategorized

Block Three Week 1

aaaaaaaand we are back! Mum and grandad moved me back in on saturday and I spent the weekend basically unpacking and sorting my room out ready for another term.
Monday

Finally! The block I have been waiting for! This block, Block Three, The Neuro block is the one I have been looking forward to for ages. It is the same area as my degree though I make no assumptions on actually knowing anything. The only downside is that my timetable changes dramatically and I don’t like that fact but oh well.

Monday did not start untill1:45pm for me! Our year finally have bedside teaching and instead of getting 200 first-year medical students descending on the local hospitals every day for one week, we are split in two. One half of the year on Monday morning and the other half on Tuesday afternoon of which I am part of. I used the morning to go over a block one lecture and get ready for the upcoming block.

It was nice to see everyone after Christmas and I got really excited for one of my friends who had submitted their PhD thesis over Christmas, once he gets it he will forever be known to me as Dr Tom and that’s all I will address him as until the time comes that we graduate and then he will be Dr Dr Tom.

We eventually got into the lecture theatre to have our intro to block three by dawn who has quickly become one of my favourite lecturers just because she runs block three and is an avid neuro nerd such as myself. Understandably most people do not share the over-enthusiasm as I have for block three so there was a lot of calming us down and a lot of informing us about drop-in sessions but there was a lot of information given to us at once so I need to go over it all.

We do so much in one week that I have to have my timetable open when I writing this to remind me what I have done!

One of the first lectures was nice as I knew about 90% of the lecture but I got a bit twitchy when the cells that became my entire life for 4 months during my dissertation were referred to as “just” the bridge between neurones and blood vessels…. They are so much more than that and I had an internal struggle not to defend my astrocytes out loud.

We finished with an ascending tract lecture which at the time was really confusing but after a lot of drawing at home and some going over, it became straight forward. That’s the thing with neuro, you have to get the big picture to get the minor details.

 

IMG_20190110_131947
Some neuro doodles

Tuesday

Tuesday brought one of my favourite lectures ever. Neuroimaging. I was in my element looking at brain scans and histological slices for an hour and I was surprised at how much I did know despite never having done much neuroanatomy as an undergraduate.

In the afternoon I had my turn at the hospital teaching and Matt was an angel and offered me a lift to the hospital in the afternoon. We spent an hour trying to get a car parking spot but thankfully we managed to get one by sheer luck and made it to the lecture theatre on time. It has been free car parking at UHCW this past couple of weeks so it is bedlam up there.

I got to meet my consultant who is lovely. We were on the wards within 20 minutes and before I knew it I was examining my first patient, a male complaining of chest pain. It was nice to know that I had retained something over Christmas and our findings were actually being written down into the patient’s notes! I got to do an abdominal examination and a respiratory exam, most of which I had remembered! After we were sent off to discuss treatment plans and differentials and got to have a long discussion with our clinical fellow afterwards, he even took the time to teach us ECG’s and show us some X-rays of chests including dextrocardia and cannabis abuse. It was incredible to have this opportunity and we all came away having learnt something.

At the end of the day, I had been offered a lift home but I spent 20 minutes trying to get into the wrong locker. In my nervousness I had filled in the label on the wrong locker so spent most of the time trying to break into someone else’s locker. After that, the chaos was not over as we had to fight the rush hour traffic so it took an hour and a half to get back to campus. I felt bad for Stuart who had offered me the lift and I was sure he was regretting it fairly quickly, so I owe you a couple of pints!

It was our coursemate’s Abhi’s birthday that evening so after my run, I gathered a group of Tocils and we headed to her room, except she wasn’t in. We ended up leaving a kind of memorial to her outside her door with flowers and cake and actually ended up sitting in the corridor having a chat as a block. It was nice as I normally don’t get to see everyone as I choose to stay in the MTC after uni so it is easy to feel disconnected from my block and that sometimes it feels like I am an outsider so these little moments are nice to have.


Wednesday

We had a half day today as we do at the start of every block in which we covered neuroendocrinology, analgesia and study designs. After I did some work in the MTC before heading back and having a bit of a lazy evening, something I would regret on Thursday as I had to fill in the anatomy book … all 17 pages of it.

 

Thursday

We had our first CBL session of block three and it was nice to be back. I scribed for the session and brought chocolate and biscuits as snacks. I was keen to scribe this block as I wanted to do something in the best 5 weeks of the year from my perspective 🙂

The afternoon lectures brought some of the heaviest material of the block but also some of the best lectures I think we have had.

A stand out one was consciousness given by Mr Ronan Dardis, A consultant neurosurgeon at UHCW. I was over excited and was keen to speak with him at the end. He gave an incredible lecture on GCS scores and how you measure the arousal state of a patient. He also mentioned about projects that his team can offer so I am hoping to get one of those one day to help me in my career!

 


Friday

The first day of the new Friday timetable. Instead of having anatomy last, we were first in and I prefer it this way. I don’t know what it is about Fridays but I am always done with the day at 3pm so by having anatomy first, I could be focused throughout the whole session. This was great as I got to teach some of my coursemates the material which I seemed to be picking up easier than other blocks. The only issue with this is that we now have clinical skills last meaning that the already long sessions seem to drag a lot more, but that’s nothing a cup of coffee can’t fix.

I got back and prepared for the next day. I was excited as someone I had met through Lancashire Science Festival had offered me some busking experience (not the musical kind) as a local science education conference. I brought my brain puzzle which I had made myself so I had to quickly write annotations onto the jigsaw about the names of the lobes and basic functionality.
Saturday

Up again early to get to Birmingham for the ACE conference. I managed to get there on time though as was chatting to other outreach people and it was nice to learn some more outreach activities such as oboe straws (crush one end of a straw, cut into a triangle and blow) and fire with steel wool. I also got to meet two people from UCLAN who I miss more than anything, the YSC crew. These people became more than my bosses as such during my third year and helped ignite my passion for science outreach and I would often go to them when I was stressed so to see them was a gift. I also got a lot of encouragement that day for pursuing science outreach so I am now going to start planning some outreach events up at the medical school with the hope for a mini-festival at some point in my medical education.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

 

 

 

I got back to Coventry at about 5ish with the intention of doing some work. However, I ended up crashing out on my bed and did absolutely nothing except binge watch How I met your mother for the millionth time in a row and catch up on the Big Bang Theory (I am sticking with it till the end).
Sunday

A day of work today but in the evening my flat and I headed over to the local pub to eat and play board games. It was nice as we had not actually done anything as a flat and breaking out of the medicine bubble was a well-needed break. We ended up playing QI (as it was the only game with all the pieces still present) and I came third…. not bad 😀

Here is to a brilliant 5 weeks!

IMG_20190110_131947

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s