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MEDICAL SCHOOL
            TRAINING






        Changes in Post Graduate


        Medical Education




        By David P. Green, MD



             ost graduate medical education has changed radically in the past
             several decades. Perhaps the most obvious difference is how res-
        Pidents and fellows access information. When I joined the full-
        time faculty at the brand-new University of Texas Medical School at
        San Antonio in 1970, medical knowledge was acquired through lec-
        tures, journal articles, conferences and the relatively few textbooks that
        were available then. For example, in my specialty Orthopaedics there
        existed a couple of out-of-date fracture books, a single, not very good,
        volume on general Orthopaedics, a difficult to read pathology text,
        and a treatise on Pediatric Orthopaedics. Now, every subspeciality in
        Orthopaedics has several two-or-three volume textbooks. I must con-
        fess that San Antonio contributed to this deluge of written texts by
        publishing “Rockwood and Green’s Fractures in Adults” in 1975 (now
        in its 9th edition) and seven years later “Green’s Operative Hand Sur-
        gery” (now in its 8th edition), plus additional works generated from
        our department on pediatric injuries, the shoulder and orthopaedic
        sports medicine. The expansion of medical journals has been even
        more explosive. In 1975, there was not a single journal devoted to my
        subspecialty, hand surgery, and now there are more than a half dozen.
          Even more remarkable than the proliferation of books is that res-
        idents and fellows rarely read the written texts in today’s modern
        world. Most current textbooks and scientific journals now have online
        versions on the internet, which have become the primary source of
        reading for residents and fellows. Whereas my generation spent hours
        wandering around library stacks looking up articles, young doctors in
        training today have the entire world of medical information at their  years. This exposure to seasoned veterans is perhaps nowhere more crit-
        fingertips (or thumbs, as it were) on their iPhones.   ical than in the student’s pursuit of surgical knowledge and techniques.
          Another problematic change is the expansion of medical knowledge.   The bottom line of all this is simple. No matter the source of medical
        Again, to use Orthopaedics as an example, when I was a resident, we   knowledge nor how easy it is to access, 90 percent of what any student
        had four or five books and a single journal to study in preparation for   learns comes from diligent effort and hard work. A teacher will serve as
        our specialty board exams. Now, the graduating Orthopaedic resident   a mentor and guide, but the goal of becoming a proficient, capable and
        has a towering stack of books and journals, each of which contains   compassionate physician and surgeon is achieved only by the diligence
        information from which an examiner might generate questions.  and dedication of the student to learn his or her craft.
          It is not surprising then, that the current crop of individuals finish-
        ing a residency or fellowship are equipped with far more knowledge   David P. Green, MD, is a founder of  The Hand and Upper
        than those of my generation. What has NOT changed, however, is the   Extremity Center of San Antonio, with an international
        ability to apply that knowledge appropriately, and that is where men-  reputation in hand surgery, and the first surgeon in San Antonio
                                                                    to devote his practice entirely to hand and upper extremity
        tors have a place. Every student at every level needs more experienced   surgery. Dr. Green is a member of the Bexar County Medical Society,
        teachers and colleagues who do their best to keep the student from   and a recipient of the BCMS Golden Aesculapius Award for Lifetime of
        making the same mistakes that the mentor did in his or her earlier   Distinguished Service.



         12     SAN ANTONIO MEDICINE  • June 2024
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