TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「The foundations of the American medical education system haven't changed much for decades. The first two years are a mad rush to attend lectures and memorize as much information as humanly possible, since students usually take the first part of their medical licensing exam after their second year of school. In their third year, students start clinical rotations in hospitals, then spend most of their fourth trying to find a match for their next phase of training: medical residency. The coronavirus pandemic upended all of that this spring. Schools had no choice but to adapt, which, for many, opened the door to overdue changes—changes that are coming in handy with COVID-19 again surging and new lockdowns being enacted, writes Jamie Ducharme. Read more about how U.S. medical schools are training a post-pandemic generation of doctors at the link in bio. Here, Dr. Anthony Wylie and student Kaiya Flemons of the Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine in Pennsylvania, at screen bottom, pay a virtual house call to a Pennsylvania patient. Photo-illustration by @evaoleary for TIME」11月29日 1時21分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 11月29日 01時21分


The foundations of the American medical education system haven't changed much for decades. The first two years are a mad rush to attend lectures and memorize as much information as humanly possible, since students usually take the first part of their medical licensing exam after their second year of school. In their third year, students start clinical rotations in hospitals, then spend most of their fourth trying to find a match for their next phase of training: medical residency. The coronavirus pandemic upended all of that this spring. Schools had no choice but to adapt, which, for many, opened the door to overdue changes—changes that are coming in handy with COVID-19 again surging and new lockdowns being enacted, writes Jamie Ducharme. Read more about how U.S. medical schools are training a post-pandemic generation of doctors at the link in bio. Here, Dr. Anthony Wylie and student Kaiya Flemons of the Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine in Pennsylvania, at screen bottom, pay a virtual house call to a Pennsylvania patient. Photo-illustration by @evaoleary for TIME


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