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- Sakibul Huq, Adham M Khalafallah, Wataru Ishida, Jose L Porras, Ryan P Lee, Jordina Rincon-Torroella, Teresa Wojtasiewicz, Risheng Xu, Alan R Cohen, and Debraj Mukherjee.
- Department of Neurosurgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
- World Neurosurg. 2020 May 1; 137: e535-e546.
ObjectiveMany medical students find neurosurgery interesting, but few pursue it as a career. Reasons for this mismatch include lack of exposure and poor perceptions of its career demands, work-life balance, personalities, and patient outcomes. It is imperative to recruit promising students early in medical school to build a pipeline of future neurosurgeons. We aimed to recruit medical students to neurosurgery and improve perceptions of the field by hosting an optional cadaver laboratory event (Neuroanatomy Lab Initiative [NLI]) during first-year students' gross anatomy course.MethodsFive neurosurgery residents and a rotating faculty member led students through the hands-on performance of a retrosigmoid craniotomy on 4 anatomic specimens in the students' cadaveric laboratory. Questionnaires with 6-point Likert scores were distributed to students before and after the NLI.ResultsThirty-nine students with broad specialty interests and previous experiences attended. They perceived neurosurgery to be demanding, competitive, and incongruent with work-life balance and family. At baseline, their interest in neurosurgery was high despite perceived lack of knowledge about the field. Students were eager to participate in neurosurgical procedures and interactions with neurosurgeons. After the NLI, students felt more knowledgeable about neurosurgery and perceived neurosurgery faculty and residents as more pleasant/friendly, approachable, and satisfied with their careers.ConclusionsAn NLI during first-year medical students' anatomy course was an effective, relatively low-resource means of engaging students and improving their perceptions of neurosurgery. We provide a framework for scaling this initiative to other institutions to help recruit the next generation of neurosurgeons.Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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