CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne
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Students are introduced to techniques of physical examination at medical school. However, their skills are deficient at the time of graduation, and with the increasing shift of clinical teaching away from the bedside and into the conference room it is expected that these skills will weaken in succeeding generations of physicians. ⋯ We describe a program whose unique hierarchical approach has permitted a detailed ongoing review of physical examination. One clinician was able to teach 24 residents by instructing a small group of senior residents, who in turn, after practising with clinical clerks, taught groups of junior residents.
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Comparative Study
Career and practice profiles of Alberta medical graduates (1973-85) practising in Alberta.
This collaborative study examined the career choices and practice locations of the 940 (58%) of the Alberta medical students graduating between 1973 and 1985 who remained in Alberta. Of the 686 practising graduates slightly less than two-thirds were in family/general practice; the remainder were in a specialty. More women (76%) than men (60%) had chosen family/general medicine. ⋯ Approximately 20% of the practising graduates chose to locate in small towns or rural areas. Accessibility to consultants and opportunities for continuing medical education were reported as vital prerequisites for more physicians to move to smaller Alberta centres. These findings provide a starting point for studies designed to determine how Alberta medical school graduates are contributing to patient care within the province.
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The initial resuscitation and stabilization provided to a critically ill or injured child is often an important determinant of outcome. Before transfer to a tertiary care facility the initial care may be provided by physicians unaccustomed to managing critically ill children. The authors outline the unique aspects of resuscitation and stabilization of the critically ill child and give guidelines for the initial management of diseases affecting the central nervous system and respiratory tract (the most frequent indications for transfer to a tertiary care facility) and other, less frequent but important problems. In many situations it is worth while to enlist the expertise of the tertiary care centre, either by telephone consultation or by dispatch of a specially trained transport team.