The ultimate survival guide for medical students, interns, residents, and fellows, Staying Human during Residency Training provides time-tested advice and the latest information on every aspect of a resident's life - from choosing a residency program, to coping with stress, enhancing self-care, and protecting personal and professional relationships. Allan D. Peterkin, MD, provides hundreds of tips on how to cope with sleep deprivation, time pressures, and ethical and legal issues. This sixth edition is not only updated to reflect the latest research and resources, but also features new material on the latest issues in residency training, including social media use, patient-centred care, the medical humanities, and the "hidden curriculum" of residency. Presenting practical antidotes to cynicism, careerism, and burnout, Peterkin also offers guidance on fostering more empathic connection with patients and deepening relationships with colleagues, friends, and family. Acknowledged by thousands of doctors across North America as an invaluable resource, Staying Human during Residency Training has helped to shape notions of trainee well-being for medical educators worldwide. Offering wise, compassionate, and professional counsel, this new edition again shows why it is required reading for medical students and new physicians pursuing postgraduate training.
N Engl J Med 1974; 293: 601–605 6 New guidelines for resident contracts. JAMA 1996; 276: 26 7 Wischnitzer S. Survival Guide for ... Galen Press, Columbia, SC, 2006 Miller L. Medical Students' Guide to Successful Residency Matching.
This is a Concise Manual Designed for Medical Students, Interns, residents and fellows from all specialties.
All residents, medical educators, those involved with academic training institutions, specialty societies, professional groups, and consumer/patient safety organizations will find this book useful to advocate for an improved culture of ...
Provides a highly engaging, richly contextualized account of the residency system in all its dimensions and analyzes the mutual relationship between residency education and patient care in America.
Medical professionals are often viewed as a special breed of stoic figures whose tough grace allows them to stay strong as they confront human frailty and tragedy on a daily basis.
Clinical outcomes of a stepped care program for the treatment of borderline personality disorder. Personal Ment Health. 2018;12:252–64. Paris J. Stepped care for borderline personality disorder. New York: Academic Press; 2017.
This series of loosely interconnected scenes from the author's medical training concludes her residency three years later.
Canadian Book Review Annual
Heirs of General Practice is a frieze of glimpses of young doctors with patients of every age—about a dozen physicians in all, who belong to the new medical specialty called family practice.
Listening to Dr. Max describe his pioneering work, one might think the field of research would be limited to a select few individuals, but he interjected, “Somebody who has the intellectual ability to get through medical school and ...