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Showing posts with label MEDICO SPECIAL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MEDICO SPECIAL. Show all posts

Akrit Jaswal-The Seven Year Old Surgeon ????

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What is the reality behind this news ?? Anyone knows ???

From Wikipedia 

"
Akrit Pran Jaswal (born April 23, 1993, Nurpur ) is an Indian adult who was a child prodigy as a surgeon. He performed his first surgery at the age of seven.



According to his mother Raksha Kumari Jaswal, Akrit was an early starter, skipped the toddler stage and started walking. He started speaking in his 10th month and was reading Shakespeare at the age of five. Akrit developed a passion for science and anatomy at an early age. Doctors at local hospitals took notice and started allowing him to observe surgeries when he was seven years old. Inspired by what he saw, Akrit read everything he could on the topic. When he was seven years old, an impoverished family unable to pay for regular healthcare heard about his amazing abilities, and asked if he would operate on their daughter. The surgery was successful and was widely celebrated. Akrit hopes to someday continue his studies at Harvard University.
At 12 years old, he is the youngest person to be admitted to a medical university in India (Punjab University).
Akrit Jaswal has an estimated IQ of 146.

At 17 years he is  working on a master's degree in applied chemistry.

Here is the videos about him







.
What is the reality behind this news ?? Anyone knows ???


MEDICOS WORLD - www.medicine-students-medical.blogspot.com

How Much Do Doctors Make?

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Somebody asked: "You're a Doctor? How much do 
you make?"
I replied: "HOW MUCH DO I MAKE?" ...
I can make holding your hand seem like the most
important thing in the world when you're scared...
I can make your child breathe when they stop..

I can help your father survive a heart attack... 
I can make myself get up at 4AM to make sure
your mother has the medicine she needs to
live...and I will work straight
through until 4am to keep her alive and start the
day all over again!
I work all day to save the lives of strangers...
I will drop everything and run a code blue for
hours trying to keep you alive!!!
I make my family wait for dinner until
I know your
family member is taken care of...
I make myself skip lunch so that
I can make sure that everything I did for your wife today was
correct...
I work weekends and holidays and all through the
night because people don't just get sick Monday
though Saturday and during normal working
hours.

Today, I might save your life.
How much do I make?

All I know is, I make a difference.
MEDICOS WORLD - www.medicine-students-medical.blogspot.com

My 15 Study Tips for Medical Students.

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medical study tips

1)Have a to-do list and set deadlines (realistic deadlines, of course). Nothing gives you a greater sense of achievement than crossing something off your to-do list.


2) Aim to do a little bit of studying each day, even if it�s just revising notes from the afternoon�s lectures or reading some anatomy. Little things add up, and you�ll be surprised how much you learn. 


3) Study in a group - the key here is to choose your friends wisely and to strictly limit how much time you study with them. Ideally, you should do all your studying on your own, and use group studying time as a review or to clarify confusing points. The sessions should be rapid fire and limited to no more than an hour or two a week. The ideal study group is one with similar views on studying and work ethic that complements your knowledge base well.




4) Translate the notes you receive into your own condensed, easy-to-read version This helps you internalize the knowledge in a way you can easily access.


5) Diagrams and pictures! Anything that is conducive to being in a flow-chart or diagram should be. It forces you to think about the information, and makes a great revision tool come exam time. 


6)If you are going to highlight, write notes in the margins to summarise, otherwise you�re going to have to read the text again. 



7)Keep organized - Take one general topic, and list all its subtopics underneath it. Keep diagrams concise so that you can review them for quick reference and comparison.


8 )Plan time-blocks and breaks. There�s a lot of material, and no time to realize you just wasted an entire afternoon poring over obscure clinical research on Chinese laparoscopic surgery outcomes. This is where time-blocking trumps simple to-do lists; you need to know when to start and stop doing things


9) Enjoy what you are doing � if you find yourself getting bored while you study, stop. Take a break, and think of a way to make what you are studying interesting, whether that is by turning it into a game, making it interactive, more visual


10) Get copies of old tests. This is very important! Most professors are not industrious enough to create new questions for each exam. And there are only so many questions you can ask about the same topic. Therefore, many questions are repeated. Some may have wording changes, but most questions have the same concepts.


11) To revise all the topics on the previous day of exams , use my collections of powerpoint presentations.Visit  www.medicalppt.blogspot.com , download and save all presentations to your computer/lap/mobile/tab


12)Don�t forget your family. Your family is proud as heck of you for making it into medical school. Call them once in a while. Better yet, write them an e-mail and send pictures. 



13)Sleep is essential - Get your sleep! It�s better to eliminate the random wasted minutes/hours throughout your day than to sacrifice minutes/hours of sleep. If you�re sacrificing sleep, then you should have already maximized your daily studying.


14)Activity is especially important to maintaining focus. Do things that challenge you physically or mentally. Go to the gym. Go surfing. Go running. Play a sport. Practice yoga. Do something. It doesn�t have to be every day, but an hour every other day won�t hurt you. You�ll feel better.


15)Enjoy life - this goes along with rewarding yourself. Look at the world around you and take in all the beauty. Remember to smile. Make it a point to go out and enjoy yourself, and don�t think about what you have to get done later.




Courtesy:Various online articles.
If you like this post please share.

Top 20 TV Medical Shows

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Please comment missed one in the list

20. Northern Exposure (1990-1995) When �Northern Exposure� showed up on the barren landscape that was CBS� prime-time schedule in 1991, it got a chorus of critical raves. The cleverly crafted series followed the ups and downs of New York doctor Joel Fleischman (Rob Morrow), a fish out of water, stuck practicing medicine in remotest Alaska.

19. Doctor Finlay (1993-1996) Starring David Rintoul and Annette Crosbie, this series was a follow-up to the BBC�s successful �Dr. Finlay�s Casebook,� from the 1960s, based on characters created by physician-turned-novelist A.J. Cronin. Set in a small Scottish town just after World War II, the series was a big hit on PBS� �Masterpiece Theatre.�

18. Doogie Howser, MD (1989-1993) Neil Patrick Harris starred as a 16-year-old doctor with a genius intellect. The show aired on ABC. The first two seasons were successful and were in the top 30 shows in the ratings.



17. Doctor in the House (1969-1970) We include this zany British comedy because the first episode �Why Do You Want to be a Doctor,� was written by future Monty Python stars Graham Chapman and John Cleese. The show was seen in the United States in 1971.

16. Bramwell (1995) This unique period drama starring Jemma Redgrave as Dr. Eleanor Bramwell, a headstrong doctor in Victorian London, built a strong following when it aired on PBS� �Masterpiece Theatre.�

15. Diagnosis: Murder (1993-2001) A charming and beguiling family show starring Dick Van Dyke as Dr. Mark Sloan, a doctor who also solves murders with a down-home manner. Mr. Van Dyke�s son, Barry, played Detective Steve Sloan. Special guests included Shelley Long, Reba McEntire and Regis Philbin.

14. Doc Martin (2004-present) Martin Clunes plays Martin Ellingham, a doctor who hates the sight of blood in this hilarious British drama series, which is currently seen on PBS. The show is set in the fictional seaside village of Portwenn and filmed on location in the village of Port Isaac, Cornwall.

13. Scrubs (2001-2010) This medical sitcom, with Zach Braff as the central character, never became a network smash on NBC, but did develop a core following in the upscale demographics. The show later moved to ABC.

12. China Beach (1988-1991) Dana Delany played the tough Army nurse in this show, which was set at an evacuation hospital during the Vietnam War. Ms. Delany, who radiated passion and grit, garnered two Emmy Awards for her role.

11. Trapper John, M.D. (1979-1986) Trapper John was one of the lead characters in the early �M*A*S*H� episodes, but in this show he is the chief surgeon in a San Francisco hospital, nearly 30 years after the Korean War. This may be the first spinoff in TV history that brings nothing from the parent show except the name of a former character, Dr. �Trapper� John McIntyre, played by Pernell Roberts.

10. Chicago Hope (1994-2000) Mandy Patinkin played the brilliant and overzealous surgeon on the CBS show, which also starred Christine Lahti. Mr. Patinkin won a Golden Globe and an Emmy for his role.

9. Grey�s Anatomy (2005-present) This ABC drama about young doctors at a Seattle hospital with very active social lives has won numerous awards and is a huge commercial success. It�s most noted star is Patrick Dempsey, who plays neurosurgeon Dr. Derek Shepherd.

8. General Hospital (1963-present) The ABC show is the longest-running American soap opera currently in production. The 1981 fairy-tale wedding between Luke (played by Anthony Geary) and Laura (Genie Francis) was watched by 30 million viewers and landed the couple on the cover of Newsweek magazine. In the episode, Elizabeth Taylor made a cameo as the malicious Helena Cassadine. Demi Moore started here career on the show.

7. Dr. Kildare (1961-1966) Richard Chamberlain became an instant star and heartthrob in the early 1960s in the wildly popular NBC television series �Dr. Kildare.� His bedside manner and sensitive smile seemed to cure all ills. Mr. Chamberlain next stunned Hollywood by going off to England and emerging anew as a classical actor.

6. Marcus Welby, M.D. (1969-1976) This ABC series, starring Robert Young and James Brolin, was the top-rated weekly American television program in 1970-71. Both stars won Emmy Awards.

5. M*A*S*H (1972-1983) Starring Alan Alda, the show followed the exploits of the 4077th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital in Uijeongbu, South Korea. The show�s finale was the most-watched television episode in U.S. television history at the time, with a record-breaking 125 million viewers. In 2002, the show was ranked No. 25 on TV Guide�s 50 Greatest TV Shows of All Time.

4. St. Elsewhere (1982-1988) It was the show where Denzel Washington got his big break as Dr. Phillip Chandler, a character he played during the show�s entire six-year run from 1982 to 1988. The NBC show, set at a Boston teaching hospital, also starred Mark Harmon, Howie Mandel and Ed Begley Jr. The series never won huge ratings, but had a loyal following.

3. Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (1993-1998) This hugely popular CBS family-favorite starred the willowy Jane Seymour as a 19th-century frontier doctor. Notable guests stars were Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson, Jane Wyman and Trisha Yearwood.

2. House (2004-2012) Hugh Laurie stars in the title role as the cantankerous but brilliant Dr. Gregory House with a questionable bedside manner. Mr. Laurie, who was raised in Oxford, England, and educated at Eton and Cambridge, was long known for his wry witty humor in Britain before he took on an excellent American accent in �House.�




1. ER (1994-2009) The largest audience �ER� ever attracted was 47.8 million viewers when it aired after the series finale of �Seinfeld� in 1998. The most famous cast member was George Clooney. �ER� won 10 Emmys, including one for outstanding drama series; three Screen Actors Guild and Directors Guild of America awards; and one Golden Globe. NBC at one point was paying out a record $13 million per episode to keep the show.

Compiled by John Haydon
Sources: The Sunday Mail, The Washington Times, Associated Press, phillymag.com and Wikipedia
MEDICOS WORLD - www.medicine-students-medical.blogspot.com