Personal Narrative
Nov 2001

Through the Student's Eyes: Working in the Shadows

David R. Block, MD
Virtual Mentor. 2001;2(11):117-118. doi: 10.1001/virtualmentor.2000.2.11.prsp2-0011.

 

I wondered how many others in the large laboratory had the same conflicting feelings as I: anxiety, nervousness, eagerness, and enthusiasm all rolled into one. It was the first day of gross anatomy, the course that, arguably, defines the first year of medical school. The preceding week of orientation now completed, the 135 or so members of the Class of 2004 stood in front of our dissecting tables, awaiting the first instructions from our professor. Before opening our tables, we offered a moment of silence in deference to those deceased women and men who had given their bodies so that my classmates and I could learn from them. We were then told that the cadavers were our first patients. Then we were told to open up the tables.

During orientation week, among presentations about courses and what books to buy (and those not to) and exploring the social life of Buffalo (one exists!), professionalism was a recurrent theme. Professionalism is such a hot word in medicine and medical education nowadays, that sometimes I feel it can be overused, but not here. Medical schools offer a professional education, and medicine in the 21st century is struggling to redefine itself as a profession in the midst of phenomenal scientific advancements and difficulties adjusting to a managed care model. During our lives as med students, professionalism will likely be redefined and refined many times before a "permanent" definition is formed. In many ways, studying or practicing medicine now has the thrills and dips of a roller coaster ride.

On the second or third day of "gross," my dissecting partner complained that she was not getting enough light in her part of the body. "It's like I'm working in the shadows, Dave," she remarked. I'm not exactly sure why, but her comment really struck me. While she certainly could have used more illumination (especially considering we were examining the posterior cervical triangle), that's not why her words had an impact. No matter how much light we might have had, we would be spending the entire semester dissecting in the shadow of this great woman. Who knows what contributions she made during her life, but now, in her death, she was continuing to aid 8 young students in their journey towards becoming physicians. That we should consider her our first patient, however, seemed a bit strange. While we knew her age and cause of death, that was all that we knew. We were not told her name, her medical or social history, nor could we ask her questions: we possessed her physical being, but little of a total person.

Though I have spent barely a month in medical school, I already sense that I have learned a great deal of information about anatomy, cells, biochemistry, and epidemiology. In 1 course, histology, the student's task is to take a highly microscopic view of the body and identify the 1 or few cells on a slide. Even when such cells are aggregated, as in a smear of different bone marrow cells in various stages of development, I find it difficult to fathom that these miniscule units once were part of a very substantial human being. Examining the body from this perspective is something I am not entirely comfortable with. Much like dissecting a cadaver, I feel I am working in the shadow of something, but that something can be frustratingly elusive.

I trust these shadows will disappear as my studies progress. Every medical student knows that the scientific knowledge he or she is inundated with during the first few years will be supplemented with the artistic aspects of medicine in later years. As the humanism so critical to the successful and professional practice of medicine is incorporated into my development as a competent physician, those integral bits of knowledge that now lie in darkness will surely come into focus.

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Citation

Virtual Mentor. 2001;2(11):117-118.

DOI

10.1001/virtualmentor.2000.2.11.prsp2-0011.

Acknowledgements

Special thanks to Brenda Boggs.

The viewpoints expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the AMA.