Jerrel Catlett’s eyes narrowed on the large intestine, a
gloppy, glow sticklike object whose color matched the stool stored inside of
it. He chose to isolate the organ, and it expanded on his screen as the body
parts surrounding it receded — the gall bladder bright green with bile, the
ribs white and curved like half-moons.
اضافة اعلان
“My old boss used to tell me that when I did this, I’d be so
wowed by how complex the human body is,” said Catlett, 25, a first-year student
at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, gesturing to the image of a body on
his laptop screen. “But it feels like there’s something missing from the
experience right now.”
For generations, medical students were initiated to their
training by a ritual as gory as it was awe-inducing: the cadaver dissection.
Since at least the 14th century, physicians have honed their understanding of
human anatomy by examining dead bodies. But amid the coronavirus pandemic, the
cadaver dissection — like many hands-on aspects of the medical curriculum —
turned virtual, using a three-dimensional simulation software.
Of the country’s 155 medical schools, a majority
transitioned at least part of their first- and second-year curricula to remote
learning during the pandemic. Nearly three-quarters offered lectures virtually,
according to a survey by the Association of American Medical Colleges, and 40
percent used virtual platforms to teach students how to interview patients
about their symptoms and take their medical histories. Though the cadaver
dissection posed a trickier challenge, nearly 30 percent of medical schools,
including Mount Sinai, used online platforms to teach anatomy.
Though medical students in many states have been eligible
for and able to receive the vaccines, some have not yet fully shifted back to
in-person learning, with school administrators saying they preferred to wait
until COVID case rates decline further. Some in-person training, like
practicing clinical skills, has largely resumed.
Medical schools adapted in the past year with inventive
approaches to clinical training. Case Western Reserve University School of
Medicine and Stanford used virtual reality technology to teach anatomy. The
Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University offered
students the opportunity to shadow doctors virtually, sitting in on
tele-medicine appointments. And at Baylor College of Medicine last fall,
students were assessed on giving physical exams via video what actions they
would be taking in person, according to Dr. Nadia Ismail, Baylor’s associate
dean of curriculum: “Now I would hit you at this part of the knee and this is
the reflex I would see.”
The Keck School of Medicine, at the University of Southern
California, opted to have faculty members dissect cadavers while wearing body
cameras so students could watch remotely. The cadavers were also imaged using
three-dimensional scanners, so students could practice manipulating the sorts
of images produced by magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography (TC)
scans.
“When the faculty came up with this, I was like, ‘Oh my
goodness, this is amazing,’ ” said Dr. Donna Elliott, vice dean for medical
education at Keck. “These scanned, three-dimensional images approximate the
type of imaging you’ll use as a clinician.”
Educators are aware that for all the promise of new
technologies, there’s a sense of loss for students who aren’t able to be in
hospitals, classrooms and dissection laboratories in person. “The classroom of
the medical school is the clinical environment, and it’s so stretched right
now,” said Lisa Howley, senior director for strategic initiatives and
partnerships at the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC). “That
worries me.”
Students said they felt some frustration as they watched the
pressures mount on front line providers without any capacity to help. “We know
more than the average person, but we feel generally powerless,” said Saundra
Albers, 28, a second-year student at Columbia.
Both faculty members and students realize that watching
organs move on a laptop screen is not the same as removing them, one by one,
from a human body. “A cadaver’s body parts wouldn’t look as smooth and perfect
as they do on a screen,” Catlett said. “Let’s say the cadaver was an alcoholic,
you might see liver cirrhosis with bumps and ridges covering the liver.”
He and his classmates know that they missed a medical rite
of passage: “We don’t get to feel what the tissues are like, or how hard the bones
are.”
Catlett and his classmates have now been offered vaccines,
and they are beginning to resume some in-person activities, including meeting
with patients for the first time this month. Their lectures are still online.
Sarah Serrano Calove, 26, is a second-year student at the
University of Massachusetts Medical School, which offered a blend of in-person
and virtual learning last semester. Since the start of medical school, Calove
had been eager to practice interacting with patients — taking their medical
histories and delivering news of diagnoses — so the transition to learning
clinical skills on Zoom was a letdown.
She was assigned to interview a medical actor, referred to
as a standardized patient, about his financial troubles, an emotional conversation
that she found awkward to conduct virtually.
“When you’re on Zoom, you can’t tell if the person is
clenching their hands or shaking their legs,” she said. “For some of my
classmates, the feedback was we had to show more empathy. But how am I supposed
to make my empathy known through a computer screen?”
Medical schools were often unable to arrange for students to
practice their skills on medical actors last semester, because these actors
tend to come from older, retired populations that are at heightened risk for
COVID-19. Some schools, including the University of Massachusetts, had students
conduct practice physical exams on their classmates, forgoing the parts of the
exam that involve opening the mouth and looking into the nose.
Some students pointed to a silver lining in their virtual
medical training: They’ve become adept at speaking with patients about
sensitive issues over video, a lesson very likely to prove essential as the
field of telemedicine expands. Through remote clerkships at schools like Sidney
Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University, medical students
assisted hospital staff by following up virtually with patients who had been discharged
earlier than usual because of the pandemic.
“Other doctors got thrown into the deep end but we get to
practice using this technology,” said Ernesto Rojas, a second-year student at
University of California San Francisco School of Medicine. “We learned how to
build rapport and ask the patient things like, ‘Are you in a place where you
can talk privately?’ ”
Students have also said they’ve felt particularly motivated
to complete their training amid the pandemic. Medical school applications are
up by 18 percent compared with this time last year, according to the AAMC.