Department of Neurosurgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Department of Neurosurgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
World Neurosurg. 2020 May;137:e535-e546. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2020.02.032. Epub 2020 Feb 22.
Many medical students find neurosurgery interesting, but few pursue it as a career. Reasons for this mismatch include lack of exposure and poor perceptions of its career demands, work-life balance, personalities, and patient outcomes. It is imperative to recruit promising students early in medical school to build a pipeline of future neurosurgeons. We aimed to recruit medical students to neurosurgery and improve perceptions of the field by hosting an optional cadaver laboratory event (Neuroanatomy Lab Initiative [NLI]) during first-year students' gross anatomy course.
Five neurosurgery residents and a rotating faculty member led students through the hands-on performance of a retrosigmoid craniotomy on 4 anatomic specimens in the students' cadaveric laboratory. Questionnaires with 6-point Likert scores were distributed to students before and after the NLI.
Thirty-nine students with broad specialty interests and previous experiences attended. They perceived neurosurgery to be demanding, competitive, and incongruent with work-life balance and family. At baseline, their interest in neurosurgery was high despite perceived lack of knowledge about the field. Students were eager to participate in neurosurgical procedures and interactions with neurosurgeons. After the NLI, students felt more knowledgeable about neurosurgery and perceived neurosurgery faculty and residents as more pleasant/friendly, approachable, and satisfied with their careers.
An NLI during first-year medical students' anatomy course was an effective, relatively low-resource means of engaging students and improving their perceptions of neurosurgery. We provide a framework for scaling this initiative to other institutions to help recruit the next generation of neurosurgeons.
许多医学生对神经外科学感兴趣,但很少有人将其作为职业。造成这种不匹配的原因包括缺乏接触和对其职业需求、工作与生活平衡、个性和患者预后的负面看法。必须在医学生早期就招募有前途的学生,以建立未来神经外科医生的人才库。我们旨在通过在一年级医学生解剖学课程中举办可选的尸体实验室活动(神经解剖学实验室倡议 [NLI])来招募医学生并改善对该领域的看法。
五名神经外科住院医师和一名轮转教员指导学生在学生的尸体实验室中对 4 个解剖标本进行乙状窦后开颅术的实际操作。在 NLI 前后,学生们填写了带有 6 分李克特量表的问卷。
39 名具有广泛专业兴趣和先前经验的学生参加了该活动。他们认为神经外科要求高、竞争激烈,与工作与生活平衡和家庭不和谐。在基线时,尽管他们认为自己对该领域的了解有限,但他们对神经外科的兴趣很高。学生们渴望参与神经外科手术,并与神经外科医生互动。在 NLI 之后,学生们感到对神经外科有了更多的了解,并认为神经外科教员和住院医师更友善、平易近人,对自己的职业更满意。
在一年级医学生解剖学课程中举办 NLI 是一种有效且相对资源较少的方式,可以吸引学生并改善他们对神经外科的看法。我们提供了一个框架,将此倡议推广到其他机构,以帮助招募下一代神经外科医生。