January 29, 2007
In Print
Spotlight
Upcoming
Student Scene
Lab Works
StudenTalk
Home
|
|
Student Scene
Clinical Anatomy Taught Through Surgery
Photo by Liza Green, HMS Media Services
Michael Zinner
|
Every medical student has to take anatomy, but only a lucky handful
of fourth-years get a spot in the Clinical Application of Anatomy course offered
in August.
What makes the class different from a typical anatomy course
is that it goes beyond simple identification. Instead, students discuss and
perform clinical and surgical procedures as a means to study anatomy. Surgical
faculty and residents and anesthesiologists, in addition to anatomists and
radiologists, teach the lectures and labs.
“It is anatomy as you are going to see it in a clinical
setting,” said Trudy Van Houten, an HMS clinical instructor in radiology
and director of the course. In the labs, the students perform procedures from
a range of specialties, using radiology along with dissection as tools for
learning. As a fourth-year course, the class also achieves the goal of longitudinal
learning, enhancing what is taught in the first-year anatomy class.
“The approach is very different from a classical, anatomic
perspective versus a surgical perspective. They are almost exact opposites,” said
Kitt Schaffer, HMS associate professor of radiology and director of the first-year
Human Body course. In the typical anatomy course, a wide section is opened
in a cadaver so students can view as much as possible, but in a surgical procedure,
the smallest incision possible must be made. Once the procedure is complete,
the students make a bigger cut so they can see surrounding anatomy.
|
“The approach is very different from a classical, anatomic perspective
versus a surgical perspective. They are almost exact opposites.”
|
The course started in 1997, after surgical faculty found that
the anatomy courses, typically taken in the first year, were not adequately
preparing clerkship students, interns, and residents. William Silen, then chief
of surgery at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, was among the faculty who
approached Van Houten about designing a new anatomy elective. Van Houten was
previously involved in the development of the first-year anatomy elective.
Notable faculty have since participated, including Michael Zinner,
De-partment of Surgery chair at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, who taught
a session on abdominal surgery last summer. Silen has also remained involved.
“Part of the success of the course is that instead of trying
to find a surgeon who has the time to be the director of the course, which
they don’t, we’ve been able to create cameos,” said Van Houten.
It also gives clinicians a welcome opportunity to teach, she said, noting that
clinicians often call asking how they can take part.
Students also must do a presentation, which includes a demonstration
in the lab. Some students have invented new approaches to procedures that were
not as successful as they could be, said Van Houten. “[The projects]
are incredibly ingenious and fun to do,” she said.
The course has proven to be extremely well-received by students. “It
is one of the most popular, if not the most popular, elective at Harvard,” said
Shaffer. “Students are so lucky to be able to spend time with these superstar
doctors that they would maybe never meet otherwise.”
Ziad Obermeyer, a fourth-year student who took the course, realized
that he had not absorbed all he could have from the first-year anatomy course
during an emergency department rotation in his third year. Faced with a patient,
a young girl, who had a lacerated arm, he could not remember the local geography
and was unsure of what might have been damaged. He said he found the clinical
anatomy class to be much more useful.
“The approach of the continuing anatomy course was to emphasize
the practical aspect, starting from how anatomical knowledge is applied and
working backwards from the goal to the details. This made everything so much
more relevant—suddenly it became crucial to know not only the one path
of a vessel traditionally described in textbooks, but also the three common
anatomical variants,” Obermeyer said. “Essentially, we were no
longer learning for a test, but for real life.”
Van Houten said that the course, which she also helped develop
at Boston University, is the first of its kind among medical schools; representatives
from Yale visited the class last summer to investigate instituting a similar
course. Shaffer said those involved with the HMS course hope to expand it and
offer it two or three times per year.
—Emily Lieberman
top
Copyright 2006 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College
|