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Consider This from NPR

How The Pandemic Shaped Medical Education And, Ultimately, Your HealthCare

Consider This from NPR

NPR

News, Daily News, Society & Culture, News Commentary

4.26.2K Ratings

🗓️ 19 July 2021

⏱️ 17 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Medical education must always keep up with the times. But the pandemic forcing medical students to learn virtually revealed new fault lines and opportunities to rethink the way medical professionals should learn. The medical field is grappling with which of those changes should become permanent and which ones could jeopardize the quality of healthcare.

To get a better understanding of how technology has enabled new ways of approaching medical education, NPR's Jonaki Mehta visits Kaiser Permanente's Bernard J. Tyson School of Medicine, a school that was uniquely positioned to adapt to the conditions imposed by the pandemic since it opened during quarantine.

Elisabeth Rosenthal, editor-in-chief of Kaiser Health News and a non-practicing physician, shares her concerns about the medical field leaning more heavily on telemedicine as a result of the pandemic.

In participating regions, you'll also hear a local news segment that will help you make sense of what's going on in your community.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey, it's Jesse Thorn from NPR's Bullseye Podcast.

0:03.0

I'm one of thousands of NPR network voices coming to you

0:06.5

from over 200 local newsrooms across the country.

0:10.7

We bring all Americans closer together

0:12.7

through free and independent journalism,

0:14.7

music, politics, culture, and so much more.

0:17.2

The NPR Network.

0:18.4

Learn more at npr.org slash network.

0:21.6

Mock patient visits are a normal part of medical school,

0:24.6

a way for doctors and training to practice

0:26.5

their clinical and conversational skills.

0:29.0

We are practicing having kind of serious conversations

0:32.0

with patients.

0:32.8

What's not exactly normal is your patient disappearing

0:36.0

right before your eyes.

0:37.1

And my wife, I kept going out and then so I just fully

0:40.1

dropped out of the call and then I came back

0:42.0

and I was like, oh, I'm so sorry about that.

0:44.4

Like, I just think that for Ashland Torres,

0:46.2

walking a patient through technical difficulties

0:48.8

is actually a routine part of her training.

0:51.6

Her med school, Kaiser Permanente's Bernard J. Tyson

...

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