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I'm first year and about to finish and go to second year and I love everything about it but the studying hurts sometimes but i gotta do what i gotta do i guess😂😂
Hello Yusuf, fantastic video. The main thing I like is what you’ve said as long as you’ve got one offer that’s all you need to get into medicine and become a doctor.
Why on earth would we follow the US instead of Germany, France, Denmark etc why? It's ludicrous. If we're talking private sector look to Europe, it may not be perfect but better than America.
This MMI is to test students who want to enter Medicine right? Not existing medical students. Why does it seem like all the answers involving a lot of knowledge in the medical field and medical ethics and NHS etc? I thought this kind of prior knowledge are not required?
Hi, i am a student in Nigeria, i am in my last year and i hope to get an admission into Oxford , please can i get more information on how to start as soon as u am done with secondary school
I am from Pakistan and have done my intermediate (FSc).So how many marks or percentage is required for oxford ,becz all videos are on A levels requirements .Kindly let me know
How would biases influence the use of diagnostic AI. Whist poor training data sets provide poor quantifiable outcomes. The current use of AI such as for use in ECG and radiology slides, to analyse the pixels of the output images. Would a patients ethic background influence the ECG readings or MRI results, in terms of the characteristic hallmark of a certain pathology?
How to get rid of the NHS 101. Get in to power sell off the lucrative parts and cut the funding to the rest. Fill it with managers. Wait for it to start failing and the public to start saying it doesn't work. Bingo an America system starts up, the rich get richer and the rest get poorer. Wake up to what this government is doing.
How about the simple fact that the NHS treats patients as less than human and is more worried about money and time saving protocol than the patients best interests? How about the fact that people have to wait 10+ hours in A&E to get seen even if they’re in pain? Surely that’s the main reason to leave the NHS
Hi. thank you so much for this amazing video. I have my interview soon so was just wondering how you would approach a situation like this: ' you are a doctor. You have lost a patient's blood sample but this has no effect on the patients diagnosis. What do you do?'
Ah that's very kind of you - best of luck I'm sure you'll smash it, here's how I'd approach it... If I lost a patient's blood sample, my immediate response would involve owning up to the mistake by transparently communicating the error to the patient, emphasizing that their diagnosis remains unaffected. I would apologize for the inconvenience and take full responsibility for the oversight. To clean up the situation, I would expediently arrange for a new blood sample to be collected at the patient's convenience, ensuring a streamlined and comfortable process to alleviate any additional stress or discomfort. For a patient known to have severe anxiety, I would handle the situation with heightened sensitivity and empathy. This would include preparing a calm and supportive setting for the conversation, potentially involving mental health support. I would carefully explain the error and its non-impact on their diagnosis, focusing on reassuring the patient and offering additional support to manage any resultant anxiety, including clear guidance on the next steps. To level up and prevent such incidents in the future, I would initiate a review of the existing procedures and identify any lapses or weaknesses in the process that led to the loss of the blood sample. This might involve additional training for staff, implementing more robust tracking systems for samples, or introducing double-check mechanisms to ensure samples are handled correctly. The goal would be to strengthen our protocols to prevent similar mistakes, thereby safeguarding patient trust and maintaining high standards of care.
You can with practice and also there’s not a set way to speak, it’s about being you, showing a realistic insight into medicine. There’s no ideal medical student and come from a variety of different backgrounds :)