With any great stroke association the anatomy lessons would contain stroke damaged brains also, but that will never occur with our fucking failures of stroke associations.
http://news.ubc.ca/2016/08/25/new-tool-for-medical-students-anatomy-lessons-a-virtual-scalpel/
First-year medical students at the University of British Columbia
will begin using a state-of-the-art touch-screen table that displays
detailed images of internal anatomy that can be rotated, enlarged and
even sliced open.
The anatomy visualization table will be used with traditional
anatomical dissections to teach first-year medical students about human
anatomy and the medical conditions they are likely to encounter as
physicians. The device also will familiarize students with the
radiological images that have become a core tool in the diagnosis and
treatment of patients.
The 500-pound, 5-foot by 3-foot table displays primarily computed
tomography (CT) scans of the entire body, including bones, muscles,
organs and connective tissue. Instructors can customize the table’s
images for the lessons they want to convey, showing anonymized patients
with diseases and injuries that are deemed particularly relevant to the
curriculum and to the practice of medicine.
“Medical imaging provides an increasingly revealing window into human
anatomy and physiology,” says Dr. Dermot Kelleher, dean of the faculty
of medicine. “But medical schools are utilizing just a fraction of its
educational potential. We intend to show how powerful visualization
technology can be in training the next generation of physicians.”
The table, made by the Sweden-based Sectra AB, will be used in UBC’s
gross anatomy lab in conjunction with traditional teaching through
dissection. Groups of students will take turns with the device, moving
from their dissection tables to the touch-screen device and back again.
UBC is the first Canadian medical school to use a Sectra table, and one
of only 16 in North America, thanks to a generous donation from the
London Drugs Foundation.
“The anatomy visualization table highlights aspects of anatomy that
are often difficult to see in the tightly-packed confines of a human
body,” says Claudia Krebs, a professor of teaching in anatomy in the
Faculty of Medicine. “This technology allows students to understand how
the various parts fit together – and how a problem with one part can
easily affect another.”
The device was demonstrated for two dozen UBC faculty members at
Vancouver General Hospital two years ago, and two faculty members
observed its use in Swedish medical schools last year, before the
Faculty of Medicine decided to buy it. The faculty’s instructors and
medical education experts will closely monitor its impact on student
learning.
The purchase of the table comes as UBC, which has the fifth-largest
medical education program in North America, substantially revises its
four-year medical curriculum. Many of the curricular changes are geared
toward better integrating foundational sciences, such as anatomy, with
clinical lessons about diagnosing and treating patients.
“Medical imaging has become a critical component of patient diagnosis
and treatment in virtually all medical disciplines,” says Dr. Bruce
Forster, head of UBC’s department of radiology. “By enabling students
to interact with these images from the moment they begin their medical
education, we will be priming them for their future careers in whatever
medical discipline they choose.”
The London Drugs Foundation donated funds for the table and its operating costs.
“As part of our ongoing commitment to health and education, London
Drugs is proud to support the UBC Faculty of Medicine and the future
learning of its students with the anatomy visualization table,” said
John Tse, vice president, pharmacy, of London Drugs, “This technology
will provide the students with an enhanced clinical experience in their
first year. The London Drugs Foundation is thrilled to be able to be
part of this advancement.”
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