Aids to Undergraduate Medical Students
To serve you long after you have forgotten any particular fact
Before thinking outside the box β make sure you master what's inside it.
Common things are common β When you hear hoofbeats, think horse β not zebra.CTAC - A medical aphorism attributed to Dr. Theodore E. Woodward, University of Maryland School of Medicine
Foundational concepts in clinical pediatrics.
Children are not small adults.
This model explains the key
differences in normal physiology and common pathology between
children and adults β and how to avoid common pitfalls in
clinical reasoning and management of paediatric cases.
The gap between pre-clinical and clinical years is a major
hurdle for medical students.
This model explains how to
bridge the gap effectively by connecting theoretical knowledge
to clinical practice.
Skills for gathering clinical information accurately and systematically.
Ask. Examine. Think. Revisit. Refine. Clerking order is a
communication format β not a thinking process. Good clinicians
loop.
This model explains how to do clerking in an
iterative process.
Powerful discriminating questions outperform many vague ones. This model explains how to ask discriminating questions that will guide clinical reasoning and narrow the differential diagnosis and plan of management.
Severity is a clinical judgement.
This model explains the
importance of assessing and communicating severity effectively
to colleagues and seniors.
Uncertainty is a core part of clinical practice.
This
model explains how to think about uncertainty in clinical
reasoning and how to manage it effectively.
Translating patient experience into doctors' language.
Patients describe their experience in their language β not
doctors' language.
This model explains how to listen to
the patient's story, identify the relevant information, and
structure it into a coherent clinical history.
If you stop at the noun β you cannot diagnose.
This model
explains how adjectives are not just embellishments β they are
essential modifiers that can change the entire differential
diagnosis.
Patients tell stories. Clinicians take histories.
This
model explains how to listen to the patient's story, identify
the relevant information, and structure it into a coherent
clinical history.
A good summary explains everything in a few sentences.
This model explains how to distill a complex clinical case
into a concise summary that captures the essential information
and guides clinical reasoning.
The art of purposeful clinical observation.
Frameworks for thinking through diagnoses.
A step-by-step approach to differential diagnosis. Apply this to every diagnosis on your list. Rank, don't list. Consider negative findings. And always ask β why?
Symptoms are clues. Systems are hypotheses. Mechanism is the
truth.
This model explains how to think about the origin
of symptoms and avoid common pitfalls in clinical reasoning.
We investigate to answer questions.
This model explains
decision making in doing investigations β from formulating a
clinical question to choosing the right test to interpreting
results in context.
Understanding the 'why' behind the disease.
When something in the blood is low, it is raw material deficiency, production problem or loss. This model applies to albumin, haemoglobin, platelets, and clotting factors β a single framework, four clinical scenarios.
Do not memorise "reticulocytes increased." Understand why.
This model explains why immature blood cells are increased in
the peripheral blood when there is peripheral cytopenia with
functional bone marrow.
Frameworks for safe clinical practice.
Classify the state before you act. The acute flare is not bad
luck β it is the consequence of failed maintenance. One model,
every chronic disease.
This model explains how to classify patients into three clinical
states β stable, flare, and recovery β and how to clerk each
state effectively.
Recognising the limits of your competence is a strength, not a
weakness.
This model explains when and how to seek help effectively β for
the patient's sake, and for your own learning.
Medicine is not about winning arguments. It is about
constructing sound ones.
This model explains how to be defensible in a clinical setting.
Every treatment decision needs a defined endpoint.
This model teaches you when to start, when to stop, and when to
escalate β without guessing.
When outcomes are poor, the human instinct is to protect
self-image.
This model teaches you the importance of self-examination as
professional growth begins with self-examination.
A step-by-step approach to investigating anaemia β from MCV to reticulocyte count to bone marrow.
In preparationPlatelet plug vs. coagulation cascade β when to suspect which, and how to read the coagulation screen.
In preparationWhat each abnormal cell tells you β schistocytes, target cells, hypersegmented neutrophils, and more.
In preparation