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Wednesday night at the clinic
As schools around the country rethink medical education and look for
ways to enhance clinical experiences for students, the Wednesday Evening
Clinic can look back on almost three decades of a unique experiment [“Learning
for the Long Run,” Spring 2001]. Since the mid-1970s about 15 students
each year have enjoyed a rare opportunity in medical school—the
chance to see the same patient over and over again—and learned how
to manage long-term clinical care. Working under the supervision of attending
physicians, medical students interview patients, conduct physical exams,
make diagnoses and recommend treatment.

For G. Morris Dillard, M.D., Ph.D., who founded the clinic, the clinic’s
value is not in the information that students acquire, but the ability
to think clinically.

“It is the logical reasoning with the material you have at hand
that is the most important thing the clinic can accomplish,” he
said.

The clinic serves as an example of how to expose students to long-term
clinical experiences at a time when the medical school is exploring ways
to teach universal, as opposed to discipline-specific, skills. “There
is an interest in a longitudinal experience,” said Herbert S. Chase
Jr., M.D., deputy dean for education. “To that extent, the Wednesday
Evening Clinic was really a pioneer.”

Kathleen P. White, M.D., the clinic’s director, said the clinic
has seen a few changes in recent years. Spanish-speaking first- and second-year
students are on hand to interpret for patients. Undergraduates interested
in medicine provide clerical support. Four more attending physicians have
joined the roster of volunteers, and the clinic has recruited community
doctors. Clinic files are now computerized so preceptors can review student
notes on their cases online.

And this year, said White, two students found long-term preceptorships
outside the clinic, in reproductive gynecology and vascular surgery. “They
got longitudinal experience in their interests,” White said.

John Curtis
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