Today we have the awrd presentation ceremony for the teacher of the year award. Since I was the class representative last year, Chiu and I had to present the award to some of the winning teachers.
Prof Gregory Cheng, has won 2 awards this year (voted by both yr 3 and yr5) and he is now a master teacher because he has won 5 years in a row. (he is now not elligible for further teacher of year award...just so be fair)
Finally I got a chance to take a photo with him.
Prof KL Chan has also won a award this year and he now also a master teacher. Unfortunately I cannot get a picture with him.
Prof Enders Ng, has got a award as well. He is my favourite surgical teacher. He is very young, highly taleted (got a full professorship before 40). He is very kind. On the other hand, he expect alot from us and is extremely strict towards our performance. This is his 3rd year in a row
This is Prof WH Tam, he is the prof of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, he was extremely gentle and prepare superb powerpoint slide for teaching purpose and he always available for questions.
Finally, we managed to steal a photo with our dean prof Fok. He himself is a master teacher, He gave an 2 hour tutorial every saturday without fail last year during our paediatrics rotation, that might not sound very much, but for the dean of our faculty who has a lot of administration matter to attend to, this is a very demanding duty indeed. He is very very kind and has excellent way to get his point through during his tutorial.
星期一, 1月 31, 2005
星期一, 1月 24, 2005
Even more elective students
Suddenly, there is a large influx of foreign exchange students in my School.
Here is the tally:
Singapore 1
New Zealand 3
Australia 4
England 4
Germany 1
China 5
The Netherlands 1
There are now 5 exchange medical students in module now...Comprising 24% of the total medical student body (5 out of 21)
Here you can see Benjimin (left most) from New Zealand and Mary (2nd from Left)from Australia
Here you can see Mary and myself.
Here you can see the 3 medical students (center, 2 guys and 1 girl from NanJing, China.
I wonder why so many of them come in during this time of the year?
Here is the tally:
Singapore 1
New Zealand 3
Australia 4
England 4
Germany 1
China 5
The Netherlands 1
There are now 5 exchange medical students in module now...Comprising 24% of the total medical student body (5 out of 21)
Here you can see Benjimin (left most) from New Zealand and Mary (2nd from Left)from Australia
Here you can see Mary and myself.
Here you can see the 3 medical students (center, 2 guys and 1 girl from NanJing, China.
I wonder why so many of them come in during this time of the year?
星期六, 1月 22, 2005
Prof KL Chan
Well.. Prof KL Chan is another excellent teacher blessed(btw, I am a free thinker) to our medical school. He is very nice, keen to teach and takes time to prepare for lessons. However, he also knows how to teach us effectively. He doesnt drill us on an exhuastive list of diagnosis, he doesnt force his opinion and way of performing physical examination onto us. He recognises each of us are different and has different approach to the same problem and different ways to examine the same problem.
What he does is to point out our strength and weaknesses and the disadvantage and benefits of our approaches. He put alot of emphasis on the logical approach towards diagnostic process and patient care. His tutorials wont last more than an hour, but, in that magical (truly magical) hour, he teaches us things that takes us years in reading textbooks.
What he does is to point out our strength and weaknesses and the disadvantage and benefits of our approaches. He put alot of emphasis on the logical approach towards diagnostic process and patient care. His tutorials wont last more than an hour, but, in that magical (truly magical) hour, he teaches us things that takes us years in reading textbooks.
星期四, 1月 20, 2005
Exchange student from China
Recently our medical school has been flooded by exchange students from overseas. Just in my firm, there is one from New Zealand, and 2 from China. So, considering we only have 16 local student in Firm 2, they compirse 3/19 = 16% of the student population. (obviously, there is a huge sampling error here), I can see around 10 to 20 exchange student around all the time, so they roughly make up 10% of the student population.
Here are the two mainland china students that are in firm 2.
They wear a hybird name tag that has both there original school and CUHK on it... strange
Here are the two mainland china students that are in firm 2.
They wear a hybird name tag that has both there original school and CUHK on it... strange
星期二, 1月 18, 2005
Physical Examination 101
There are different ways to do physical examinations, there are a few really bad ways to do them,
1)Handle the patient together with your friends, 3 to 4 at a time, (as shown in the picture below)
2)Talk about the diagnosis when some of the classmates has not examine the patient
3)This is similar to #2 but, more annoying. Do not talk about heart murmurs before everyone has a go. Murmurs are murmurs, they are soft and sometimes requires some imagination to be able to pick them up.
The good way:
See it for yourself
This is Yin Kei showing doctor Vincent Wong how to examine this patient's eye. Looks funny right? They correct way doesnt look all that cool after all.
1)Handle the patient together with your friends, 3 to 4 at a time, (as shown in the picture below)
2)Talk about the diagnosis when some of the classmates has not examine the patient
3)This is similar to #2 but, more annoying. Do not talk about heart murmurs before everyone has a go. Murmurs are murmurs, they are soft and sometimes requires some imagination to be able to pick them up.
The good way:
See it for yourself
This is Yin Kei showing doctor Vincent Wong how to examine this patient's eye. Looks funny right? They correct way doesnt look all that cool after all.
星期六, 1月 15, 2005
Prof Cheng - Reloaded
Today I met prof Cheng after the Medical Grand Round, and we had a casual chat. He mention that Mr Wong, the 80 yrs old gentleman who refused his treatment and blood transfusion has called and was admitted for treatment.
I was trilled to hear this from him, and from Prof Cheng's tone and expression, he was very happy about that as well. It is totally normaly for a medical student to be so passionate towards the patients, but prof cheng impressed us with his compassion and care for his patients.
I think that is what makes being a doctor so satisfying and meaningful, seeing our patients comply to our treatment and alleviate their pain and problems. At the same time, we have to keep our hearts warm and brains sharp
I was trilled to hear this from him, and from Prof Cheng's tone and expression, he was very happy about that as well. It is totally normaly for a medical student to be so passionate towards the patients, but prof cheng impressed us with his compassion and care for his patients.
I think that is what makes being a doctor so satisfying and meaningful, seeing our patients comply to our treatment and alleviate their pain and problems. At the same time, we have to keep our hearts warm and brains sharp
星期二, 1月 11, 2005
Prof Gregory Cheng
Prof Gregory Cheng is the Chief of Haematology in Firm2. He was a victim of the SARS epidemic when our teaching hospital was hit very hard in 2003. I attended his haematology clinci today.
We have seen quite a few cases with haemolytic anaemia, aplastic anaemia, myeloproliferative disease and acute lymphoma. He spent a lot of times between each patient to discuss and teach us about the various aspects of the diseases that we have just seen in the previous patient.
The last patient is an 80 years old gentlement, Mr Wong, with acute lymphoblastic lymphoma, he has got very bad bone pain for 5 years due to the extend of his disease. He wheelchair bound and very weak. He came today with very severe anaemia and a very tired looking body. He has refused any blood taking and any medication except pain-killers. All in all that showed how bad he was managed, nobody has paid any attention towards his pain and to relieve his symptoms, so now he has lost all his hope in living and his trust in doctors.
Prof Cheng has spent 30 minute trying to pursuade Mr Wong for blood transfusion and admission to the hospital for pain management. Mr Wong refused. Prof Cheng has then went on to allow him to have outpatient transfusion in his office and promised Mr Wong a very short hospital stay just to relieve his pain. Mr Womg once again refused. Despite all of Prof Cheng's effort, Mr Wong just wont have anything other than pain-killers, Prof Cheng gave Mr Wong his telephone number so that he can be contacted anytime when Mr Wong wishes to have a tranfusion.
Mr Wong has not wasted any of our time even when he refused all of our treatment, he has shown and reminded us how important is to care for the patient rather than just managing the disease. Prof Cheng has shown us what a good doctor should have done, and he is exactly the kind of teacher that we should have in the medical school.
The whole clinic lasted from 1030 to 1430. It could have ended earlier if Prof Cheng has not spent so much time teaching us and talking to Mr Wong. We were very hungry towards the end of the clinic but I still think it is very worthwhile.
We have seen quite a few cases with haemolytic anaemia, aplastic anaemia, myeloproliferative disease and acute lymphoma. He spent a lot of times between each patient to discuss and teach us about the various aspects of the diseases that we have just seen in the previous patient.
The last patient is an 80 years old gentlement, Mr Wong, with acute lymphoblastic lymphoma, he has got very bad bone pain for 5 years due to the extend of his disease. He wheelchair bound and very weak. He came today with very severe anaemia and a very tired looking body. He has refused any blood taking and any medication except pain-killers. All in all that showed how bad he was managed, nobody has paid any attention towards his pain and to relieve his symptoms, so now he has lost all his hope in living and his trust in doctors.
Prof Cheng has spent 30 minute trying to pursuade Mr Wong for blood transfusion and admission to the hospital for pain management. Mr Wong refused. Prof Cheng has then went on to allow him to have outpatient transfusion in his office and promised Mr Wong a very short hospital stay just to relieve his pain. Mr Womg once again refused. Despite all of Prof Cheng's effort, Mr Wong just wont have anything other than pain-killers, Prof Cheng gave Mr Wong his telephone number so that he can be contacted anytime when Mr Wong wishes to have a tranfusion.
Mr Wong has not wasted any of our time even when he refused all of our treatment, he has shown and reminded us how important is to care for the patient rather than just managing the disease. Prof Cheng has shown us what a good doctor should have done, and he is exactly the kind of teacher that we should have in the medical school.
The whole clinic lasted from 1030 to 1430. It could have ended earlier if Prof Cheng has not spent so much time teaching us and talking to Mr Wong. We were very hungry towards the end of the clinic but I still think it is very worthwhile.
星期一, 1月 10, 2005
First day in Firm 2
Today is my first day in Medical Firm 2, there are a total of 3 firms in the department of medicine and therapeutics of my university
Firm 2 consists of the Division of Gastroenterology & Hepatology, the Division of Cardiology and the Division of Haematology.
Firm 2 is headed by Prof Sanderson, the chief and cardiology, he is very nice. The famous prof Joseph Sung is also in Firm 2 and he is the head of the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatoloy. I think I will be seeing him quite a lot this month.
Firm 2 consists of the Division of Gastroenterology & Hepatology, the Division of Cardiology and the Division of Haematology.
Firm 2 is headed by Prof Sanderson, the chief and cardiology, he is very nice. The famous prof Joseph Sung is also in Firm 2 and he is the head of the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatoloy. I think I will be seeing him quite a lot this month.
星期日, 1月 09, 2005
Charity Walk for the Tsunami
Today, the medical and nursing people of hong kong has organised a fund raising charity walk for the Tsunami vicitims. Our faculty dean prof fok has urge us to join such occassion and a lot of us has turned up for it. I think we have raised about 1 million hong kong dollars in a morning.. not bad right?
This photo shows my girl friend and I at the Starting point of the walk
Here is a bunch of my classmates
Here is the same bunch of my friends with Prof Yuen, He is a paediatric haematologist, He taught us last year during our paediatric module, he was very kind and keen to teach us.
Bunch of my friends during the walk
This photo shows my girl friend and I at the Starting point of the walk
Here is a bunch of my classmates
Here is the same bunch of my friends with Prof Yuen, He is a paediatric haematologist, He taught us last year during our paediatric module, he was very kind and keen to teach us.
Bunch of my friends during the walk
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