Yes, for any major, you need to work on your summer plans early in the year. My kids firmed up summer internships by/during winter break. |
IDK for sure at INOVA, but when I did volunteer hospital work for a medstar location, i mostly sat behind the counter doing admin type work like answering the phone and transferring calls to the patients room, or directing visitors down the hallway, or answering the patients calls and getting them a juice if that's what they wanted. Or when meds arrived, I'd tell the nurse. Or once a patient checked out I had to go through the file and make sure everything was signed and dated. The only hands on stuff I did was help a nurse change bed sheets, and if the patient was bedridden, then I'd move the sheets around as nurse held patient. IOW, i actually never touched a patient. I would have like to sit and talk to patients more, but never had time. |
I think if you want this kind of patient interaction, you could look into volunteering at a nursing home/long-term care facility. https://www.sunriseseniorliving.com/about/volunteers |
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The INOVA program does not allow the kids to perform surgery. I agree that getting a chance to perform surgery while still in high school or college would be a father in one's cap. But maybe INOVA worries that patients might not be happy playing along? Do other hospitals allow it?
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Of course you need to look in winter! How can your kids be so book smart yet so street not smart? |
Maybe on their pet cat 😀 |
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Many pre-meds don't do internships per se, and no one does hands on surgery. There are four major boxes to check that are prerequisites for many medical schools.
Volunteering - 100+ hours, usually much more - This can be anything, preferrably medical related. Shadowing - Anywhere from 50-200 hours depending on the school. Reach out to any doctors you know and ask to shadow. Do it acrosse a variety of practice types Clinical - 100+ hours, many do much more. Scribing, EMT, medical assistant, phlebotemist, whatever you can get. Research - 400+ hours for research oriented medical schools, many do much more. Get in touch with research professors at your school. Hard to do for just a summer. |
Maybe at a nursing home as a PP said. As a patient, no thank you. I barely tolerated actual med students who weren't sure about their specialty but were giving a go at everything. I sure as hell would decline a student in college or not even in college yet. And I believe in helping to educate future doctors, just not that early. I don't need high schoolers crowding the room during a procedure, thanks. |
I was referring to college students. My certified EMT will be working in a clinic this summer doing patient triage type duties. |
| ^ was also referring to underserved and free clinics. Not that patients voices don’t matter, there, but didn’t mean the local GP office. |
None of the examples listed in the link are remotely related to patient interaction. |
I can’t tell if you’re serious. No high school student is doing surgery anywhere, despite the article referenced above. Not everything on the internet is true. High school students would be lucky to observe a surgery. USUHS has a program. I’m sure the deadline has passed for this summer. Many med students become licensed CNAs or EMTs. |
This breaks it down nicely. Your child would be wise to meet with an advisor or go to a premedical school planning session. If you know any doctors, ask them for shadowing opportunities. Let tour child handle it. Your OP is so incorrect that your advice is not helpful (and I get it - I do not advise mine either). |
This. I was an orgo chem prof at a community college and many of my pre-med students were EMTs or combat medics. |
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Get a job as a nursing assistant. In some areas they are called certified nursing assistants, certified nursing aides, or patient care technicians. In Virginia and Maryland you need to complete a training program, but it doesn't take too long. The job provides a lot of patient interaction and an understanding of the workflow in the hospital by all levels of care providers.
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