Surgery (MEDI3003)
Information valid for Semester 2, 2016
Course level
Undergraduate
Faculty
Medicine & Biomedical Sciences
School
School of Medicine
Units
3
Duration
One Semester
Delivery mode
Internal
Incompatible
MEDI3011
Restricted
MBBS students only.
Assessment methods
Structured long case - Problem Oriented Medical Record (POMR), Clinical Case Presentation (CCP), General Surgery Assessment-Short Answer Questions, General Surgery Assessment-Multiple Choice Exam Questions and Clinical Participation Assessment.
Course enquiries
Course description
The year 3 Surgery rotation is devoted to General Surgery (Breast / Endocrine, Upper Gastrointestinal, Hepatopancreatobiliary, Colorectal, Trauma & Acute surgery) and some subspecialties including Burns & Plastics, Urology, Vascular, Neurosurgery and Cardiothoracic Surgery. The aim of the rotation is to familiarise students with common, serious and life threatening surgical diseases and for the student to develop an understanding of how they present clinically; how to systematically evaluate these conditions; how they are investigated; principles of management; how to assess priorities for treatment; and when and how to initiate referral. The rotation is not intended to train students as technical surgeons but to develop students that are 'intern ready' who can function as part of a surgical team. Students will be allocated to surgical units to participate in the daily activities of those units, and to participate in all that happens during their patients' episode of care. In addition, students should attend outpatients, ward rounds, operating theatre, and other unit meetings. Learning resources are provided in the form of a series of Core Lectures (available on the Surgery Blackboard site). In the individual teaching hospitals a tutorial program is conducted. Students are provided lists of recommended operations and investigations to observe and a list of Surgical skills for which they should develop competence and understanding.