Nacho Libre
September 8, 2022 | Author: Anonymous | Category: N/A
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NACHO LIBRE
Libreng pabaon mula sa Unicornlandia para sa masarap at swabeng biyahe papuntang Westeros #WinterIsComing CAUTION This is a secret recipe bestowed upon our people by our allies from Unicornlandia. It is recommended that you take it with a grain of salt. Warning: may cause nausea, tachycardia, cold sweats, nervousness, anxiety, itching, and fever fever of unknown origin. If this occurs, stop reading reading immediately; drink a glass of water, have a Kitkat, and remind yourself why you’re here, who you’re doing this for, and that it’s worth it. If symptoms persist, consult Batman. Batman. When all else fails, pray. #tiwala #tiwala
ENICIDEM Relative Difficulty 4.5 out of 5
Read Harrison's if you can. Interview patients giving attention to all the important details and reading about them as this helps in building up knowledge of important cases. Read in advance as there are a lot of topics and exams are more of application rather than memorization.
Harrison is your best friend. It your bible, your lover, your guardian angel. It is the jack of all trades, and master of all. When in doubt, refer to Harrison first. Try to read every chapter. In your free time, try to read the on fever, pain, hypertension, etc (the most common conditions) as these are very helpful for when you become clerks. #claimtheclerkship #noseriouslyCLAIMIT #insertShiaLeBeoufvideohere #dontevencareaboutmisspellingthename
Medicine II will probably be the one of the most difficult subject of 3rd year, but (for me) the most interesting of 'em all. It also comprises the bulk of your GWA for 3rd year (23%). Expect 1520 transes per LE. Don't print out our transes just yet. The department is known to switch lecturers and topics around. There will be preceptorial sessions yearlong as well except this time, it's not about perfecting HPI and PE anymore. You will be given a patient every week. You are expected to do COMPLETE history and PE + SOAP (Subjective Data, Objective Data, Assessment and Plan). SOAP is taking out noteworthy noteworthy info fr from om the history and PE and giving your patient a diagnosis. References: Harrison's + clinical guidelines on several diseases (these can be downloaded off the net for free) BayNatz tip: Invest more time finishing those transes than producing the perfect paper for precept. Remember that LEs comprise 54% of your total grade (9% per LE) while papers only make up a small percent of your precept grade (20% of your total grade). HOWEVER, this does not give you an excuse to come to precept unprepared. Study the cases of your patients well!
Harrison's is your best friend, but for a quick fix, Medscape is your best bet (use technology to the fullest!). Read Harrisons. Medicine requires good foundation of the basic pathologic processes of the common diseases so make sure to read up on topics before lectures begin. Prepare for long coverages exams. Before we had around 20 plus transes on Infectious and Dermatology. Most in our batch failed that exam. Definitely the hardest of all the subjects in third year. And make sure to recite and contribute in your preceptorials. It will really pull your grades up.
freakin' hard! after every exam, if those patients pa tients on the exams are real, maybe more than 50% of them are already dead, and the rest of the 50% are in the ICU by the time your finished answering the exam. Medicine II is not about memorization, it's about understanding and applying what you've learned theoretically. almost 100% of the exam questions are clinical in nature. it's not enough that you've read the transes 2/3/4/5x, what matters is if you really understood what you've read. there are so many topics every LE, around a minimum of 10 topics per LE, so know when to start studying. learn how to read and interpret xrays, ultrasounds, CT scans, angiograms, and other radiologic procedures. learn how to quickly make a good paper with good case discussions for preceptorials. integrate what you've learned in physiology, pathology, clinical pathology to help you understand the topics. don't forget the basic sciences! they still ask some 1st year and 2nd 2n d year questions during exams. during exams, they can ask almost anything from the entire universe. unicorns are of no help because every year they switch lecturers and some lectures and even the arrangement of topics they switch, so it's of no use at all. Medicine II is really really hard so make sure you really do your best to really study for this course.
The emphasis is no longer on what is the condition but instead, you will be asked "HOW DO YOU DIAGNOSE/ TREAT/ MANAGE?" without mentioning the disease at a t all! So essentially you should be able to diagnose AND treat. All of the flow charts and diagnostic diagnostic criteria are important. important. FOCUS ON THE TABLES in transes and in books. The content ALWAYS comes comes out. The cases in the exams will be long, but only 1 or 2 questions will be asked. Make sure to read them thoroughly. These topics are the most difficult ones: 1. Pulmonology and Nephrology - lots of computation about Acid Base Balance, and correct diagnosis of the metabolic state of the body (ex. mixed acidosis and alkalosis) 2. Infectious diseases - PHARMA PHARMA PHARMA, know your drugs against different bacteria and pa rasites!
SCIRTAIDEP Relative Difficulty 3.88 3.88 out out of 5 5 1st exam is really hard as the topic is so broad. Read the prescribed textbooks as most of the questions will come from there. Must have high grade for the 1st longs. Neonatology is difficult! Topics in Pediatrics are very long. But the transes are sufficient. No need to read Nelson except for special topics prescribed by certain lecturers like Dr. Salazar. If Pediatrics I was all about everything normal in children (e.g. growth charts, developmental milestones, EPI, nutrition, breastfeeding), Pediatrics II is like Internal Medicine kidz version. Special thanks to XVIA & Unicorns | Page 1 of 6
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Libreng pabaon mula sa Unicornlandia para sa masarap at swabeng biyahe papuntang Westeros #WinterIsComing You get to explore stuff mostly unique to these little humans. Diseases, pathogenesis, treatment plans, you name it. Usual lectures + preceptorials. QUIZ ALERT! The department gives out quizzes a few minutes before preceptorials start. These serve as attendance with the questions related to a previously lectured topic. Most of the answers can be found in your transes. Use these quizzes as an indicator if you have been reading/highlighting your pedia transes. References: Nelsons + Fundamentals of Pediatrics BayNatz tip: If there's anything you would want to invest your time on during the first few weeks of 3rd year, it's Pedia. 1st LE will again be that infamous Salazar-Eusebio combo. Study hard for this subject! You and I both know the department is notorious for shelling out unexplainably high MPLs.
For Dr. Salazar's lectures... PRAY. PRAY TO GOD. Haha well no actually, his exam questions are gathered from several books (which he will not mention), not just nelson's. It's not enough to listen to the lecture however it's not n ot enough to just practice with the sample exams. Infectious diseases in children - a MUST KNOW. You will never escape developmental pediatrics. Recall all the ages of certain milestones.
YGOLORUEN Relative Difficulty 3.75 3.75 out out of 5
Ah, the pride of UERM! UERM! Neurology II II is more of an extension of the range of topics lectured in Neuro I. Again, you'll cover many neurologic diseases (it's not always stroke!), the clinical findings, diagnostics and treatment of choice. Usual lectures + preceptorials, but the difference is that preceptorials only last for half a semester. You will finally step foot onto the Neuro ward. You are expected to do a COMPLETE PE with a COMPLETE neuro exam, of course. So have those neuro PE stuff on hand and ready! OSCE will again be 2 stations: one localization station and one case-based station with performing the correct neuro exam. References: Adams, but transes will do BayNatz tip: Remember having a really hard time in Neuro during 2nd year? Well, expect to feel the same in 3rd year, maybe even tougher. 5-10 transes per LE, but they do give out tough questions as well, mostly case-based. Don't worry though! Personally, I have never met a Neuro lecturer I didn't like. Prepare to be in awe of their vast knowledge and experience in Neurology. Don't believe me? Make an effort to attend the Neuro CPC! I'm biased towards neurology, it's a difficult but funtosubject to study. Neuroanatomy is very important. Listening the lecture and reading Adams is the best thing to do. They always go back to the basics = NEUROANATOMY.
YREGRUS Relative Difficulty 3.5 out of 5
master your localization skills and review neurological pathways and things would be easy.
Master the advantages of the different imaging diagnostics, which works well in differentiating lesions. Differentiate the absolute and relative indications for surgery. Memorize the different staging of cancer.
Same. Practice mag answer ng samplex. Halos ganun ung questions pero super hirap talaga. Need talaga magbasa ng book kasi ung iba talaga wala sa nilecture
Madaming kailangan imemorize na algorithms and staging.
Neurology is hard. Period. So don't despair over your (future) poor performance in exams. Read Adams for theoretical stuff, DeMyer for mastering the neurological exam. PS Dr. Olaivar's lecture on Neurological Examination is DA BOMB. Thou shalt not miss this lecture! Second hardest after Medicine. Questions are tougher and more clinical compared to Neuro 1. Transes should be sufficient. But make sure you have good foundation and grasp of your neuro exam and localizations. review your neuroanatomy. clinical neurology is mainly applied neuroanatomy so you better review all your pathways! Manter & Gatz will come in handy. almost all of the lecture comes from Adams so if you you want to com completely pletely understand the lectures y you ou can read it. Harrison's section on neurology is also a good read. also learn how to read radiographs especially x-ray and CT scan, it will help you understand the lectures and even in precepts. precepts will hone your neuro exam skills so better participate.
Sabiston is my preferred book for studying, since Schwartz is very complicated. For preceptorials, try to film every skill you do, such as tying knots, holding a scalpel, inserting an ET tube, etc. These will be very useful in the future (i.e. OSCE) Read up on both Schwartz and the transes. review anatomy! surgery is applied anatomy. if you really really really know your anatomy you'll survive this course. listen on your preceptorials and participate. consider surgery precepts your time to master your clinical skills. some preceptors allow their group to have an OR exposure (just like ours) and sometimes some students were allowed to scrub-in into surgeries (just like our group again haha) so make sure you make the best out of every precept. read on Schwartz or Sabiston if you want to have a better grasp of what their talking about during lectures. Listening to the lecture is enough. Have fun during preceptorials and ask lots of questions qu estions because usually the experience of the surgeons is what is asked in the exams. exams.
Special thanks to XVIA & Unicorns | Page 2 of 6
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Libreng pabaon mula sa Unicornlandia para sa masarap at swabeng biyahe papuntang Westeros #WinterIsComing If you do plan on becoming a surgeon in the future, then Surgery II will definitely a foretaste of something exciting for you. Usual lectures + preceptorials. Preceptorials this time around isn't about skills anymore. It's more on diagnosis and creating a game plan for your patient (Will you operate on him/her or not? If not, why? If yes, what procedure?). Take down notes, as the common cases really do come out in the OSCE (e.g. appendicitis, small bowel obstruction).
Oh yeah btw, may Psych OSCE. usually done a week before the 3rd/6th LE. You will get to meet PGIs and clerks acting out psychiatric disorders. You will be tasked to interview them (properly! try interviewing the schizophrenics and the depressed, galing um-acting!!), get their history, diagnose them and give the necessary treatment.
Here's something to look forward to: Many surgery preceptors actually ask you guys to scrub in to the OR and observe many of the surgical procedures. Best to prepare scrubs, OR shoes (clogs, duralite), booties, face mask and cap and keep them ready because sometimes they 'll ask you to scrub in without prior announcements or whenever a special procedure is scheduled. Don't scrub in unprepared! Read on the cases and the procedure, the risks, the indications, etc. Nagtatanong sila sa loob ng OR!
BayNatz tip: A baby Kaplan works wonders here. It gives you all the necessary criteria from DSM to help you clinch the diagnosis. Be prepared for anything in each Psych LE. They can ask anything from percentages to DSM criteria. Aim for exemption!!!
BayNatz tip: Surgery is usually the last exam scheduled on each LE week. The department is definitely one of o f the kindest. They give out the lowest MPLs (we had a 50 once!), but that doesn't mean you get to chill out on this subject. They do have out-ofthis-world questions but most of them will definitely be answerable.
YRTAIHCYSP Relative Difficulty 3.25 3.25 out out of 5 Be familiar with DSM criteria. Pharmacology is important know the important drugs related to psychiatry Sakto lang :) Kaya naman. May exemption 85. Transes. Pero pag kay dr rodriguez mahirap.Try to get exempted for the finals. Read myriad of smplexes. Kaplan in da house, yo! It is the only book you will need. That said, there's really no need to read so much since the course is usually very straightforward. However there will be some Pharmacology involved though so you'll have to study that. Transes should be sufficient. have an ebook copy of DSM V. it will also help you on your preceptorials. also you should master your psychopharmacology. they always give psych drugs almost every long exam period. but don't worry, i believe that by 4th-6th LE, you've already memorized most of them. Have you ever wondered what's it like to be inside the Psych ward? Now's your chance. Psych this year now has preceptorial sessions (again, for half a sem) so you will have patients for this subject. Doing papers for Psych is very different than the usual HPI and PE. You will be asked to do a Mental Status Exam (MSE), an Anamnesis (histories of each part of the patient's life from childhood to adulthood), and Psychodynamic evaluations (how theories in Psych explain the behavioral changes in the patient). Usually 5 lectures per LE and a few pages for each trans. So it
References: Kaplan and Saddock Synopsis of Psychiatry, DSM V
The focus is on treatment of psychiatric disorders, therefore if you do not remember the criteria for diagnosis, you should freshen up on it. Psychopharma Psychopharma and neuropsych is the focus for 3rd year.
SCIRTETSBO Relative Difficulty 2.25 2.25 out out of 5 Fun =) Iprioritize din kasi minsan di napprioritize sa dami ng subjects. Transes and williams Know the physiology of embryology, mens cycle, buntis cycle. Read the transes. Williams is the worst medical textbook I have ever read. If Harrison was an angelic 10, Williams would be a decrepit 0. It just sucks. #sorrynotsorry A chapter will usually discuss various studies done and so on, only to conclude later that there is still no definitive proof. Only read Williams when told to by your professor. Definitely something new for 3rd year. Preggies, preggies and more preggies. Lectures + Half-sem preceptorials. Part of what makes OB difficult is 1.) Being male 2.) These relatively new concepts (e.g. the events during labor) that we have never heard of. BUT, OB preceptorials are one of the more interesting precepts too since you'll be learning all things new (e.g. how to palpate the pregnant belly, computing for the AOG by LMP, how to do a Pap smear, doing an internal exam in models and real patients). You will also learn the MOGSCI maternal history when interviewing patients (Menstrual, OB-GYN, Sexual, Contraceptive, Immunization histories). Difficult but fun nonetheless. OSCE included computation of LMP, doing Leopold maneuvers and demonstrating the Pap Smear. Done before sem break. BayNatz tip: OB LEs are difficult in that they give out questions with choices that are all seemingly correct. They give out okay MPLs (60's) but the difficulty level makes it not okay. Take special note of the risk factors, the AOGs, the drugs of choice. If you must, review reproductive endocrinology and physiology like the menstrual cycle and how the hormones go up and down. They always get questions from williams. When making transes, always source williams. Tables and figures are important to read and to know.
shouldn't be too overwhelming. You should know by now how they formulate questions hehehe. As out there as outer space gets. :)) Special thanks to XVIA & Unicorns | Page 3 of 6
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Libreng pabaon mula sa Unicornlandia para sa masarap at swabeng biyahe papuntang Westeros #WinterIsComing Some favorite questions of the professors: 1. percentage - how many % of women experience this symptom? 2. incidence - only 5 out of 1000 women experience this condition 3. which disease is the most common in young/reproductive/old young/reproductive/old women? 4. pharmacologic management!
YGOLOCENYG
YGOLOMLAHTPO Relative Difficulty 1.63 1.63 out out of 5 no sweat. Transes only. Mejo samplex pero may times na hindi. So aral pa din. Samplex-based learning (SBL) pwede Transes are your main source of knowledge. The book (the name of which escapes my memory) is very simple, and the pertinent info contained therein can easily be condensed into your transes. The lectures are easy on the mind, and exams are usually fairly simple. PS it's spelled Ophthalmology :)
Relative Difficulty 3.0 out 3.0 out of 5 Mahirap maging babae. Same with OB. Pero mas mahirap to. Read transes also. Comprehensive Gynecology is very useful for when you want to do some advanced reading. It is highly informative unlike its counterpart. just like surgery, surgery, know your an anatomy. atomy. but also memorize and understand reproductive/female/obstetric physiology! memorize and understand your menstrual cycle and you'll have a good grasp of the entire course. hahaha! they also ask about surgical
Transes should be sufficient. They tend to repeat questions from old exams. transes will suffice. just have the other section's trans beforehand, or even the previous batches' transes will do. just listen on the lectures, read your transes, and have a copy of those unicorns *wink wink* and you'll pass this course haha One of the more chillin departments, Ophtha is relatively manageable. 1st sem for Section B, 2nd sem for Section A. 3 LEs + Occasional precepts + OSCE. Your preceptorials will not n ot be done every week. You do case discussions and return demos. You do have quizzes before each preceptorial session ends so
procedures so make sure you understand how they do surgeries.
LISTEN CAREFULLY.
If you think OB is difficult enough, GYNE during 2nd sem will have its own share of casualties. The difficulty level parallels Medicine II...possibly even surpassing surpassing it. The plan of attack is so different from how you guys study OB, as is its contents and questions. Just lectures. No preceptorials. You have been warned!
OSCE included interpreting fundoscopy findings and testing for CN III, IV, VI.
Maybe it's a department thing, but GYNE questions also have choices that all seem correct. They can ask questions from the littlest details of your transes. They can also manipulate just one word from the choices in the questions to make them correct or incorrect. Also, part of the reason why it's difficult is that it's a whole new world from OB. parang bagu-baguhan nanaman for 2nd sem. Relatively few recycled unicorns tho.
References: Vaughan and Asbury's General Ophtha BayNatz tip: Review the 8-part eye exam. Ophtha exams are relatively okay. Not too difficult (compared to ENT). No finals exemption tho. The dept doesn't really rotate or change lecturers so there. Love ophtha because many of their exams repeat questions from previous batches. Uveitis is a difficult topic, otherwise all other topics are relatively easy and are lectured in i n a straightforward manner. What comes
References: Lentz Gynecology, Gynecology, but well-made transes will do.
out in the lecture comes out in the exam.
BayNatz tip: Give your 110% on each LE. You don't have a preceptorial or an OSCE grade to up your LE grades. Attendance can help you that much. Adding book info to your transes may help too.
For glaucoma, pharmacologic management is the most important.
They always get questions from comprehensive gynecology. When making transes, always source the book. Tables and figures are important to read and to know. Some favorite questions of the professors: 1. percentage - how many % of women experience this symptom? 2. incidence - only 5 out of 1000 women experience this condition 3. which disease is the most/least common in young/reproductive/old women? young/reproductive/old 4. pharmacologic management!
They have different eyedrops that they like to ask about.
(TNE) YGOLOGNYRALONIHROTO Relative Difficulty 3.0 3.0 out out of 5 Dasal ka na lang unpredictable minsan. Just study what you can Mej mahirap pero transes ok na. Samplex Read the ENT manual. Transes are also sufficient for the course. For preceptorials, the first step is ALWAYS positioning your patient. Missing this one step is equivalent to a missed point, which can spell the difference between passing and failing. Do not be late for quizzes! They are very easy and compose a nice percentage (the actual number eludes me) of your total grade. Special thanks to XVIA & Unicorns | Page 4 of 6
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Libreng pabaon mula sa Unicornlandia para sa masarap at swabeng biyahe papuntang Westeros #WinterIsComing There will be a quiz every meeting. Transes and Probst should be sufficient for exams. relatively harder than ophtha but manageable. transes will suffice as long as the transes contain some book notes. just have the other section's trans beforehand, or even the previous batches' transes will do. know your anatomy. almost 50% of exam questions is about anatomy, 1st year anatomy! also have a copy of unicorns *wink wink* like even unicorns from #throwback years haha 1st sem for section A. 2nd sem for section B. Maybe one of the few subjects you will dread easily. QUIZ ALERT! ENT holds scheduled quizzes after 2-3 lectures. They usually give it before the start of the lectures. Don't bank on these being attendance only, they are GRADED so have a 1/2 lengthwise or a 1/4 pad papers ready. Their LEs are definitely out-of-these-transes. Transes simply will not do. Make an effort to seek out unicorns/samplexes from back in the day (circa 2010 2015). They sometimes recycle questions from there. They have an ENT OSCE but it's just slide projection with 3-4 cases. References: Probst Otorhinolaryngology, but transes + an cient unicorns + prayers will do They do have an exemption list but they only announce it on the day of the finals. You will also be asked to make a 20 minute video sometime around 2nd or 3rd LE, acting out a case and answering all the guide questions. So yeah, definitely adds a lot of burden to your already hectic schedule. BayNatz tip: Just play their game and keep up with what they ask of you. Treat those quizzes as a way to up your grade. Do good in the video presentations as well. The ENT nightmare will be over before you know it.
Cummings and Probst are your best friends. Many exam e xam questions are not lectured, but are found in the book. They LOOOOVE asking anatomy questions. Never forget the anatomy for ENT! They will ask you to make a video and it will be due within 3 days. Do not complain. This always happens. Major cases are similar to preceptorial classes but it is handwritten. Do them beforehand because they want lengthy answers with drawings (usually 5 to 10 pages of yellow pad). Ask the higher batches if they have answers already because they tend to repeat the major cases
ECNEDURPSIRUJ DEM & DEM LAGEL Relative Difficulty 2.38 2.38 out out of 5 Memorize. MAKINIG SA LECTURE :) Just listen to the lectures Transes rule! but don't forget to read everything your professors tell you to read. Despite being one of the lighter subjects, our experience with exams last year was terrible because of the vaguely worded questions. Hopefully the department has remedied that. If you are interested in Forensic Medicine, you can follow [Forensic Medicine, PAMS] on Facebook. It has interesting forensic cases on its page and other related stuff. Transes should be enough. i found this hard because: 1) our professor that time wasn't that good in teaching the course, and 2) i don't like law stuff. the course will make you memorize and interpret legal stuff--as in republic acts and stuff. just read and read the things they make you read and pray that you remember the more important details of your readings. Haha Our experience with Legal Medicine was definitely a pain and the department is well aware of it. We had a lecturer, eccentric as he appears, who works in the PNP and even manages a Facebook page. Quotable quote: "How do you autopsy a chicken?" It wasn't until the 3rd LE when we had a juris doctor-attorney brothers tandem who made Legal Med a little bit more interesting. For those with an interest on politics, jurisdiction and ethics, Legal Med is for you. You will zoom in on many medico-legal matters such as Negligence, Physician's Act of 2012, Forensics, etc. BayNatz tip: Lectures only. 3 LEs. 4-5 transes per LE. No Finals exemption, i'm afraid. Most of the questions are case-based. case -based. You do not need to memorize every bullet under each law but familiarize with the inclusion criteria and the pertinent details (when do you say you are practicing nursing or midwifery? when are you considered to be a medical student? Can a foreign physician practice Medicine in the PH?)
YGOLOHTAP LACINILC Relative Difficulty 2.00 2.00 out out of 5 Clinical Pathology is nothing like Pathology. The focus is more on the laboratory procedures and diagnoses, making the lectures highly conducive for sleeping. Transes are highly recommended. For lab exams, do not forget to refer to your manual since some questions may be lifted from them. And the Department of Pathology w welcomes elcomes you once more come 2nd sem. Clinical Pathology is very very different from the Pathology you had last year. This is more on Laboratory Medicine (where the forte of Med Techs lies). How to do lab procedures, when to order for them, how to interpret lab results, r esults, etc. Lectures + 1 Pracs. The Practical exam is no stranger to what you guys did last year. Move type exam + slide projection written exam. Familiarize yourselves with the experiments done during lab time. The written exam will take some concepts from the lectures as well. Special thanks to XVIA & Unicorns | Page 5 of 6
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Libreng pabaon mula sa Unicornlandia para sa masarap at swabeng biyahe papuntang Westeros #WinterIsComing References: Henry's, but transes + manual will do do BayNatz tip: Ask help from the Med Techs as much as possible. Know the changes in lab results in the presence of a disease. Unicorns ready! ;) clinpath is all about the theoretical stuff of labworks. basically this is a medtech course, so expect that all your medtech classmates will top the class haha clinpath cover all laboratory tests ordered in the clinics. but will it will be aalmost lot easier because almost all topics were already discussed in 2nd year pathology and 3rd year medicine. memorize normal values. make sure you already have a good grasp on how to integrate theoretical and clinical information by the time you take clinpath. have a copy of those unicorns *wink wink* and it'll help you pass the course haha Transes should be sufficient. Lab exams are hard so make sure to read the lab manual. don't absent sa lab hirap mag make-up
SDOHTEM HCRAESER Relative Difficulty 2.38 2.38 out out of 5 There will be a manual, and it will be your source of info for the course. Try to accomplish the exercises after the discussion on the topic is done as it will make your life easier. Dr. Juangco is your go-to guy for anything related to statistics. He has this awesome calculator on his phone that he uses to compute for the accuracy of your computations. He is amazing. Be his friend. you'll just finish your paper that you've started in 2nd year, and present it starting July/August up until the end of the semester. this is just a pass-fail course. attend all symposiums and always sign the attendance. at the end of the semester you're required to pass your final final final paper. just accomplish all the necessary documents so that at the end you won't be cramming anything.
No exams here but mostly paperworks.
ENICIDEM YTINUMMOC Relative Difficulty 2.38 2.38 out out of 5 Community Medicine is just like how things go in DPC, Epid and Research Methods I. You sit down and listen to lectures and break out into preceptorial groups after. Community Medicine, as in the name, trains us how to impart health promotion and education in the community setting. Preceptorial sessions will be more focused on creating lesson plans and conducting and demo-ing health teaching classes to your groupmates, who will be acting as barangay health workers. 3 LEs. Aim for exemption!!!! References: That undeniably expensive Com Med manual (Php350-400) BayNatz tip: Read the manual!! Most of them get their questions from there, aside from the lectures. Have those unicorns (the one that starts with S and ends with X) ready too.
extra paperwork but kinda manageable. they're all groupwork so it will make the workload easier. just read your transes and READ THE MANUAL before the exam and you'll pass the course. they take exam questions from the exercises and readings found on the manual and from the class activities, so make sure you participate and not miss on those. Read the manual and transes. The manual is your frenemy. You will love and hate it in equal measure. You will get to meet actual Barangay Health Workers, which is cool. But then you have to create community programs afterwards, which is not so cool. Pinakamahirap sa lahat ng subjects ng prev med. med . Makinig sa lec and transes. read and answer the manual and assignments on your own
This is pretty much meh. PASS or FAIL. By now, you should be done with implementing your research and writing your manuscripts. With the hectic schedule of 3rd year, it pretty much gets difficult to allot time to work on your thesis defense so make sure not to neglect it. I know many of us dread this, but it will soon be over. I promise. prom ise. BayNatz tip: Preparing for the research forum is a class effort. The department expects a well-conducted program, organized logistics, smooth program flow and well-designed brochures and invitations. Respect the department deadlines and meet all of of their requirements! You don't wanna do Research Projects again, do you?
Dress well when presenting your thesis.Make sure the statistic analysis you used is correct. And make sure everyone e veryone in the group knows how the study and the statistics was done. Having a group meeting to practice report knows and to about make the the powerpoint is good for making sure the everyone research, everyone has a role, and helps boost morale within each other. :D Buy yummy food for the panel and for the presenters! Reward yourselves once it's over!!!! Mag aral ng mabuti. Magbasa everyday. Advance reading kahit may times na di talaga kaya magbasa ng maaga. Enjoy lang. Super bilis lang ng 3rd year :) and kayang kaya niyo yan! Goodluck and God Bless! – – CAMA CAMA Q: If you could warn your past self about anything using five words or less, what would you say? 1. you're treating an actual patient – patient – pants pants 2. Study ahead of time – time – nite nite 3. Thou shall read Harrison. Harrison. – – M M Taylor 4. nowhere is safe safe – – Ibn Ibn 5. Don't stress over grades!!!! Chillax!!! – Chillax!!! – LDC LDC 6. "If you feel feel like giving u up, p, rremember emember why you started." -BayNatz
Special Thanks to XVIA & Unicorns! Godspeed, luchadors. Special thanks to XVIA & Unicorns | Page 6 of 6
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