Ok so I've read all the posts ever written about books for 4th year ortho electives. Now that I've collected a pile of books, I have a few questions about them -- most importantly, which ones should I read cover to cover beforehand, which ones should I memorize, and which ones are more for reference during the rotation?
It seems that Wiesel's can be read cover to cover beforehand and learned without clinical correlate ... Netter's can be reviewed to be as familiar as possible with the anatomy ahead of time ... but everything else really has to be used while doing the rotation. Maybe Hoppenfeld's Exam book can be covered and practiced on a friend or something.
Beyond that ... the fracture handbook seems to be a laundry list of fractures that you can't possibly remember in isolation ... Hoppenfeld's Exposures is more useful on a per case basis ... any major ortho text is too much to read ahead of time ... and the reference-type books like House Officer are more useful as references during the elective.
Is my impression correct? If this is the case, then is that the best way to shine during the rotation? Read Wiesel, review Netter's, familiarize with exam techniques beforehand ... then prepare day to day with Hoppenfeld Exposures, texts, and fracture handbook?
I'm planning a rotation at some of the top programs, and am willing to work my butt off ... but just want to know how to work effectively.
Thanks!
b
It seems that Wiesel's can be read cover to cover beforehand and learned without clinical correlate ... Netter's can be reviewed to be as familiar as possible with the anatomy ahead of time ... but everything else really has to be used while doing the rotation. Maybe Hoppenfeld's Exam book can be covered and practiced on a friend or something.
Beyond that ... the fracture handbook seems to be a laundry list of fractures that you can't possibly remember in isolation ... Hoppenfeld's Exposures is more useful on a per case basis ... any major ortho text is too much to read ahead of time ... and the reference-type books like House Officer are more useful as references during the elective.
Is my impression correct? If this is the case, then is that the best way to shine during the rotation? Read Wiesel, review Netter's, familiarize with exam techniques beforehand ... then prepare day to day with Hoppenfeld Exposures, texts, and fracture handbook?
I'm planning a rotation at some of the top programs, and am willing to work my butt off ... but just want to know how to work effectively.
Thanks!
b