Louisville Medicine Volume 67, Issue 12 | Page 17

FEATURE A MEDICAL STUDENT’S PERSPECTIVE ON COVID-19 AUTHOR Jerome Soldo T he rapid spread of COVID-19 throughout the US has resulted in polarization and division, with gov- ernment leaders and media person- alities on both sides of the political aisle blaming those on the other for our current public health and eco- nomic crisis. Paradoxically, this is perhaps the moment in American history when the rest of us have most profoundly supported and appreciated each other. Our collective actions illustrate the role of unity in overcoming this pandemic. Kentucky’s proactive coronavirus response effectively classified people as either essential at work or essential at home. Farmers, grocery store employees, garbage collectors, custodians, health care professionals and many other professions are appropriately lauded for their efforts serving society by heroically showing up to work. Everyone else stays “healthy at home,” and regardless of their employment status, they are thanked for sacrificing individual liberties to flatten the curve. Caught in the middle between these two defined roles are health professional students, whose duty to state, country and profession is currently being debated. demic affects medical training is dependent on one’s year in school. » M4s: Louisville’s newest doctors will still graduate on time, but unfortunately without the well-deserved celebrations and traditions that enrich the months before residency. Senior Week festivities and vacations were canceled, and Match Day and graduation were moved online. Approximately 75% of the class is completing residency at other institutions, so most will have to house-hunt in unfamiliar locations and make cross-country moves despite the ongoing pandemic. When they begin their intern year a couple short months from now (if they are even permitted to begin on time), they might be doing so in com- munities severely affected by COVID-19. Some M4s in other states have already been granted MDs and enlisted to battle the virus as physicians. » M3s: My classmates and I are away from clinical service, but we continue moving forward by studying the content of the clerkships in which we would otherwise be participating. We will take each clerkship’s corresponding exam from home on a secure testing browser that ULSOM staff proctor through Zoom, a video conferencing program. Our school’s leaders (who have been absolutely wonderful during this time of peak stress) have informed us to expect to complete 50% of our missed rotations when we are allowed to return to the clinical environment, most likely in the summer or fall. My class is concerned about how these delays will affect our carefully-con- structed fourth-year schedules and how the pandemic may interfere with away rotations and residency prospects. For example, emergency medicine (EM) has canceled all visiting student rotations for the 2020-2021 academic year, and these opportunities have traditionally been vital to the EM residency application process. “Uncertainty” is by far the best word to describe our present experience. » M2s: Our school’s busiest learners are currently in a metaphor- ical no man’s land. They have finished their M2 curriculum online and have entered “dedicated” to prepare for the Step One licensing exam. For many students, this is the most dreadful period in all of medical school. Most students are scheduled to take the exam in late May or early June, and they will be studying for nearly every waking hour until then without the certainty that they will be able to sit for the exam at the conclusion of The debate is as novel as the coronavirus itself, emerging from unique circumstances. Throughout January and February, life at the University of Louisville School of Medicine (ULSOM) and other medical schools around the country continued at its regular, hurried pace. Fourth-year students finished graduation requirements and submitted rank lists for residency programs, third-year students continued core clerkships, and first and second-year students at- tended lectures and studied for exams. COVID-19 remained an abstract, far-away threat. However, March ushered in the most consequential changes to medical education in decades. When COVID-19 cases skyrocketed in early March, the pre-clinical curriculum moved completely online. Clinical students continued working in patient care settings until March 17th, when the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) issued guidance directing that all medical schools nation- wide immediately “pause” student rotations due to concerns over student safety and personal protective equipment (PPE) availability. While many medical students’ plans for the remainder of the year have been unraveled in the past month, the extent to which the pan- (continued on page 16) MAY 2020 15