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How Gaming Can Help You Learn Medicine Better
TL;DR
- Rote memorization is part of medical education, but drawing deeper connections between concepts is what makes you a physician.
- Medical school emphasizes finding the correct answer, but when you begin to practice medicine you’ll find that the answers are much more complex than that.
- Although moving from med school to residency can be scary–as with any transition–Paulius found it to be easier than he expected.
Dr. Paulius Mui is a first-year family medicine resident in Virginia, and a long-time listener (since before med school!). He wrote to Dave not long ago because he had published a game called Table Rounds. It’s a game he and his friends in med school had made up, and now he’s working to bring it into the world as an actual product.
Paulius sent Dave a copy of the game [for free, he’s not a sponsor. –Dave], and M1s AJ Chowdhury, Alex Belzer, Nolan Redetzke, and M4 Joyce Wahba play the game. Players use cards–each with a medical term or concept on it–to draw connections between them. The connections can be deep or they can be spurious, but if you can make your case you’re a winner. But perhaps more importantly, it’s a game that you can make your own, coming up with rules that make it even more interesting and helpful.
Paulius also gives his advice to Joyce, who’s about to start her residency in Emergency Medicine, and discusses his first-year as a resident beginning while the pandemic raged.
We Want to Hear From You
How’d we do on this week’s show? Did we miss anything in our conversation? Did we anger you? Did we make you smile? Call us at 347-SHORTCT anytime or email theshortcoats@gmail.com. It’s always a pleasure to hear from you!
364 Gamifying Med Ed
Dave Etler: [00:00:00] Welcome back to the Short Coat Podcast. a production of the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine. I’m Dave Etler joining me in the studio and in our live stream on Facebook’s. The Short Coat Student Lounge is a fine slate of medical student co-hosts, say hello to an illustrious M4, Joyce Wahba.
Joyce Wahba: [00:00:50] Hey everyone.
Dave Etler: [00:00:51] Over there is a fine young M1 who’s really going places. AJ Chowdhury. Hello. Next to him is his virtually identical twin and a fascinating M1 himself. Alex Belzer. Howdy. Howdy. Holy smokes. A new co-host is entered the chat it’s Nolan Redetzke. Hello. But if you thought that was all that I had to offer you today on today’s show, I would ordinarily say isn’t that enough for you listeners, but yes, I do have more, Dr.Paulius Mui is a first year family medicine resident now in Winchester, Virginia. Is that right? That’s right. I did a little research. He’s the co-inventor of a new game called table rounds. Which I think you’re going to like short coats.
Hello. Thank you for, thank you for joining us on the show. So we’re gonna play this game a little bit first. The story I want to get into the story, you sort of the origin story of this game. Is that you and your med student friends sort of invented this game while you were, a med student at, , BU Boston university VCU.
Okay. I don’t know why I thought it was B U I F I swear to God. I looked it up. I think he’s actually, I found your, I found your resident page on the website and I think it says, BU dude,
Paulius Mui: [00:01:57] I went to BU for undergrad
Dave Etler: [00:02:00] okay.
So I read it wrong.
Joyce Wahba: [00:02:03] You tried though. It’s fine
Dave Etler: [00:02:04] I do try. I do try to do my job. Yeah. It sounds like your effort was there.
Yeah. Not focused. I think you said , you sort of invented or came up with this game while you were in med school…
Paulius Mui: [00:02:15] Yes. Yes. So you know, thanks for having me on the show. I’ve actually listened to you all since, um, at least
Dave Etler: [00:02:21] September 2016, I went back and looked through my emails in the first time you emailed me was September of 2016.
Paulius Mui: [00:02:28] So this is even before. I knew for certain that I was going to be a doctor. So, , yeah, I’ve been following along your work for some time and it’s been really exciting now, full circle, kind of crazy.
Dave Etler: [00:02:41] Now you’re now you’re the real thing and you’re on the show. I love it. This is great. So yeah. How did you come up with this game?
Paulius Mui: [00:02:46] Well, I mean, it was harder to not make the game, I think, than actually make it and share it with my colleagues. It really came out of how we studied, and with my friends and the study group. I think it was step one dedicated period when it really clicked.
And, I think kind of realizing, going through medicine and medical school, realizing that, medicine is just a lot about identifying connections that seem to be hidden, and there are all sorts of clues that the patient tells you and you’re supposed to kind of piece them together and make the connections visible for others.
And I can get into kind of more of the maybe not the so exciting part, but you know, like my friend Graham, he would quiz me about different things. For example, Dave, we’re going to get a little medical here.
Dave Etler: [00:03:34] I can handle it. I’m going to gird my loins.
Paulius Mui: [00:03:38] Girded. So, you know, he would, Say.
Okay. So tell me what you know about cellulitis. Like what’s the first thing that comes to mind and I don’t know. I think of like an antibiotic, like clindamycin and , he’s like, okay, what else is associated with clindamycin? And I would say, okay, maybe C-diff. Okay. And then he’s like, what about C diff?
And then I would say a vancomycin and then we just kind of go down the path of one thing makes you think of another thing. And then we’d kind of see how far we can take each other’s knowledge. And so that’s really the idea that, you know, there are these things that you’re, you know, you think of one thing and then it’s connected to the other and we’ve built off of that and created this, this game.
Dave Etler: [00:04:16] I don’t know about you guys, but I like this approach because , it seems kind of an obvious approach because a lot of med school is about memorization, but that’s not where the real sort of learning, is done. Right. I mean, that’s just basic sort of surface level.
Paulius Mui: [00:04:29] Yeah, exactly. And I mean, I think, you know, this is, certainly a game in a way to play.
But really, I think it’s more of a symbol for why we. Actually took the effort to produce it and make it available and go through some of the steps that are not just purely fun. Cause it , took, , a lot of time to make sure that it’s a good experience for everybody is because, we’re really hoped to nudge the culture of medical education to create a space for playfulness and human connection.
In a place that I think doesn’t welcome it all the time. I think just broadly speaking, obviously. That’s great. I like that. Yeah. every medical school experience is different for everybody, but, and so this is kind of coming from my experience and, you know, medical education is full of amazing people.
But some things exist that I think could be improved and whether this is just. kind of leftover or, unintended consequences of well-meaning efforts or just historical inertia, but they’re definitely a few things that. Could be changed about the way our training happens in terms of it matching up with the reality of practicing medicine.
And I think that our game really tries to bridge the gap between what’s what’s not available right now in terms of developing some of these more emotional intelligence skills.
Dave Etler: [00:05:49] Any reactions to that, you guys?
AJ Chowdhury: [00:05:51] That sounds very high yield.
Alex Belzer: [00:05:55] I’m going to go, I’m going to go ahead and file that in the good take file folder,
AJ Chowdhury: [00:06:00] indeed.
Dave Etler: [00:06:02] So you had this idea, and what was it like to bring. An idea from something you do with your buds to a physical product, I’m kind of always fascinated by this, by this process because it’s not, it’s not just like have an idea, make it profit.
Paulius Mui: [00:06:18] Yeah, that’s true. Exactly. And I mean, I think this is not something that is going to make us wealthy or, have us, pay off our student loans.
I think this is just a fun thing that hopefully we’re not going to lose money and be net neutral or so in the end. , we launched officially and made it available for sale early in 2021, but have been working on it. Really, I think for about two years now.
And so we first developed the concept for the game and then tested it with our friends and refine the rules. And then we , tested it some more, got feedback and went through a lot of iterations and kind of handmade the cards ourselves. First we created everything by hand. Then we take it to the next.
Phase of printing it at Kinko’s. , then when things were kind of evolving, as we were expecting, you know, we ordered some prototypes research, the different companies they could place the order with, and then kept testing it. And then eventually when we felt comfortable that this is a. Worthwhile pursuing, you know, we took somewhat of a risk and, bought an inventory and, , created a website, you know, like a whole production, I think.
And I don’t, I honestly don’t know why it happened. But it did.
Dave Etler: [00:07:34] Yeah. Because I was going to ask, like, what was that signal that you were like, Oh yeah, This, this has legs. I can, we can do this. I mean,
Paulius Mui: [00:07:40] so, because I think, I believe in what it represents. So, so there, you know, I didn’t get into the specific issues that are wrong with, I think, medical training, but I’m happy to highlight a couple of times do it.
Dave Etler: [00:07:53] Nope. There’s nothing
Paulius Mui: [00:07:54] wrong with that actually. You know, I’ve only, I only know my experience and, the few people that I know outside of my medical school who have gone through the same thing, and I’ve heard it echoed, but if you guys feel that this is not really true to you, let me know. So what I think, for example, there, there are a couple of things.
The, biggest thing that stands out to me is that the opportunity cost of not studying in medical school is huge . I felt , the need to, to try to study whenever I can even like when exercising, I try to listen, you know, try to kind of do something medically oriented
because of that people generally who go to medical school, you know, adapt really well to their circumstances. And that comes at the neglect of their wellbeing and physical health and mental health and the very qualities that our patients expect us to model, just are not paid attention to. And I think that the system, Yes, there are wellness efforts and so on, but I think that really the medical education system does not make it easier for us to prioritize ourselves.
I don’t know if. There is a glimpse of truth in your experience, especially you, Joyce, that you’ve gone through school. Yeah.
Joyce Wahba: [00:09:08] I mean, I would definitely agree with that. Like I think wellness very much needs to be like a systemic thing. Like that’s kind of built into the structure of what the school has to offer.
Not just kind of like one-off wellness lectures. Cause those don’t really do much. It’s more of like a cultural change overall.
Alex Belzer: [00:09:24] I feel like I was trying really, really hard. I don’t know how much I can speak about this, but I was really, really hard to do wellness stuff and they’re
Dave Etler: [00:09:32] well, wait a minute, wait a minute.
Wait a minute. I just want to point out that if you do say something wrong, you will have to die. I mean,
Alex Belzer: [00:09:38] it’s a sacrifice we’re willing to make. Okay, good. Yeah. I was, I was trying really, really hard to like. Emphasize wellness if that makes sense.
Joyce Wahba: [00:09:46] Wellness passport not make you more
Paulius Mui: [00:09:47] well.
Oh, that is
AJ Chowdhury: [00:09:48] peak
Alex Belzer: [00:09:49] wellness. No, I booked a flight, taken a trip and gone through customs to get to the land of wellness.
Paulius Mui: [00:09:56] Absolutely.
Dave Etler: [00:09:59] Yeah , these are efforts that are clearly still developing. I could, I think we can. Yes.
AJ Chowdhury: [00:10:06] And they are open to student feedback. I sit on the committee. That’s actually revising wellness passports for next year’s M1s. That
Dave Etler: [00:10:12] is, no, I’m confusing it with something else. Nevermind. ,
AJ Chowdhury: [00:10:14] there’s a student liaison committee.
Yes.
Alex Belzer: [00:10:17] Talk
Paulius Mui: [00:10:17] between
Dave Etler: [00:10:17] the
Paulius Mui: [00:10:17] two. Yeah. If I can just add, so it sounds like you guys can, , empathize with what’s happening, over at other places too. And so, so that’s one of three things. So then I think the second thing that I think about is that there’s also a culture of individualism and medicine and.
Obviously people will study sometimes together and, you know, there’s some, , team-based exercises, but overall, you know, I felt even though I had friends and classmates and so on that we got along with there, there’s definitely a sense of you, , competing, , ultimately against other people, even at whether it’s a silent competition or something.
You know, there’s just, there’s that process of ranking. And like our school was , pass/ , fail for the first two years, but people keep track of where you stand and then you have to go through the match process to get into the residency as like the ultimate competition, you know, limited spots.
And you, you need to be able to get into places. Whereas the real world medicine is really all about working in teams and having the emotional intelligence to collaborate. And, , that’s really ultimately how good patient care is delivered. And so, you know, you have to be able to work well with pharmacists nurses, audiologists, like all of the people out there in the health team.
So
Dave Etler: [00:11:39] the, so the game, is basically an additional opportunity to learn while you’re enjoying the company of other people. Instead of like just hitting the books,
Paulius Mui: [00:11:48] basically. Exactly. So really like if you just play the game, I don’t think you’re going to get very far in medical school. This is more medics,
Joyce Wahba: [00:11:56] right?
Their version.
Dave Etler: [00:11:57] I mean, you know, version two, the DLC, you know,
Joyce Wahba: [00:12:03] expansion packs, infectious disease, the start getting really specific
Alex Belzer: [00:12:08] version. Oh, Honestly, what would a game be these days without more payments, right. Sports,
Paulius Mui: [00:12:17] credit card. Yeah. And, and actually this it’s an interesting point and you can . Certainly take it, you know, when we’re going to talk about the details of the game.
Yeah. So you can certainly take it and make it a lot, you know, like specialty specific, but truly, if you are creative enough, you can connect a lot of things to. To the foundations of medicine. I think that’s the other piece, the third part, I think that is kind of different about the medical training compared to the practice of medicine that, you know, I’ve had just under a year of experience, but yeah.
To me, there’s that one difference of, , medical school. It really drills into you certainty and knowing the one correct answer. I mean, our often our self identity is wrapped in our academic standing and, you know, How we live is defined by the answer you choose. And that determines what specialty you go into.
And the real world is a lot more messy. I mean, there is not any answer in the back of the book for most patients. Like, yes, there are definitely things that you shouldn’t do, but for the most part, even something as routine as like treating hypertension, you have so many different ways to approach it for a particular patient.
And it’s really. An art of how you do this. And I think that this is what this game is really best at doing and showing how, like, most people say, like, where are the answers to the cards? Like, where do I look up these connections, how one card connects to the other, and that’s the whole point. Like you need to get out of that mentality because like that.
It’s far from how the real world is. And I think the more we get comfortable with discomfort, this is where we grow, and this is how innovations happen in medicine and so on. I think that’s pretty
Joyce Wahba: [00:14:09] parallel to fake it till you make it. It’s just like, yeah, this connects totally smiles and nods.
Dave Etler: [00:14:16] When you began your residency journey the residency portion of your journey, in the past year.
You had this theory about how these connections work. I mean, you pretty much knew that that was true, but where are you at some point? Were you ever like, okay, thank God. Now that I’m doing this for. Living, it actually turns out to be true.
Paulius Mui: [00:14:36] Yeah. It’s amazing. It really is amazing.
I still can’t believe it that this, this is so rewarding to have gone through med school and now I’ll be doing it in real life. And Oh yeah. And I mean, I went to school late. Like I, you know, in my twenties I kind of explored other things and , I got to know myself really well. And then I was pretty certain that medicine was for me, but just, , Being out in the real world and experiencing, and having that privilege to, to just have patients really listen to what you say because their health is in your hands.
I think that’s really cool.
Dave Etler: [00:15:08] You know, I’ve had, you know, I don’t want to brag, but I have had a few really good product ideas in the past.
Paulius Mui: [00:15:17] Oh, no, I think I’ve heard some,
Dave Etler: [00:15:21] for instance, I probably talked about them on the show. I did have an idea for a wearable airbag for motorcyclists, which is actually a thing it’s like an
Joyce Wahba: [00:15:29] avalanche bag.
Yeah. They have like these backpacks
Dave Etler: [00:15:32] yes, exactly. My other, really, really good idea that I never. I’m waving around a screwdriver, why… My other, other really, really good idea was the ejection seat for motorcyclists, which for some reason, like if you get, if you find it in, in trouble, you know, you would eject you from the motorcycle, get you out of harm’s way.
For some reason when I mentioned this to people. Nobody liked that.
AJ Chowdhury: [00:15:57] Well, does it come with an extra optional purchase of a parachute so that you land safely?
Dave Etler: [00:16:03] Yeah. Well, one of the, yeah, that was a great idea. I mean, I supposed, it was better than, you know, smashing into something I’m patenting that right after
Alex Belzer: [00:16:10] this.
Okay. Give everybody a jet pack all the time. Yeah. Same thing.
AJ Chowdhury: [00:16:16] Pretty much the same thing. Or we could
Alex Belzer: [00:16:19] genetically push evolution so that everybody can fly. Okay.
Dave Etler: [00:16:22] That’s a little more complicated than than making a card game , or even making a, an ejection seat. Somebody did point out to me the bridge overpass problem with my ejection seat.
So percentage that’s when I abandoned. That’s when I abandoned the idea, what
Alex Belzer: [00:16:38] percentage of roads are actually caused by, or our roads are covered by an overpass. I dunno, like less than
Dave Etler: [00:16:44] 0.5%. That’s a good point. Yeah. That was a good point. I should have brought that up while your
AJ Chowdhury: [00:16:49] product could drive a lot of business towards Joyce.
Alex Belzer: [00:16:52] That’s true.
Joyce Wahba: [00:16:54] Always looking for new patients.
Dave Etler: [00:17:14] I’m proud of you. Paulius. I’m proud that you were able to, to come up with this and bring it to some sort of fruition. So let’s try this out. First of all, I’m going to awkwardly. Run around and rearrange cameras so you guys can fill while I do this .
Paulius Mui: [00:17:29] So how are you guys feeling? Tell me what your experience has been so far. Have you like looked at the box or the instructions or any, or, you know, nothing I’ve seen the outside of the box. I think the box is big vibes, really
Alex Belzer: [00:17:44] very pastel. That’s that’s all I got. I really read two wait three sides of the box.
That’s about it. They’re six, five, five. I’m at five. I haven’t seen the bottom. Is there anything on the bottom? There is no, let’s go. Can you go see the, it looks like a nutrition label. It
Paulius Mui: [00:18:03] does. I like
AJ Chowdhury: [00:18:03] it.
Paulius Mui: [00:18:03] Is this good for your health? Paulius you know, I can’t make any substantial claims, but I
Joyce Wahba: [00:18:09] also, how badly am I going to be embarrassed by this?
If I haven’t done any clinical care since like October and haven’t taken step two you since like, before that
Paulius Mui: [00:18:18] this is okay. We’ve played with non-medical people. And, I think it’s pretty interesting. I think, I think this is more about a different way to think and a way to teach each other. And just like in real life, you can look stuff up.
And I think the, you know, the whole idea is to just generate a conversation that otherwise wouldn’t happen. And, , I think as long as it’s. Somewhat, you know, it’s like, was it, it was saying, you know, like, , does, is this supposed to help you learn medicine better? I mean, I think it’s just going back to one of those things where it’s just an excuse for you to not feel pressured, to just always grind.
And this is just like giving yourself the permission to hang out. And if you learn something along the way great. But if you just end up like hanging out with people and you know, talking about some medical things, I think that is. Okay. Just like what you’re doing with the podcast. I think you’re taking, you know, you’re setting an hour aside to do something that is not just, you know, scrolling through a computer and clicking on answer choices.
I think so that’s part of it. Wait,
Alex Belzer: [00:19:23] so you’re saying that we don’t have to memorize that the Philadelphia chromosome translocation is nine and 22. You’re saying that we can just look that up
Paulius Mui: [00:19:32] cause they asked. Yeah. So it’s part of the system. That’s part of the system. Yeah, there were patients give us
AJ Chowdhury: [00:19:40] five multiple choice answers for their diagnosis.
By the way, we had our first physical SPs, the three M1s in the room last week. And we were, we were definitely getting softballs like I have a history of reactive airway disease. Hah.
Dave Etler: [00:20:01] Yeah. And you do your best. All right. So I have awkwardly set up the camera. We’ve got this top-down view of, the table. So, what do we do? How do we start? What’s going on? Polly’s give us the, give us all
Paulius Mui: [00:20:12] right. Okay. So, well, , Open up the
Dave Etler: [00:20:14] box. Oh, yep. It’s important to,
Paulius Mui: [00:20:17] and everyone in the room is going to play.
Right. So I cannot play cause I
Dave Etler: [00:20:21] need to run things over here. I realized I wanted to, Oh
Paulius Mui: [00:20:24] my gosh. Okay. All right. Well, we’ll do another round later for you.
Dave Etler: [00:20:26] If I can see on my monitor, maybe I can
Paulius Mui: [00:20:29] see it. This is maybe what you could do is you could turn the box over and just, spill the cards on the table and then, , shuffle them up.
We can just exactly mix them up like that, but there were different colors, the cards. And so that’s also on the top of the box. And so the way that the game is set up is that it has. 280 cards that we selected very meticulously to represent the foundations of medical knowledge.
And so they’re roughly grouped into five categories. And , if you look at the box, it goes from the peach to purple. , going outside in. And so the cards that have, and you can flip one or two over just to get a sense of like what’s on there, but exactly. So let’s say vascular valvular heart disease.
Right? So, so that’s , blue card. So that’s a diagnosis card. So what if we, if we look at the each cards there signs and symptoms, the yellow ones are the. Tests the workup, essentially, that exactly that you would order like an ultrasound and then the green ones are the results of different tests that would come back to you.
So what does that one say? Hyper or hypochloremia. Right. So if you order a BMP, you know, you would see what the chloride levels are. Then the, you already showed, , blue card, which is a diagnosis card, and then the purple cards are the treatment cards. So that’s. Metronidozole exactly. So like, for example, what do you guys, when you see metronidozole what do you think of anything random comes to mind?
There’s a Z in that word.
Okay.
Alex Belzer: [00:22:02] Hazel, some kind of a proton pump inhibitor.
AJ Chowdhury: [00:22:06] We have not learned that yet.
Paulius Mui: [00:22:10] That’s really interesting. Actually, that’s one of those instances where like omeprazole is a PPI, but, metronidozole is actually not it’s an anti- I think parasitic technically, , because it used to for like anaerobic, or I guess antibacterial, you know, use for, anaerobic, infections, like.
Bacterial vaginosis, for example. , but anyway, so, so you have these cards and the beauty, I think of this game, you know, patting myself on the back is that, these are building blocks of medical knowledge, right? And you can discover learning just by playing. And it’s very modular. So it’s almost like those Lego toy pieces that you can, essentially, , follow an instruction manual to build something very specific or, you know, once you’ve like have a bunch of Lego bricks, you can kind of create your own thing and you can do what you want with it.
And so same here, like we have these cards and we’ve created a number of ways that. You can follow our instructions and play whether you want to make it a competitive or a collaborative experience. If you have 15 minutes to play versus you have an hour to play. And I really encourage you to take a look through the instructions on our website at some point, just to get an idea of how you can play, but every time we’ve showed this game to somebody they’ve.
Adapted it and created their own rules to play. Like they want to like, even somebody, one of the, , attendings at another school actually said that they would pick out the cards that are related to the patients on their service, and then use those cards to kind of, take the game based approach to learning about their patients and generating discussion, because you are going to be vulnerable when you try to explain things and you’re still learning.
But at the same time for people, for educators, it’s a really good opportunity to identify what you don’t know in real time and that’s a space for, teaching you exactly where you’re at. You know, cause sometimes with the lecture hall there might, you might be, you know, giving the, the information only to segment of the people.
That’s the right information at that time. But a lot of people might be, you know, you might be overshooting or undershooting sometimes. Any questions about those basic ideas?
Alex Belzer: [00:24:25] Sounds like I’m going to do a lot of finding out what I don’t
Paulius Mui: [00:24:27] know. That’s exactly right. Yeah. And I think about it. Yeah, no, I that’s exactly it.
I think that’s a very sharp, perception. And, and I don’t know if you’ve had that feeling too. Like, I mean, we kind of joked about this, but when, like you do, you know, like I said of UWorld questions, I don’t know if you, you guys have not gotten into it yet. Right? The, uh, ones, but it’s like a, you know, Q bank, , like you would do Kaplan for MCAT or something like that.
, and you know, you get up, like you do like a set of 20 or 40 questions at a time, and then you get feedback of like, how many did you get right wrong? And it’s like very demoralizing sometimes to get more than half incorrect or whatever. Right. But if you think about it, like that is really good because you did not waste your time.
You actually like struggled and you realized that this is how much you did not know. And ultimately that’s for the better, because if you’re just cruising and, you know, missing only one or two questions, you kind of wasting your time, you know? Cause you’re already know that’s 90% or whatnot. That
Joyce Wahba: [00:25:32] is such a positive way to look at blocks where you get 40%.
That is definitely not what I was going through stuff when you did it. And you’re just like, dang it
Paulius Mui: [00:25:42] exactly. It’s cause you learn 60%, right?
Joyce Wahba: [00:25:46] It’s like, wow, such a learning opportunity.
Alex Belzer: [00:25:49] Well
Paulius Mui: [00:25:50] development. I mean, I just tend to, I think lean and over optimistic zone, but it’s. It’s carried me this far and that’s just who I am.
I think that’s
Dave Etler: [00:26:02] beautiful. All right, we’ll get into it. Let’s see.
Paulius Mui: [00:26:03] Let’s do it. Okay. So you’ve, you’ve shuffled the cards. So why don’t each of you, draw? , let’s say why don’t we do five cards. For example, guys are
Dave Etler: [00:26:13] meticulously picking up.
Paulius Mui: [00:26:15] Can we look at them? Yeah. So why don’t you take a look and it’s okay for, I think maybe show me the card so that I can see if you’ve shuffled them fairly.
Okay though, where it’s not like everyone has one color. Okay, perfect. So, , for this first, so the way you would play, right? Like if you’ve dealt these cards out, so, Joyce, do you like, can I ask you to, for example, , when I go first, would you be okay with that?
Okay. So what you all could do is, , make some space in the middle where you’re going to build your connections. And then some, some basic ideas of how the connections work. So for example, also somebody just can, , pull out a random card and put it in the middle. Exactly. CSF. Okay. So do you guys know what that is?
Cerebral spinal fluid. Exactly. Yep. And
Dave Etler: [00:27:05] camaraderie,
Paulius Mui: [00:27:07] you know that? I did know that. Yeah.
Dave Etler: [00:27:11] Look, a lot of you dude works at
Paulius Mui: [00:27:13] a medical school. He’s a medical educator. There’ll be some. The thing is that you’ll need to look up. Cause as M1s, you’ve just not been exposed to some of these abbreviations and so on. And so like “metropablanopzole”
Dave Etler: [00:27:26] absolve or whatever.
Paulius Mui: [00:27:32] So, okay. So let’s say, and you know, depending on how competitive you want to get, like, we, we could give like a time limit per turn or whatnot, but. For now, , maybe we can just like try without too, too much intensity. So the way the connections basically work is that you can put your card on either edge of, , another card.
So the connections would work, , essentially, you know, top or bottom or side to side, but the diagonals don’t need to connect in a sense. And if you have only the cards that are directly touching should have some sort of connection that you explain. So for example, if you have, you know, like three cards in a row, the first card and the third card don’t have to directly connect, like they can, but you don’t have to.
So it’s really all about the immediate connections. This is that’s the basic principle. Does that make sense? Yep. Okay. All right. So Joyce, so why don’t you look at your cards and you know, why don’t we take like 30 seconds or so, and see what things you could connect to the card in the middle right now using your cards.
And you can use
Joyce Wahba: [00:28:39] one. These are going to be a gigantic stretch.
Paulius Mui: [00:28:42] And, and that’s that’s okay. And that can be part of the conversation. Like if this is something that is maybe borderline not true or
then the group can say, all right, like we’re not buying it or we need to double check and look it up and then you’ll just take those cards back and it’ll be someone else’s turn. Yo, Paulius,
Joyce Wahba: [00:29:03] well, yes, if you weren’t here, I would be the one with the most medical knowledge, I could say whatever I want and they just be like, “uh-huh!”
Paulius Mui: [00:29:08] I mean, technically, yes.
Joyce Wahba: [00:29:12] I’m just kidding. I’m going to play cirrhosis,
Paulius Mui: [00:29:15] play as many cars as you feel comfortable with with that current hand. So you could, you know, if, if you, okay. So I actually, when I see this, I’m not really like nothing jumps out at me immediately, but. Well, let’s say, if you don’t want to play any other cards, then after you’ve set your cards down, then you get to explain what the connection is.
And you can take as much time to do that. And you can like use your phone if you wanted to. I mean, these are the rules you could create amongst yourselves, but so like what teaching point would you share with somebody about CSF and cirrhosis?
Dave Etler: [00:29:49] I’m going to translate that. What bullshit
Joyce Wahba: [00:29:55] I don’t quite see the connection there. He would say something on rounds and they ask you a question and you just BS your way through it. And they’re just like,
AJ Chowdhury: [00:30:06] why don’t you make a report about this to present tomorrow?
Paulius Mui: [00:30:09] Go ahead.
Joyce Wahba: [00:30:10] Um this is an absolute stretch, but CSF, the F stands for fluid. Cirrhosis. You have really bad, like alcoholic cirrhosis, and you get like some ascetes goin’, then that’s also a fluid, AKA, this is a really big stretch. I don’t have a lot.
In my card,
Paulius Mui: [00:30:29] you did it, Joyce,
Dave Etler: [00:30:32] mildly, you did a
Joyce Wahba: [00:30:33] great is like, eh, take it back
Dave Etler: [00:30:37] to do that. My understanding is that, this is a, a game of spurious connections, even, you know, sometimes we’re here to be freethinkers.
Alex Belzer: [00:30:45] Right?
Paulius Mui: [00:30:46] Exactly. I mean, I think, I think. This is a good connection to start with.
I think it’s a little bit of a soft connection, but I think it’s a really interesting way to think. Cause I would not have put these down cause I just, I wasn’t thinking the way you did. So. But the way you explained it actually made me think that one thing that I, for example, and like, I’m not that far from you guys in training, but what I would try to teach on top of that if I was a more seasoned attending, I would say, okay.
So when we think about ascieties and cirrhosis, You want to think about the sag that it’s like? Serum albumin to ascieties gradient. And if it’s like greater than 1.1, you want to think that the ascieties is caused by portal hypertension. So that’s like one idea and I have to double check myself with what I told you is true, but the there’s this calculation that you can do based on the fluid to tell you where it’s coming from.
And then, , you want to also potentially think about, like with ascieties, you’re testing it for bacteria because you’re looking for something called spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. And if you have, like, I don’t know, Joyce, you remember, it’s like, if you have more than 250 neutrophils, then like you want to start antibiotics and you have like a higher, you know, and that’s the diagnosis for it.
The same way that you test CSF for bacteria that, indicates that you want to start antibiotics for example. That was beautiful. Genius. Yeah, that’s kind of the idea. And then like, if we, if I was playing with you guys, we try to pull up the sag ratio and see what we can remind each other about that. And that’s pretty much it.
And so who’s setting to your left. We can have. Okay, Alex. So why don’t you try next? Do I draw a new card since I played one? , so you don’t have to, because the idea would be to try to get rid of your cards first. So if Alex can play all five of his, you know, then boom game over in a sense, right.
But this is like the version. So this, this version is called flash rounds in a way that in a hospital you can kind of do flash rounds where you just like . Quickly talk about the patient and like, don’t go too much into the detail.
Alex Belzer: [00:32:54] Okay. So I think I’m gonna play multiple cards. You got dizziness on CSF and we got anti-histamine on cirrhosis and.
Dave Etler: [00:33:04] Going for it, ladies and gentlemen, I think I’m going to, like, I’m going to put this
Alex Belzer: [00:33:06] exciting. Would’ve put magnesemia on cirrhosis as well. And I think, well actually, but say like, can I attach things to
Paulius Mui: [00:33:15] cards that I yeah, so exactly you can. Yeah and
Alex Belzer: [00:33:19] that’s all the cards in my hand that I know what they mean.
So, so here we go. So CSF is related to dizziness. Cause if you have too much CSF, in your ventricles, then you can push on the vestibular nuclei and make some weird stuff, go on and get dizzy. Cirrhosis is a liver issue. , and I’m guessing that in some way, the liver is related to the metabolism of magnesium.
So if you have cirrhosis and you have decreased liver function and maybe you can get magnesemia the anti-histamines, I know that there is some processing of antihistamine drugs that is done by the liver, , which might be screwed up in cirrhosis. And then with cellulitis, I know that the wheel and flare reaction that’s associated with, , the type one hypersensitivity, , Is in the skin and if you have cellulitis, then you might have more skin destruction.
When you have a histamine release in the type one hypersensitivity. So anti-histamines, I don’t know how to finish that thought, but there’s, there’s a, there’s
Dave Etler: [00:34:26] a connection there. I promise. I just want to say that that was a lot of words. That sounded great. Thanks,
Paulius Mui: [00:34:33] Dave.
Anybody can feel free to fact check me.
Alex Belzer: [00:34:41] You’ve done. Good. Thank you. I would’ve played this card too, but I don’t even know what this card means.
Paulius Mui: [00:34:45] Yeah, it’s
Joyce Wahba: [00:34:47] a ARB. So it’s like a hypertension medication. That’s exactly right. Okay. Cool.
Paulius Mui: [00:34:53] Angiotensin receptor blocker. Yeah. Okay. So by the way, your connections were awesome. I think the only, like all of them were really creative and you did it in a way that I think like wasn’t the first thing that comes to mind.
One thing that I would say we should double check is, magnesium and cirrhosis. Like one thing that I think of, , I think magnesium might, I think it’s a kidney that it will be filtered through. , but I do think that. The cirrhosis and mag levels are you tend to have low mag in people with liver disease.
And I think, I don’t know if it’s just due to poor nutrition or other, like as just an associated thing. That’s what I think of, but the way I would double check it is just, you know, either Google or PubMed, magnesium and cirrhosis and see what comes up. And it actually has been a really interesting way for me to read a lot of pub med articles.
Like just get to explore the
Dave Etler: [00:35:49] connections. You know, , I will jump in with my knowledge and say that, magnesium deficiency is commonly associated. As you said, with, liver diseases and may result from low nutrient uptake. Like you suggested things like greater urinary secretion, low serum, albumin, concentration, hormone inactivation.
So yeah,
Alex Belzer: [00:36:06] it seems like it Dave, the
Dave Etler: [00:36:08] cuff. Yeah, I had all that knowledge in my
not
Paulius Mui: [00:36:12] holding his phone up. He is pub med. So is AJ next? Yeah, I am.
Alex Belzer: [00:36:21] All
AJ Chowdhury: [00:36:21] right, so asthma and anti-histamine. There you go.
Joyce Wahba: [00:36:26] Beautiful. I got that one. You have asthma, or you
Paulius Mui: [00:36:28] understand that
Dave Etler: [00:36:31] in this deck and
AJ Chowdhury: [00:36:33] Magnesemia and arrhythmia, those are the connections that I can make.
So with asthma, you can have allergy induced asthma, which you can treat with anti-histamines and arrhythmias. I know nothing about the heart, but I know that electrolytes can mess with the rhythm of the heart. So that’s my connection. There.
Paulius Mui: [00:36:56] That’s that’s amazing. So good. So like, if you, for example, if Dave was, , an award winning, , faculty attendings specializing in asthma, you know, he would prompt you to probably say something along the lines of like, What specific antihistamine would you use and what would be the dosing like to just push your knowledge to the next level, if this was like a, you know, a teaching session. , so that’s one way to kind of explore and deepen and challenge yourself, you know? Yeah. This
Dave Etler: [00:37:26] is pretty cool. Magnesium deficiency does, increase irregular heartbeats.
Paulius Mui: [00:37:31] So yeah. Yeah. So actually that, that is a really cool connection because. With torsades, which is this rhythm it’s if you look up torsades, it’s like twisting of the points from French.
It is when you’re, , just, you’re pretty much close to dying, but the way to treat that is that you give a lot of magnesium And interestingly magnesium, I don’t know, Joyce, if this rings a bell, , how it acts as a calcium channel blocker. And, that’s why it kind of blocks the, the rhythm that’s of the torsades and actually, you know, stabilizes the heart just filed that away
Dave Etler: [00:38:10] for four, , three months from now when she’s day one on her, her roof.
Have you
Paulius Mui: [00:38:32] guys
Alex Belzer: [00:38:32] seen the videos where people will. Like, you know, there’s hyperlinks and Wikipedia pages. And so people will try to like, yeah, speed run from like Ben Shapiro’s Wikipedia page to like Sonic the hedgehog just by like going through and like clicking stuff, that’s embedded in the Wikipedia page.
Cause like there’s this virtual network of Wikipedia pages and they’re all connected somehow. , this is exactly what that reminds me of except with medical knowledge and these nifty little cute cards.
Paulius Mui: [00:39:04] Awesome. All right. Nolan, right? Is that yeah.
Nolan Redetzke: [00:39:07] So I’m going to go with ACS, which I had to look up, but acute coronary syndrome, Hey, there you go.
And that could be, causing an arrhythmia. But also off of that, , cortisol could be a triggering. Triggering that, but then off of cortisol, we have
which is the excess cortisol, , causing that.
Paulius Mui: [00:39:30] So, yeah. Nice that’s work. Yeah. I mean, you’re getting the hang of it. And so that’s the idea is that. You, you know, explore what you don’t know together. And you’re somewhat vulnerable because like, I mean, it’s, you know, like you guys somewhat know each other.
I don’t know if you’ve hung out before, but yeah, but like that’s. You know, it takes a lot of courage, I think, to do that because we, you know, often in like lectures, you just sit and listen, and then if you’re answering anything, a lot of it is just like on your computer and you click away, like, yeah, you might have some like, I think we call them PBLs where you have to like Work together through like multiple choice questions or whatnot.
But this is, I think just really pushing you to that next level of, , exploring what being vulnerable and learning. I was actually
Alex Belzer: [00:40:18] curious about the cortisol can connect a precipitate. Like if you had just had like cortisol rush, can that precipitate, acute coronary
Paulius Mui: [00:40:25] syndrome? I don’t know if it would precipitate it.
I often think that if you’re having a, so ACS, acute coronary syndrome can, you could have, , Multiple things that go under it, but something like a STEMI, right? You have an ST elevation MI and if what I would connect cortisol to is that you’re, you know, you’re stressing your body and your natural response is going to release some cortisol levels.
And so it’s more of a response to that. That makes sense. I would think so. , but, and I mean, you could also think about that. Why are you having MI and is it related to, , like myocarditis for example, and, you would treat myocarditis. Actually, I don’t remember if you would give steroids, but you could kind of like, kind of go down that path.
And this is a good opportunity. Like, like, like I maybe should be knowing this, but, , like I admit, I don’t remember. And so I would go ahead and PubMed it or look it up and see what I can learn or maybe they’ve already looking things up. So,
Dave Etler: [00:41:21] I’m not, I’ve exhausted my data cap during today’s show. Well, this is, this is great.
I kind of enjoyed watching these guys go through it. And, talk about the connections. Love the idea. before we end the show, though, I wanted to, I would be remiss if I didn’t put you on the spot a little bit. Wait, can we
AJ Chowdhury: [00:41:41] take a second on the box at the bottom? It says distributed by low yield productions, LLC.
That is amazing.
Dave Etler: [00:41:52] Good one.
Paulius Mui: [00:41:54] Appreciate you noticing that. Yeah, I mean, yeah,
we
Alex Belzer: [00:42:02] all get it though. We all get it.
Dave Etler: [00:42:05] Beautiful. Yeah. So anyway, I’d be remiss if I didn’t put you on the spot to ask you how your first year went in the middle of a pandemic polys. ,
Paulius Mui: [00:42:15] well, I think overall it went really well. Obviously. I I’m still here. I’m smiling. , I learned a lot, , you know, I, so I’m in a family medicine program and it’s a lovely place it’s located at the entrance of a national park.
Yeah, it’s all those things. Yeah. They really make it easier to, I think, tolerate residency, but I I’m surrounded by. Great co-residents which I think make all the difference. And the pandemic has definitely changed how, , the things that normally happen. They didn’t for us There’s that. Social dynamic that really suffered, I think for everybody.
But like in our program, we have end of block resident parties. Whereas someone just get, you know, we get together and go to a park, get food, or do some activity together. So those are on hold. And because of that, we don’t get to see each other’s families and significant others. And so on. I think the patient interactions are certainly different.
Like, you know, and family med it, we see like acute urgent cases and we see chronic disease, you know, patients with chronic illnesses and manage those. And with the, with COVID a lot of the people with acute complaints, like those numbers have decreased. So I think that really impacted directly what.
What kind of, , chief complaints I was getting experience with and a lot of the people like we have a cold clinic section, so you, some of the patients are like, triaged for you to only be taken care of respiratory issues. And so, you know, like that’s not how normally things are. You just kind of adapt and work with that. I think, it was also, you know, like at the beginning everybody’s wearing masks and you like don’t know what the other people look like. It was really kind of interesting.
Dave Etler: [00:44:05] Gotten really good at recognizing people by their eyeballs only.
Joyce Wahba: [00:44:08] It’s gonna be a shock to the system to see the rest of their face, who are you!
Paulius Mui: [00:44:14] Okay. And I mean, they’re also, you know, A component of like taking care of COVID patients. And like, this is very much like I’m in the middle of this thing that is global. , and, actually like it’s, it’s your first that you’re–I remember, you know, reading, hearing about it and then.
Now I have patients with COVID on my list and I’m rounding on them and I’m trying to like be safe and like always wondering like, like, did I like wash my hands enough to like, you know, like, am I at risk or whatnot, but certainly, I don’t know. You know, this is my experience. I think overall it’s been really, really great.
And, like I’ve gotten, The vaccines and feel a lot more comfortable now, you know, and so on, but still, like, I don’t think we’re we’re done yet when it comes to letting our guard down. Yeah.
Dave Etler: [00:45:06] Joyce, here is an M4 going into emergency medicine, your family medicine. Resonant different specialty, but any advice for Joyce, as she looks forward to starting her new job in July.
Paulius Mui: [00:45:18] Congratulations. Where will you be? Joyce Harbor. UCLA. Oh, so awesome. Wow. I mean, I think it’s a, it’s a tough question. Like to broadly, you know, give advice. I think, I think that things that have gotten you this far, you’re just going to continue to do, and like, that’s like. You know, , I think you still like the learning curve I imagined was going to be like insurmountable, but it really isn’t too bad.
I think everybody has gone through this process who’s become a doctor and people relate to that experience of you being a new physician. I think, try to, I don’t know if you like the journal or reflect, but like, I still remember when I placed my first order ever as a physician. And like, it wasn’t like a Turkey sandwich.
It was like a CBC. It was like a three year old and they were sick, but like not really like toxic. And I was like, I don’t know if I should get this, like, this will hurt them. Like, you know, on peds we usually try to just like, be more conservative and, and actually started out my first rotation in the ed.
And that was really, really cool. And like, you’re going to have all these experiences, like I remember. There was a patient who I don’t even remember. It was like they were dizzy maybe and I did my like neuro assessment and it was kind of normal, but then I had them walk and something was off.
Like their gate was strange and I was like, okay, we probably need to like, get an MRI and my attending, , I was like, yeah, just do it. And I’m like, aren’t you going to go in like, double check what I told you. And I was like, wait really? And then, and then, yeah. And you’re like fitting in this MRI. I’m like, Oh my gosh.
It’s like 2000 or something dollars. I’m like this one click is going to change. Like what happens to this person? And then now, you know, like you’re just ordering CTS and everything left and right. And so, like, I just think that this is such an exciting part of your growth that like, appreciate it. Enjoy it.
Take like, like care for yourself. Like, don’t forget your priorities. Like I know that’s my, like, I think. The same advice that anybody like going through med school, too, like enjoy the process and, and, you know, like if it, if you don’t have to do residency the way that everybody else does residency, I think just find what works for you and take care of yourself.
Like along the process.
Dave Etler: [00:47:39] That sounds like fantastic advice. , well, I mean, so Paulius , getting back to the game, where can people find out
Paulius Mui: [00:47:45] more about table rounds? Well, you could check out our website, usually have all of our information there. It’s, it’s play table rounds.com and, , hopefully, you know, you’ll see your classmates playing it, and if you don’t see them, tell them about them. We’re doing some research with this game to just see if it can be part of a curricula in different places. Yeah. So feel free to explore and I’m available for contact. You can share my email if people want to email me, my email is Paulius@bu.edu and I’m happy to answer any questions.
I really appreciate you guys having me on and being you know, courageous to try the game and. Yeah. Thanks. Good idea. For the game.
Joyce Wahba: [00:48:27] I think it would be kind of funny or fun to have like joker cards. This could be just like a little tiny starter pack on the side where it’s just like random words that people have to connect. Like. Donut or something like that where it’s just like, okay, I have a Metformin. Okay. Diabetes, some like random, like everyday objects or something like that, that you just have to like throw in
Dave Etler: [00:48:48] there.
Nice. There you go. Love it.
Paulius Mui: [00:48:52] We’ll have to call it that Joyce’s dresses edition.
Dave Etler: [00:48:59] Well, thank you so much for being with us today on the Short Coat Podcast, it’s been a lot of fun. And that’s our show. Joyce AJ, Alex, Nolan. Thank you for being on the show with me today.
AJ Chowdhury: [00:49:07] Thanks for having us. Thanks for being so I don’t know.
Alex Belzer: [00:49:10] Insert good adjective here. Okay.
Dave Etler: [00:49:12] I will take it. And what kind of jerk would I be if I didn’t?
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