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In the last six weeks of MCS 2, you will participate in a self-contained mini-course, called a selective, usually consisting of six two-hour classes in the regular MCS 2 slot. The goal of the selective is to give you the opportunity for more intensive exploration of a topic which especially interests you. Please read the descriptions carefully. Check your e-mail for a memo asking you to choose which ones you wish to take. (In most cases, you will be assigned your first or second choice.) Descriptions of MCS 2 Selectives
Over the last three decades, the relationship between human rights and healthcare has become expanded and explored. This selective will provide an introduction to human rights discourse. It will use international accepted documents to provide the language and foreground with which to describe health concerns and physicians roles in the violation of and fulfillment of human rights. Amanika Kumar, MS4 Read the syllabus This course is intended to enrich students' training as doctors by familiarizing them with several broad themes in US medical history. These themes will place medicine in its wider social, cultural, political, and economic context so that we may better understand the significance of health care in Americans’ everyday lives. Instructor: Jonathan Anzalone. Read the syllabus. LITERATURE AND MEDICINE: Becoming a better doctor through poetry. SHORT CATALOG DESCRIPTION: This selective has a very simple primary goal: to read and discuss, perhaps write some good poems. You will be given ten poems, two per class meeting. Each poem will be related to health, illness, health care, grief, or dying. Maria A. Basile, M.D. is a Clinical Assistant Professor in the Dept of Surgery at Stony Brook. She is a colorectal surgeon and attending physician at John T. Mather Memorial Hospital and St. Charles Hospital in Port Jefferson. Read the syllabus. Core Concepts in Geriatrics Long Island Geriatric Education Center offers a selective as part of the MCS 2 course. The selective will cover core topics of significance in the field of geriatrics and gerontology. The curriculum explores physiologic and psychological aspects of aging as well as medical-legal topics. The course also focuses on practical aspects of caring for older people, such as communication and sensory loss, comprehensive assessment tools, community resources, systems of care, and functioning as part of an interdisciplinary team. This course is open to students in the following disciplines: medicine, nursing, school of health technology and management (physician assistant, physical therapy and occupational therapy) and social work. Sessions are a mixture of both large group lectures and small group discussion/demonstration sessions. This selective offers a unique opportunity to work closely with students in other health care fields. Drs. Suzanne Fields, Peter Kuemmel, and Lisa Strano-Paul. Read the syllabus. NB This course meets in a slightly different time frame (3 to 5 PM). This is also not a small group class, it is joint with other HSC students. Please be sure you are available before you sign up for this course. Check the syllabus for details. Holding on and Letting Go: Making End of Life Decisions in Jewish Law This selective will explore critical end-of-life medical issues in the context of both contemporary bioethics and Jewish law. We will explore principles such as autonomy in the light of American jurisprudence and Jewish law and also deal with the spiritual and religious understanding of death and suffering in the light of current medical advances. Hands -on class activities bring students face-to-face with real -life situations: writing a health-care proxy directive, role-playing an ethics committee, and communicating bad news to dying patients and their families. Instructor: Rabbi Zev Shostack. Read the syllabus. Parenting and Professionalism This selective was adapted from a similar course created by faculty members of the Child and Adolescent Psychiatry division of the New Jersey Medical School in Newark. The purpose of this selective is to increase student awareness of the many factors that may influence current and future decisions regarding career path and family planning. The ultimate goal is to allow students to make informed decisions regarding specialty choice, and to ease concerns regarding the ability to balance the demands of their personal and professional lives. Instructor / Mentors Karen Naar MS4 and , Daniel Lozeau MS4, and Jennifer Ripton, MD Read the syllabus. This selective will present the role of hospice in the terminal care of the dying. The hospice philosophy, our own death awareness, the interdisciplinary team approach and many significant issues the physician faces as the patient/family enters this period of crisis will be presented. Experiential explorations will be used in conjunction with text and lecture. Kathy van Steen, Hospice Patient Care Volunteer. Read the syllabus Sspirituality and Health Care: Illness is a physical, psychological, and spiritual crisis. It holds for patients both danger and opportunity. A growing body of literature suggests that illness is a powerful spiritual experience for both patients and theri physicians and that both physicians and patients can experience spiritual growth in the partnership of healing. This selective will address some of the most important questions in spirituality and healing:
Read the syllabus. (Michael A.Vetrano, M.Div., Ph.D.) Decision making in the ICU Decision Making in the ICU will be a seminar series for students who want to explore this topic through reading, discussion, class presentation and writing exercises. Topics include the use of critical care resources, setting goals of critical care intervention, predicting long term outcome, and the costs of critical care. Appropriate for students interested in health care policy, critical care medicine (medical, surgical, pediatric, neurologic), geriatrics, end of life care, health care resource management. Feroza Daroowalla, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, Stony Brook Univ: Feroza.Daroowalla@stonybrook.edu Read the syllabus. 9-11:The Anatomy of a Healthcare Disaster Description: This course demonstrates a multi-disciplinary approach that considers medical, psychological, and legal conditions when treating complex post-disaster cases, like those among World Trade Center disaster responders, and concludes with preparing and conducting an evaluation interview with an actual WTC responder. Dr. Ben Luft benjamin.luft@stonybrook.edu Read the Syllabus NB This course meets at Dr. Luft’s office in Islandia which is about 15 min. drive from SUNY. You must be willing to travel to the office to take this class. HSC 500 The HSC 500 course when taken in first year, fulfills the MCS 2 selective requirement. If you took HSC 500 in first year please register and select HSC 500 for all three choices. |
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