viernes, 26 de abril de 2019

What can future doctors learn from patients with rare diseases? - On Medicine

What can future doctors learn from patients with rare diseases? - On Medicine

Timothy Badcock

Timothy Badcock MBiol MBChB is a graduate from the University of Warwick, UK in 2013. He is currently a General Practice Specialty Trainee (GPST4) in the West Midlands and studying for his second year of a part-time Masters in Public Health at the University of Birmingham, UK. Timothy’s interests include genetics, encouraging lifestyle approaches to health and quality improvement.






What can future doctors learn from patients with rare diseases?

As it does every year, Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases partnered with Findacure in its Student Voice essay contest. The overall winner will be published in the journal on Rare Disease Day, and we are proud to present the other finalists here. For this entry, undergraduate and masters students from around the world were asked to use a case study to demonstrate what future doctors can learn from patients with rare diseases. In this blog, Timothy Badcock describes his experience in helping a patient with X-linked agammaglobulinaemia.

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario