Dr. Dave Campbell, Chief Medical Correspondent, Morning Joe/MSNBCAssistant Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Central Florida College of Medicine
and
Al Moses, 4th year medical student, University of Central Florida College of Medicine
New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo implored other cities and states to prepare for the worst. The pace of COVID-19 in New York City is accelerating beyond our wildest nightmares.
“This will be an American problem across the board,” NYC Mayor Bill Di Blasio said on Fox News. “It will just take some time to reach full strength in some places.” New York University offered early graduation to fourth year senior medical students to assist in the City and State’s accelerating efforts to combat the crisis. The announcement was sent to medical students earlier this week.
The ethical dilemma engrained in training medical personnel is as age-old as the practice of medicine itself. How do we train incoming medical practitioners while preserving patients’ right to receive equal and adequate healthcare? To complicate matters more, what is the role of the medical student during a healthcare crisis, such as our current situation with COVID-19?
Canadian physician and one of the four founding fathers of Johns Hopkins University, Sir William Osler, is credited with the subtitle to this article. If he were alive today, Dr. Osler may have something to say about accelerating medical school graduation to serve the greater good. He created the first residency program for specialty training and was first to bring medical students from the classroom to the bedside for clinical training.
As healthcare supplies dwindle and patient load increases, our healthcare providers are being overworked and are at increasing risk of becoming ill. This will worsen in the coming weeks. Combined with our already previous shortage of practitioners, our system is in danger of running out of providers. A potential solution to this issue is the early integration of medical students into the field by accelerating their graduation by only a couple months. Medical schools have already canceled in-person classes replacing course instruction with on-line education. How much more do fourth-year medical students need to learn before being allowed to pitch in as physicians?
“With graduation only a couple of months away, fourth-year medical students have the experience and knowledge to help mitigate this crisis,” William Wallace, 3rd year medical student at St. George’s University told us. “However, this young workforce is not being allowed to aid in the fight. I believe accelerating their degrees will permit these young doctors to serve as a valuable extra set of hands, and being on the young side, they should be less susceptible to the more serious symptoms of COVID-19.”
This concept is being implemented in Italy to offset the growing number of sick that are currently overwhelming their healthcare system. In contrast, in the United States, many medical schools have postponed clinical responsibilities for students, leaving them anxious and in fear of the impact this may have on their career.
As expected, there are disparate opinions. “The fourth-year medical student curriculum is designed with redundancy, similar to many third-year rotations we have already completed,” Jake Cotton, a fourth-year medical student in the U.S. told us. “To be exposed to [this pandemic response] and learn what hospital systems are doing could be invaluable should we be faced with this type of outbreak again in our careers.”
“This is an all hands-on-deck situation in the medical arena,” Sirikanya Sellers, another 4th year medical student exclaimed. “Most if not all of us have finished our required medical school training and would normally use this time to celebrate and go on vacations with family and friends. Instead, we are waiting in our social-distancing room as the days blur together.”
There are risks and benefits to consider with the graduation acceleration plan. Adding stress to already overworked house-staff and attending physicians, called upon to train the greenhorns may be counterproductive. That training will be less efficient in a time of crisis when lack of efficiency could cost lives. Patients will receive care from these newly inducted doctors that has less basis in clinical experience and judgment.
Despite the inexperience, new doctors will be compassionate and eager to care for patients and get the experience that might otherwise take years to garner. No matter how you analyze it a fourth-year medical student quickly minted as a physician has much more to learn.
“[Medical students] are way smarter and more helpful than people give them credit for,” a first-year emergency medicine resident told us. “I would not send a brand new [resident] to see new patients in the emergency department unless they have something simple, but [they can be useful by following] up on the other patients labs; they can watch for changes in vitals and they can help us prevent dropping the ball on the super sick ones in the emergency department.”
Even as NYU proceeds with its plan to accelerate medical students into the workforce, the precedent has already been set in Europe. CNN reported that medical students in Italy could start working as doctors immediately. Other countries are following suit.








