A day in the life of a student
Yale Medicine Magazine, 2016 - Autumn
A first-year medical student navigates the new curriculum.
Jonathan Hanna
6:50 a.m.
Jonathan Hanna’s iPhone alarm plays its preprogrammed “Uplift” alarm tune at 6:45. If we’re honest, he usually hits “snooze” at least once.7:00 a.m.
He is up and takes Apollos, our 7-month-old puppy, out to the yard, then feeds him breakfast.7:10 a.m.
Hanna starts the coffee, brushes his teeth, shaves, and puts a quick dab of gel in his hair. He dresses in slacks, a button-down shirt, and navy tie, and downs a steaming-hot cup of coffee. He takes the puppy out once more, then returns to wake me for work.
Jonathan Hanna
6:50 a.m.
Jonathan Hanna’s iPhone alarm plays its preprogrammed “Uplift” alarm tune at 6:45. If we’re honest, he usually hits “snooze” at least once.7:00 a.m.
He is up and takes Apollos, our 7-month-old puppy, out to the yard, then feeds him breakfast.7:10 a.m.
Hanna starts the coffee, brushes his teeth, shaves, and puts a quick dab of gel in his hair. He dresses in slacks, a button-down shirt, and navy tie, and downs a steaming-hot cup of coffee. He takes the puppy out once more, then returns to wake me for work.
Jonathan Hanna
7:30 a.m.
The Yale shuttle app says the bus is 3 minutes from the stop, four blocks from our Cottage Street apartment. He grabs his briefcase and runs.
Jonathan Hanna
8:00 a.m.
Instead of going to class, Hanna sets up his laptop, mouse, and mouse pad at a work station in the library. “I absorb material much more efficiently and effectively by chugging through textbooks instead of listening to lectures,” he says. “It’s really whatever works for you; lots of people would not be able to read for hours on end, and for them listening to a lecture and taking notes is more effective. … The beauty of Yale Med is it gives you the freedom to choose which method you want to use.”Hanna’s preferred method includes online textbooks. “I use a million different sources. I usually have some kind of basic science text … and some pathology/pathophysiology text to understand the disease process. Then I have a clinically oriented text that describes clinical management of disease. My text of choice, which I love dearly, is called Current Medical Diagnosis & Treatment.”Hanna also uses such supplementary sources as review books for breaking down dense concepts. He loosely aligns his studying with the class schedule, which covers one topic at a time. “I often go off track because there are certain things I like to learn more in depth. Like today, one of the topics is chronic kidney disease, and I’ll study that more in depth on my own.
Jonathan Hanna
9:50 a.m.
With a takeout breakfast from the hospital cafeteria, he makes it to Hope 309 in time for a workshop, led today by Francis Perry Wilson, M.D., M.S., a nephrologist, and Sudhir Perincheri, M.D., Ph.D., a pathologist. Two faculty members lead each workshop, helping to conceptualize and expand upon the information studied independently or taught in lecture.Hanna chooses a seat at the end of the 8-foot table, which fills most of the space in the classroom. About 10 students open up their laptops. Hanna eats his breakfast—bacon, eggs, corned beef hash, and a blueberry muffin—while the class discusses kidney disease. The students look at pathology slides of kidney specimens, make diagnoses, and plan treatment for three cases. The session ends at noon.
Jonathan Hanna
12:00 p.m.
Hanna heads for the gym in the basement of Harkness dormitory for a workout that is meticulously timed (with his iPhone) and executed—a circuit of weighted squats, lunges, and crunches. The gym is small, so he does 10 sprints in the hallway. “I do cardio and weights together so I don’t waste time.” Panting, he changes back to his slacks, shirt, and tie.
Jonathan Hanna
12:30 p.m.
It’s a sunny day, so Hanna chats with classmates in the Harkness courtyard before a clinical skills class at 1:00. Today, they are interviewing standardized patients. Hanna reviews the interview questions on his iPhone. “I’m good at the interview process, but I don’t have it memorized. I’ll memorize it when I understand why I’m asking the questions I’m asking, but I feel comfortable with patient interviewing in general.”
Jonathan Hanna
3:45 p.m.
Hanna grabs a snack from a food truck on Cedar Street. Then it’s time to meet with Daniel Coman, Ph.D., an associate research scientist in radiology and biomedical imaging, to discuss a research project Hanna is working on this summer. They walk across the street to the computer labs in the basement of the Boardman Building. To their disappointment, they do not have the login information they need, so they plan to meet at another time. The warm spring weather makes Hanna change his plans for the afternoon. “Usually, I’d go to the library and study again for a few hours, but it’s so nice, and I’m pretty caught up, so I think I’m just going to go home and relax.”4:30 p.m.
He takes the shuttle back to East Rock and takes Apollos to the backyard to play. After many tries, we teach the pup to catch a Frisbee in midair. It is a joyous occasion. Hanna goes back inside, and I heat up some leftovers for dinner.7:30 p.m.
After dinner we head out to Hamden for Bible study and prayer with about a dozen friends. Rob Dunlop leads the group at his house, and we are just finishing up the Epistles of John. We leave at 10:00. Hanna drives us home, takes the dog outside one last time, and falls into bed about 11:00. “Got a lot to do tomorrow,” he says.
Jonathan Hanna
First-year medical student Jonathan Hanna greets a standardized patient while his classmates and Auguste Fortin observe. After the encounter, they will offer praise and critiques of his approach to the interview.
This spring, Yale Medicine asked Frankie Stiles-Hanna, a 2015 journalism graduate from the University of North Carolina, to document a day in the life of first-year medical student Jonathan Hanna, who happens to be her husband. On a Thursday in May, Stiles-Hanna shadowed her husband throughout his day, in the library studying, in class, at the gym, in a session with standardized patients, and at a Bible study in the evening. What follows is her report on a day in the life of a medical student.
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