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NEJM Resident 360 helps you prepare for your next rotation quickly and efficiently, provides support for coping with the pressures of resident life, and equips you to take the next major step in your career.
Rotation Prep supports your learning with an overview of the basics, and expertly chosen resources that provide the foundational information you need. Explore the educational features in Learning Lab, ways to connect with peers in Resident Lounge, and find career tips and guidance in Career.
Exploring Learning Lab, Resident Lounge, Career, and Discussions is FREE. Access to Rotation Prep is FREE to you through your institution's subscription, or you may connect with an individual subscription to NEJM, NEJM Journal Watch, or NEJM Knowledge+. Choose your current rotation below to get started.
Whether it’s internal medicine, primary care, endocrinology, emergency medicine or surgery, womens’ health questions present themselves in a range of specialties far beyond OBGYN. When should HRT be commenced? How best to counsel and manage a woman with menorrhagia? What should I do about her contraception...
We have invited the residents and faculty from the Medstar Washington Hospital Center/Georgetown University Internal Medicine Residency Program to engage in a journal club discussion about an article whose title will be announced at the time of its publication. The discussion will focus on what the results mean to your practice...
Clinical training is a priority during medical school and residency, but trainees shouldn’t put the rest of their lives on hold. How can you maximize your efficiency in and out of the hospital to live your best trainee life? Join our panel of experts and moderators as they share their tips for efficiency in clinical work and education on the wards and...
Communication is key in all relationships. Effective and compassionate communication by physicians and other health care providers has been demonstrated to improve clinical outcomes, treatment adherence, patient satisfaction, and to reduce malpractice claims. For health care providers...
Although every resident develops his or her own style for each of these roles, the following practical strategies were discussed in a NEJM Resident 360 discussion (How to Lead a Team on the Wards: The Art to Being an Effective Resident).
For many medical trainees, transitioning from having a question for a research project to taking the next steps is difficult. Finding an appropriate mentor, getting ethics approval, collecting data, performing analyses, and writing up a project for publication are particularly hard when added to the pressures and stresses of medical school or residency.