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Anki Internship

“The single biggest change that Anki brings about is that it means memory is no longer a haphazard event, to be left to chance. Rather, it guarantees I will remember something, with minimal effort. That is, Anki makes memory a choice.” Michael A. Nielsen, “Augmenting Long-term Memory”

Anki Internship

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Powerful, intelligent flash cards.
Remembering things just became much easier.

Remember Anything
From images to scientific markup, Anki has got you covered.

Remember Anywhere
Review on Windows, Mac, Linux, iOS, Android, and any device with a web browser.

Remember Efficiently
Only practice the material that you’re about to forget.

About Anki

Anki is a program which makes remembering things easy. Because it’s a lot more efficient than traditional study methods, you can either greatly decrease your time spent studying, or greatly increase the amount you learn.

Anyone who needs to remember things in their daily life can benefit from Anki. Since it is content-agnostic and supports images, audio, videos and scientific markup (via LaTeX), the possibilities are endless.
For example:

  • Learning a language
  • Studying for medical and law exams
  • Memorizing people’s names and faces
  • Brushing up on geography
  • Mastering long poems
  • Even practicing guitar chords!

Features

Synchronization
Use the free AnkiWeb synchronization service to keep your cards in sync across multiple devices.

Flexibility
From card layout to review timing, Anki has a wealth of options for you to customize.

Media-Rich
Embed audio clips, images, videos and scientific markup on your cards, with precise control over how it’s shown.

Optimized
Anki will handle decks of 100,000+ cards with no problems.

Fully Extensible
There are a large number of add-ons available.

Open Source
Because the code and storage format is open, your important data is safe.

“The single biggest change that Anki brings about is that it means memory is no longer a haphazard event, to be left to chance. Rather, it guarantees I will remember something, with minimal effort. That is, Anki makes memory a choice.”

Michael A. Nielsen, “Augmenting Long-term Memory”

“No other application [. ] comes remotely close to Anki in terms of the number and power of features, flexibility in study, or implementation of spaced repetition.”

K. M. Lawson, “Anki All the Way”

“I’ve been using Anki for two years now, and I just wanted to thank you personally for contributing to the single most obvious improvement in my quality of life. I’m not being hyperbolic: consistent use of Anki has opened more doors for me intellectually than I could have imagined two years ago. And being a poor student, I’ll be forever grateful that you’ve provided this software open-source and free of charge.”

Keldin, via email

Download Anki

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Two variants are available: Qt5 vs Qt6.

Download Anki for Windows 10/11 (23.10 Qt6)

Download Anki for Windows 10/11 (23.10 Qt5)

Installation and troubleshooting guide

Change notes and older releases

Downloads

If you’re on an M1/M2 Mac, pick the Apple Silicon version for better performance/battery life. Older machines will need to use the Intel version. Two variants of the Intel version are available: Qt5 vs Qt6.

Download Anki for macOS 11+ (Intel, 23.10 Qt6)

Download Anki for macOS 11+ (Apple Silicon, 23.10 Qt6)

Download Anki for macOS 10.13.4+ (Intel, 23.10 Qt5)

Installation and troubleshooting guide

Change notes and older releases

Downloads

Two variants are available: Qt5 vs Qt6.

Download Anki for 2018+ (23.10 Qt6)

Download Anki for 2018+ (23.10 Qt5)

Installation and troubleshooting guide

Change notes and older releases

Source code

Anki’s source is available on GitHub. There are instructions for building in the docs/ folder. If you encounter problems with the build system please let us know, but please note the expectation is that you are able to dig into basic issues by yourself. If you have no programming experience, please use the packaged version instead.

If you encounter bugs while running Anki from source, please check to see if you can reproduce them in the packaged version, as the Qt version or other libraries on your system can be the cause of some problems.

Development

The latest code is located on GitHub.

Please see the files in docs/ for further instructions.

Translating Anki

Please see this page for info on translating Anki into a different language.

iPhone/iPad/iPod Touch

AnkiMobile is a paid companion to the free computer program, for use on Apple devices. By purchasing the app, you help to support Anki’s future development.

If you can’t afford the app, you can still use AnkiWeb.

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Android Devices

AnkiDroid is written by a separate group of people. As it was based off the free desktop code I make available, the AnkiDroid developers decided to make the Android version free as well.

Prereading before gensurg intern year

The secure live connection into the operating room

I’m a nontrad med student (MS4) who just applied into General Surgery. I have a few months off between my graduation and July 1 and really need some advice on what resources I should use to keep my medical knowledge current before starting internship. A lot of residents say things along the lines of “don’t worry, just enjoy the time off / you will re-learn everything” but having taken a couple years off during medical school for personal reasons, I know how hard it is to get back into the swing of things and really want to do whatever I can to prepare. Don’t get me wrong, I plan to enjoy this vacation time, but I would like to spend a few hrs per day studying and working so my brain doesn’t turn to mush.

I’d appreciate your help trying to come up with a sample “curriculum” of things I can do. Here are some options I’m considering. Please help me prioritize or suggest other resources that might be better suited to this goal. Also I’d appreciate strategies on how to make learning more “active”. I like q-banks bc they help me stay focused, but I also like the structure that comes from reading textbooks.

– Reread DeVirgilio
– Go through AMBOSS questions for Step 2 again (just the surgery questions) – as my subscription won’t expire for a few months more
– Start reading one of the gen surg textbooks (I’ve read a bit of Sabiston and really like it. However, I’m a slow reader and it’s a thick textbook. Based on my current rate, I don’t think I can get through more than half of it before intern year.
– Read Marino’s ICU book
– Do additional surgery qbank questions – not sure which is a good qbank – maybe find a way to access score/truelearn questions (please advise if this makes sense)
– Onlinemeded CaseX – interactive clinical case scenarios
– study the Fisher red “Absite book” – make an anki deck and go through these “facts”

Thank you so so much. This has really been stressing me out. Very grateful for your advice.

WinslowPringle

Full Member
Joined Sep 29, 2014 Messages 433 Reaction score 845

Don’t go overboard with it but sure those are some things you can read if you want. Doing all of what you mentioned sounds like a lot and I’d get burned out personally and would pick one thing and move on to more if I finished it.

I’d recommend Fiser – there’s a version with a question bank as well. Going through and making an Anki deck would be helpful especially if you are familiar with Anki and will use it. Also agree that the ICU book is helpful.

After you match, contact your program and ask about their reading/study plans. Some places do a specific textbook or program a year and some purchase it for you or have library access or an educational fund.

There is a SESAP which is a question and detailed answer bank. Expensive but good. I saved this for dedicated ABSITE study and went through it in detailed review the two months prior.

Dr.LeoSpaceman

Senior Member
Joined Jun 15, 2004 Messages 1,292 Reaction score 1,339

My advice: Take a break.

Do something easy like read through Fiser. Covering some of the basics in the ICU book isn’t a bad idea either. Focus on diagnostic workup and management of common surgical issues and post-op issues/complications.

But honestly, the best thing you can do is take this opportunity to rest and recharge. Residency is a slog, and going in “fresh” is likely more valuable than having spent 6 weeks cramming in knowledge.

mikeGR

Full Member
Joined May 26, 2011 Messages 112 Reaction score 119

Another idea would be to study something that you will never get formal training on but you will be doing for the rest of your life.

If you insist on something relevant to surgery, you can consider studying the fundamentals of radiology (basic interpretation principles, different contrast agents, phases, protocols, etc). That will give you a huge edge over your peers in residency and it will be really useful in the middle of the night.

Not directly related to surgery, but on a similar note – you can learn the basics of leadership and/or management. As a surgical trainee and later a surgeon, communication, negotiation, and conflict resolution skills will be very important for both your career and your life.

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If you learn the basics in any of the above fields, you will get the opportunity to develop these skills quite a bit during residency.

AnatomyGrey12

Another idea would be to study something that you will never get formal training on but you will be doing for the rest of your life.

If you insist on something relevant to surgery, you can consider studying the fundamentals of radiology (basic interpretation principles, different contrast agents, phases, protocols, etc). That will give you a huge edge over your peers in residency and it will be really useful in the middle of the night.

Not directly related to surgery, but on a similar note – you can learn the basics of leadership and/or management. As a surgical trainee and later a surgeon, communication, negotiation, and conflict resolution skills will be very important for both your career and your life.

If you learn the basics in any of the above fields, you will get the opportunity to develop these skills quite a bit during residency.

Are there any particular resources you would recommend for the radiology basics?

Banco

Full Member
Joined May 28, 2014 Messages 2,729 Reaction score 4,174

I would honestly just do a few amboss/uworld questions a day and call it. Everything else seems overboard.

Feelgood MD

Full Member

What is the typical timeline at this point for someone at the end of 4th year about to start surgery? How many weeks of “time off” is usual? Don’t mean to hijack but was curious and figured it would make sense to clarify if there are many resources that could be used.

balaguru

Full Member
Joined Aug 16, 2007 Messages 274 Reaction score 211

I started reading Schwartz cover to cover before intern year. Don’t remember how far I got before residency but I eventually finished it and I continued to read and re-read it during 1st and 2nd year. Our conferences were pimp sessions meant to prepare residents for oral boards and it helped me make a good impression during those and also helped me score high on the ABSITE without studying specifically for it.

Lem0nz

Broke Rule 3 of GS
Joined Sep 30, 2011 Messages 1,066 Reaction score 2,749

I would take the time off and not study, at all, until residency starts. What we don’t do a good job communicating to medical students and incoming interns is that your first three to six months are not really learning surgery, they’re learning how to be a resident, learning the culture of the institution, and learning how to get things done. Being “the intern” that knows all the things doesn’t give you a leg up on that at all. Being the intern who’s always available, always offers to help, and is excited and wears a smile (even if you’re dead inside) is worth way more in those first six months, for better or worse, than raw medical knowledge or surgical knowledge. Many *many* interns are judged on their ability to be an intern for the first 6-9 months and attendings don’t start really invest in teaching you surgery until like, Jan-Feb in a lot of places when you’ve shown that you have what it takes, you’re sticking around, and you can be taught and follow instructions well. It doesn’t mean they don’t care or won’t teach you anything – just means that you need a foundation first and in a lot of places that foundation actually comes from PGY2-5 residents rather than the attendings for this first piece. That’s normal.

Time off and enjoying your life will give you that energy you need to be the star intern who has no trouble coming in at 5am and leaving at 7pm because you want to help and get it right. Reading. won’t help you with that.

You will of course need to start studying at some point. I recommend, if I’m being honest, around September. Gives you two months to focus on doing a good job learning how to be a resident and then you can change gears towards your first ABSITE.

Hope that helps. This is just my experience. Others have studied into the ground and absolutely crushed it and are fountains of youth. Others don’t study at all, are lazy, and fail miserably. I can’t tell you who you are. My experience is what I would say is the average experience for 80% of residents. Maybe others feel differently and if so I would take their opinions to heart as well.

Maddie Otto
Maddie Otto

Maddie is a second-year medical student at the University of Notre Dame in Sydney and one of Level Medicine’s workshop project managers. Prior to studying medicine, she worked and studied as a musician in Melbourne. She has a background in community arts, which combined her love for both the arts and disability support. She is an advocate for intersectional gender equity, and is passionate about accessibility and inclusive practice within the healthcare system.

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