91茄子

Diary of a clinical academic

Published on
十二月 19, 2003
Last updated
五月 22, 2015

Rob Sneyd is professor of anaesthesia at the Peninsula Medical School at Plymouth, and The 91茄子S asked him to keep a diary to give some idea of how medical academics seek to balance the three aspects of their work.

Sunday
My week normally starts on Sunday evening when I come into the hospital to see patients for my neurosurgical operating list for Monday.

Clearly the night before brain surgery is a pretty stressful time for people so I need to be there to give them proper attention and enough time to discuss things.

Monday
I am in the operating theatre all day. I get to the hospital for 8.15 for an 8.30 start. Theatre can be stressful at times, but we have a good team. Things often over-run. Last Monday I had a medical board management meeting that started at 5.30.

Tuesday
Up to the hospital to see my patients from yesterday - it is to be hoped that all are well. After that, it's back into the car to drive to university for office work and meetings. Often I go to other medical school locations, such as Truro and Exeter. I have regional and national responsibilities for the Royal College of Anaesthetists, the medical school, the Department of Health and other bodies. I also need time for computer work - I get up to 100 emails a day.

Wednesday
This is the main meetings day for the medical school, and meetings tend to be back-to-back until evening and through lunch. As associate dean I have responsibility for resources, IT, multimedia and various other things.

Thursday and Friday
These two days are always different, with lots of travelling and endless papers and emails. I do my research writing in gaps and often in the evenings. My MD/PhD students (currently there are five of them) do not get the attention they deserve. I make sure they are well supported by putting together strong supervisory teams.

I also mentor first and second-year students, which I love doing. The work varies from hardly any to absolutely masses depending on the particular problems they might have. There are also endless human resources issues, and I have done everything from chairing formal and informal disciplinary procedures to conducting inquiries.

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