
I think you can achieve it better than not studying.
It feels like a talented person is studying and somehow coping.
It’s impossible for an ordinary person.
It sounds as if that person had talent, doesn’t it?
>>3
If you didn’t stick to surgery and went in other directions, there might have been fruitful opportunities.
Takeda-kun is from the Yokoi University School of Medicine.
He was the kind of person who could study at a top level at places like Kaisei.
>>4
Why do they keep making medical mistakes as if they have no basic knowledge?
I can’t believe this.
>>7
Only when obtaining a qualification do I have a knowledgeable type.
>>7
The reason you’re clumsy with your technique is because it doesn’t get tested.
Usually, it’s said that such types are encouraged by their supervising professors to proceed in research…
>>4
Yokohama City University School of Medicine is really amazing…
>>4
Even if you can study, it means nothing if you can’t use it.
It is said that it is impossible for explosive types.
Only those who can continue to keep going will reach it.
I was able to get it after studying.
My dad gave up on his challenge and decided to become a dentist instead.
Well, it’s impossible to get into medical school without talent.
Even ordinary people face obstacles when they study hard as if they were preparing for a big exam.
A friend from university graduated from a liberal arts department, worked in a general company for a few years, and then resolutely decided to enter medical school again, ultimately becoming a doctor.
You must have put in an incredible effort, but it can be said that no matter when you start, it’s still possible.
Conversely, it can also be said that you can achieve it simply by studying.
>>13
There’s no practical training right now.
>>17
(You don’t know about the OSCE…)
>>19
In both the fourth and sixth years, OSCE has just become legally compliant, and rather, it has now become essential to have practical skills.
I don’t know the real Takeda-kun, but considering everything up to this point, it makes me think there might have been some sort of backing, and I hate that feeling.
>>14
I heard that surgeons are in high demand and that hospitals are desperate for them due to a severe shortage.
They only talk about things until you get in, but it’s pretty tough after you enter as well.
>>15
If you don’t have strength, you’ll die…
>>15
It’s tough to get into medical school.
It’s tougher since entering medical school.
During my residency, I can relax a bit, but…
Being a resident is the worst hell.
>>35
My third year of solo night shifts is probably at its peak.
At places like the Faculty of Medicine at Shimane University, you can manage even without talent.
It’s around a deviation value of 65.
>>16
That’s expensive…
It’s obvious, but aiming for it like Miyahara from K2 and passing on the first try without repeating a year and passing the national exam straight… that’s just completely fantasy.
>>22
It’s you, Miyasaka. Don’t make the mistake again.
>>22
In the countryside, there are quite a few…
I don’t want to be a surgeon either.
Many people think that getting into university is the goal, but after entering, they often get knocked down quite hard.
Before I knew it, Takeda’s former colleague has also joined the battle.
It became amazing.
>>26
The accounts and blogs of the victims’ families are coming together rapidly…
I don’t think the state Takeda-kun is in is a problem with the performance of his brain.
The hell of being a medical exam repeat student is something that can’t be compared to being a university repeat student…
There is an age restriction.
Hurry up.
It feels like a mild chocolate.
>>33
Chocolata is aware that it would be bad if his hobbies were discovered, and he has solid skills as a doctor, so it’s actually quite the opposite.
My friend became a doctor, and they were really smart.
I think there are quite a few people who vaguely believe that if they pass the medical school entrance exam, they will automatically become a doctor.
>>36
Those who say things like “the national exam pass rate is around 94% every year” need to be reminded that it’s an exam that only those who have passed the graduation exams can take.
>>53
The national exam is a test where it is predetermined that 10% will fail.
My former colleague has joined the fray, but Takeda-kun Zo is quite terrible too…
Takeida is confidently lying…
>>37
I had a hard time at my previous workplace, so…
I find myself feeling sympathy.
It’s scary.
There are older men who graduated from the University of Tokyo but keep failing the national exam, right…?
In the lowest ranks, there were no students from regular high schools in the medical department.
I mentioned retaking the exam, but the person was a former bureaucrat and had a solid background.
Really, not a single exception, everyone has seen this kind of high school in mock exams.
>>40
To be honest, high school entrance exams have a narrow scope, so if you have some talent, you can easily score around 70 on the deviation value without studying much.
>>40
Well, being the best in the prefecture is one thing, but being second or third is still pretty smart, but isn’t it just an average high school?
>>40
Well, this is the line to see if there’s a chance of passing if you study around here.
First of all, it’s impossible to enter Kaisei unless you have been immersed in studying since the early years of elementary school…
Isn’t the taboo question not functioning?
Or is it a psycho who is good at mimicry?
>>42
It’s not that kind of taboo question.
Even if you get a medical license, hospitals basically don’t accept problematic individuals.
In this case, having Dad’s power was a disadvantage.
There are quite a few older people who are able to retrain as nurses.
>>44
Even though they are both in the medical field, the difficulty level is as different as opening a restaurant to earn a Michelin star versus being featured in a city guide for a casual diner.
Before the seal on X, Takeda-kun’s colleagues came out.
It’s exposing the inner situation, but… doctors, like professors, seem to be a bit out of touch with the world.
He has been someone who should not be involved in medicine for a long time.
Next time you start a thread with Takeda-kun, do it when the original work’s final episode airs.
At this point, it makes you think that if a parent’s influence is too strong, can’t they just get in by passing the exam?
>>50
I don’t know about the national exams, but I’ve heard that private medical schools used to have backdoor admissions back in the day.
I can’t help but feel that Lucifer is probably like this.
>>57
First of all, you probably haven’t become a doctor.
>>60
For now, I’ve passed the national exam, so if I pass the third recruitment, from April…
>>60
Since this guy can survive, they should at least accept interns somewhere.
>>57
A friend who passed this year was quite upset, feeling that the generation above thinks this year’s national exam was easy and teasingly refers to them as the Lucifer generation.
You can’t keep going unless you either have very high aspirations or a strong admiration for the profession of being a doctor.
>>58
What about the thread image?
>>70
I want to become an emergency doctor because I like the scene of a fire disaster!
>>70
I think there was an admiration.
That’s why they cling to the status of being a doctor.
I think I am hopelessly clumsy.
>>61
Moreover, there is an excessive amount of self-love.
>>61
That’s not the issue…
Trying to bewilder the general public by throwing technical terms at them.
Being pointed out by an ordinary doctor as having something wrong and trying to cover it up.
I keep repeating this over and over.
This guy has no medical knowledge!
Takeda-kun’s strangeness is more in his mental state than in his dexterity…
Everything except studying is at a trash level.
At least judging by their behavior on social media, it seems that their character does not match their academic ability.
Drinking alcohol during work hours is grounds for dismissal as a professional, regardless of what the doctor says.
A disabled person who could only study.
It’s the hospital that is at fault for digging up monsters that were properly excommunicated or sealed, giving them prey, and then covering it up.
It’s also bad for the hospital to say things like “picking them up and raising them from there.”
I just barely passed the exam the other day.
It’s important to have intelligence, but what’s really important is the ability to endure and study…
It’s a test where you push down the bottom 10%, so those with a bad personality and unpleasant traits tend to pass more easily.
>>78
I remember that Masahiko Kimura said he could kill someone just by thinking about it in his later years.
>>78
Do you have skills that lower your opponent’s score?
>>93
A person who teaches unnecessary study areas.
Someone who skips clinical training, shifts work onto others, and diligently studies for the national exam.
A person who disrupts the self-study corner at the university.
Those who spread bad rumors about others right before the exam to undermine their mental state.
Those who loudly talk about the exam content at the exam venue, undermining the mental state of those around them.
There were various monsters… and everyone passed.
According to a relative in the medical field, I’ve heard that there are quite a few doctors who are on the autism spectrum.
Well, the thread image can’t be contained at that level.
>>80
I believe there’s no choice but to accept that.
>>80
Well, we both have ADHD, so it can’t be helped. Many medical students are recognizing and working through this with various systems and adjustments, and the academic affairs office and faculty are aware of it and are arranging things accordingly.
It’s no longer avoidable for monsters to be born.
Isn’t it true that Akō Hospital is complete garbage?
>>81
This guy is treated as a worthless monster even among monsters, isn’t he?
>>81
This guy being a bug in the crowd is different, but the hospital being garbage is true.
Doctors with exceptional skills, who are also sought after from the world featured in the professionals.
I’m not good at communication skills… I used to do it.
My sister was smart, so she became a doctor, but my brother was not smart, so he couldn’t advance in medical school.
>>86
Who are you?
>>91
I never considered becoming a doctor from the start because I was not smart.
>>86
So, what about my brother Nameless?
>>86
Isn’t it smart enough to be able to go as far as getting in?
>>101
You can get in through the British Mathematical Society Review…
>>86
What you need to advance is not intelligence, but the ability to be resourceful…
There are some problems that can be solved just by intelligence.
>>107
The skill to obtain materials created by seniors from friends is the most important.
>>133
Past exam questions = it’s a matter of life and death.
>>134
Well, it seems that it’s become much easier lately, thanks to the existence of sharing sites for past exam questions and their answers…
The existence of the teachers’ statements and written resumes for that year is too significant.
>>133
I’m an extreme introvert and didn’t exchange information properly, and I didn’t attend lectures, so I didn’t even have the handouts, but I managed by relying on the textbook and QB.
>>142
Isn’t that just a case of someone who has the specs to do that and doesn’t need communication skills?
I really don’t feel like I can do something like a medical interview.
>>87
You can generally manage with wordplay and charts.
There are times when things can’t be helped.
Due to the nature of exams, it’s inevitable that there will be some mixing of Asperger’s.
If it’s a public university, any university’s medical school is no different from getting into Tokyo University, or even better.
I think doctors are amazing, but I don’t aspire to be one at all…
Being able to study and being a decent person are two different things…
Didn’t Takeda-kun have something done by his dad?
>>98
It’s quite suspicious to mess up this much, isn’t it?
Recently, my father passed away, and I’ve been taken care of by a few people, but I’ve been wondering if you’re fulfilling your accountability? That thought has been mixed in quite a bit.
Just the intelligence is really good, so those with a laziness habit have switched careers to become programmers and are now working fully remotely.
There’s also something called the University of Tokyo, Faculty of Science III.
Surgeons require knowledge and skills.
Knowledge can be managed through test studying.
Technology cannot be helped.
It’s a tragedy.
>>103
Usually, people have a resistance to taking someone’s life, so if they think they don’t have the skill, they put down the scalpel.
But Takeda-kun is different!
There is an image that being a doctor requires physical strength and intelligence.
No matter how much time it takes, once it happens, I can turn things around in an instant.
When I couldn’t become it, it was seriously over.
>>106
There was a guy who passed after about seven years of failures, but he seemed to be depressed the whole time.
I wasted my precious youth in my twenties.
>>113
The rest of my life will be dedicated to medicine.
It’s wonderful.
>>113
Well, mental health depends on the person themselves…
Normally, if you’re bad at hand techniques, you would give up…
To be honest, if you have your parents’ money, you can get it.
>>110
Did you become a doctor?
>>115
It became.
Days of being scolded for being inefficient.
>>122
Do your best!
>>122
Do your best!
>>110
That’s because you’re originally smart; be aware of it.
No matter how much I study, I don’t think I can become like that.
>>100
That’s why money becomes a house and a car.
>>112
Yet, when it comes to foreign cars, I get made fun of…
>>112
It’s just like a farmer…
It’s tough, and there’s also a high risk of getting an ordinary infection, so it’s dirty.
There are also stinky medical departments.
You’re good at talking, so you should have become a medical critic or something.
>>118
Medical critics accumulate achievements to attain that position, so it’s not something you can just jump into from the start!
I was attending a medical school preparatory school around Ichigaya.
The air is amazing!
I understand that you want to think that Takeda-kun is clumsy or not suited for surgery, but…
This guy is killing patients who need dialysis without even reading their charts.
They simply have no interest in human lives.
It’s not necessarily the case that foreign cars equal good.
On X
TV is old media!
Akō Nippo is a free newspaper!
I’m being frozen because I’m going against the state! Until then, I will speak the truth!
It’s crazy to say that.
A bunch of crazy people who are in sync with that are gathering, and it’s turning into hell!
>>131
It would be great if Takeda-kun became a private doctor and treated those guys exclusively.
>>147
Followers that are no longer updating one after another.
Parents are doctors → The rate of mental health issues in medical students is enormous.
Seriously, I’m still depressed even after turning 30.
I saw it in the thumbnail and thought the original was updated, so I got all scared.
>>135
It’s good to follow since a former colleague is updating it.
I believe that a doctor’s wife is the biggest winner among all professions.
There is a relative who is a private practitioner, but it seems they will stop after one generation.
>>137
I used to go to a famous prep school, you know.
When the topic comes up at the reunion about whether to make our children study as hard as we did, everyone unanimously replies NO.
It’s not the amount of study that should be forced upon someone, especially when they didn’t wish for it themselves.
>>144
It must be a combined junior and senior high school.
That’s so relatable.
My friend said, “I’m currently part-time, so if I go to the conference, I can’t work and my income directly decreases, but I have to study,” and I couldn’t say anything.
>>138
A doctor doesn’t have to worry about money, so it doesn’t matter.
It is great.
I really think it’s over for the one who decided to target the victim.
I wouldn’t go so far as to call it a “parent lottery,” but it must be tough if you’re not from a somewhat well-off family.
>>140
Intelligence is inherited.
Smart parents earn money in some way.
I’ve been made to study a lot since I was little.
Wealth that includes things like that will come to fruition.
>>150
It’s a bit unrelated, but
I remembered that there are brothers who graduated from Waseda and one who graduated from middle school, both took completely different paths, and they are both successful enough to become business owners and racehorse owners.
>>140
It’s true that national universities don’t cost money.
Since students can only take exams in the first and second terms, there are hardly any applicants aiming solely for national medical schools.
>>153
Well, there are quite a few people who think they can go for it, prepared to be a ronin.
Especially local high school students aiming for medical school.
It could lead to educational abuse, you know.
They say it’s common for family relationships to become strained in families with “education moms.”
>>151
That was exactly me.
“My catchphrase when paying for cram school tuition is ‘I’ll get it back once I become a doctor.'”
Of course, I’ve never sent any money and I don’t plan to do so in the future either.
>>156
Did you receive love?
>>156
This is because my parents have an education-focused mindset that believes academic background is everything.
If I succeed in advancing my education, I’ll naturally start to look down on parents with lower academic backgrounds than mine.
It’s a logic of blaming the parents who took away your youth if you fail.
>>151
If it’s an educated mom with a high degree, there would be understanding.
Low-educated “education moms” are genuinely the worst existence.
I understand because I used to be a cram school teacher.
>>151
When the educated mom starts to understand the situation, she can send her second or third child to medical school while building a good relationship.
The relationship with the above becomes twisted.
Usually, you would give up on going to a private medical school because it seems impossible.
It’s tragic that if the parents are doctors, their children can easily get into medical school even if they are ordinary.
Those who project their educational complex onto their children are usually of low education themselves.
I can’t determine how to pass medical school or whether I have the talent for it.
What can a mother who can’t study teach?
>>163
A typical example is making children learn English from a young age.
It’s far more important for elementary school students to practice basic arithmetic operations.
Parents’ academic complex, huh?
I’ll get it back with children!!!!!!
That person is at least smarter than the majority of people.
The entrance exam for junior high school is mostly the parents’ will.
I thought there was an update.
Don’t scare me.
>>169
A former colleague has joined in.
What am I supposed to complete in terms of academic qualifications? I was thinking about that for a while.
There are quite a few doctors who are clumsy and poor at surgery, or who have a bad sense of diagnosis, but most of them tend to go into research.
However, those who are prideful and look down on others tend to cling to their position and become a real problem.
The image in the thread stands out among them.
>>171
I only know researchers, but I don’t really have that image…
I’m also doing consultations at my part-time job.
>>177
It’s not that only those who can’t do clinical work become researchers; it’s often said that those lacking confidence tend to go into research.
I’m an education snob.
If you have a high education, then well… I can’t complain even if Takeda-kun performs surgery on me…
When I drink with my classmates who are doctors, even after turning 30, they still talk about their parents.
It seems that the person is concerned, but conversations with industry peers tend to revolve around being a doting parent.
Doctors are all smart, but there are a lot of weird people.
Even when I’m old and can’t properly examine patients, I can still earn a high salary thanks to my medical license power.
If you have academic ability around that of Waseda or Keio, you can probably get into a private medical school or a national medical school’s regional quota.
In that sense, the thread image has a much higher level of academic ability, which is amazing.
>>178
However, it did not contribute at all to my skills as a surgeon.
>>178
No way that’s possible for Waseda and Keio.
I wonder if Hua Tuo and Hippocrates were really incredibly smart.
>>180
There’s no doubt about that!
There are often people who can study well but become arrogant with it, lacking the experience of working together with others and getting left behind.
There are those who fall into depravity and become hidden from the public eye, but there are also those who succeed despite this and become the worst kind of existence…
It’s tough that you have to be good at studying and also have dexterous hands.
I think Takeada-kun might have been a fool who could only study…
A type that becomes a total nuisance in practice.
It’s interesting that being able to study doesn’t necessarily mean being efficient.
When I watch the Thunder Beast Channel, I wonder why someone so smart is struggling with the national exam CBT?
It is true that people with good grades tend to have a proper sense of ethics and a certain level of cooperation.
I wonder if I would have been successful if I hadn’t become a doctor.