Why 'Car Talk' is playing in one med school classroom  

Mackenzie Bean (Twitter) -

Some medical professors are turning toward an unconventional resource to teach medical students how to diagnose diseases: a radio talk show about car repairs, reports NPR.

NPR's show "Car Talk," in which brothers Tom and Ray Magliozzi used a step-by-step method to diagnose car troubles, ran from 1977 to 2012. Gurpreet Dhaliwal, MD, a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, has been a lifelong fan of "Car Talk" and shares clips of the show with his first-year medical students.

"I would listen to their podcast every weekend," he told NPR. "One day I said to myself, 'My goodness, these guys are doing the same job I have.' They collect the data, define the problem and pick from several solutions. That's essentially what a doctor does."

Dr. Dhaliwal uses clips of the Peabody Award-winning show to teach his students how to use clinical reasoning skills to sift through what information is important to reach an accurate diagnosis. He also published a 2011 article about the teaching approach in JAMA.

To view NPR's full article, click here

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