Sunday, February 12, 2012

Short Study Tour Weekend

Hello all, look at how prompt I'm being! I promised I would write and here I am, writing my blog and updating you on my adventures (what a concept). This weekend I went on a short study tour with my Medical Practice & Policy Program to two cities in Western Denmark, Ebeltoft and Aarhus. Thursday morning, my roommate and I woke up at a ripe 6 am to make sure we caught our busses at 7:30 in the center of Copenhagen. We are proud to report we both made our busses and both had really fun weekends - Amanda's twenty first birthday was Friday and she was in Hamburg, Germany for the weekend which is a pretty cool free birthday present if you ask me.

So we're all on the bus, trying to sleep, when our course assistant (and second year medical student), Adam, decides it's a good idea to turn on a loud and violent movie called coincidently, Adam's Apples. It is apparently a perfect representation of Danish humor. I think it was just a very weird movie. We arrived at the Aarhus University Hospital around 11 and tried to stay awake through a lecture about the different scanners the hospital has at its PET center - they have 2 MRIs, a PET/CT scanner, an HRRT, and an MEG scanner. We took a tour of the scanning center and were all getting hungry to eat our lunches on the bus.

So I enjoyed my ziploc bag (I didn't want to use tupperware) of pasta, tomatoes, avocados and sriracha sauce as we set off to a General Practitioner's office in Skødstrup. At the Skødstrup Laegepraksis, we actually enjoyed a lecture about the universal health care system in Denmark by one of the doctors at the practice. In Denmark, every citizen chooses a GP as their primary doctor - you go to your GP for anything and everything, and then you get referred to specialists in other practices or hospitals for specific problems. Eighty-eight percent of the population visit their GPs every year, and maintain good relationships with them. Since Denmark has universal health care, the GPs focus on improving health in their own communities, and so they have a list of patients in their region that they are responsible for taking care of (and also get paid by the National Health System to take care of).  If you don't like your GP you can always switch to a different one, but you are limited by the number of GPs in your area. Even though the Danes pay between 40 to 70% of their income for taxes, some Danes opt to additionally pay for for their own private insurances. All the money that's collected from taxes goes to paying everyone's complete education and medical costs - it's pretty awesome.


After taking a tour of the GP's office and rooms, we set off to our hostel called Danhostel, and had a short discussion with Adam about the main differences between the health care systems in America and Denmark. We also understood how the educational system works in Denmark - primary school goes until year 13 (and you have to choose a track for high school - either math/science, language, or arts/music), and then for medical school there are 6 years of uni, 1 year doing a post-graduate internship, and then 5 years training to be a specialist. Adam told us that the final test for medical school is being able to diagnose a patient in 7 minutes or less (you get multiple tries) - very different than all the standardized testing we're used to.


After a small break, we headed into the tiny town of Ebeltoft for an amazing buffet dinner and bowling. When I heard buffet, I admit I immediately thought of huge pans of mac and cheese, mashed potatoes, different meats, salads.. this buffet wasn't exactly like that. On a small table, there were bowls of shredded lettuce and different toppings like corn, peanuts, feta cheese, etc and then there were small pans of french fries, roasted potatoes, scalloped potatoes, and finally a meat plate. Even though it was a small buffet it was delicious and everyone went up for seconds, thirds, some even went for fourths - it was a great meal. Bowling was so much fun - I hadn't been bowling since I think middle school when I had birthday parties at the glow in the dark bowling lanes at Chelsea Piers or Port Authority. I did roll a lot of gutter balls, and I definitely lost every game but it was still really fun to be doing a classic American past-time in the middle of nowhere Denmark.


After a decent night's sleep, we were up bright and early for a great continental breakfast and on the road to the AROS Art Museum in Aarhus. Little did I know a museum would be the highlight of the weekend. There were three exhibits that made the trip so awesome. One of them was a giant room filled with smoke and different color spectrum lights so each time you moved you were stepping into a different color gradient. Photos speak better than words:


The second best room was this one with different suspended metal rings/squares and lights that reflected off of them:



The third was this ring of color on top of the museum - as you moved around you saw the city of Aarhus in different shades of colors and it was really cool: 



We enjoyed a lovely lunch of potato soup and sandwiches at the museum and then went off to Skejby Hospital, the largest hospital in all of Denmark for a lecture and a tour of the facilities. The lecture was super boring and nearly everyone fell asleep buttttttt we got to see med students operating on live pigs! I didn't bring my camera in with me so I don't have any pictures but here's one I grabbed from someone's facebook album: 


After that, we traveled to the Steno Museum at the University of Aarhus and were treated like fourth graders by our tour guide as we learned about the history of medicine in Denmark. It was really weird. And there was a giant uterus display that you could climb into and relax in - I guess I was born again this weekend. Weird weird place. There was a giant pendulum attached to the ceiling that revolved around and hit different pegs according to the earth's rotation and we were all enamored by it and literally spent 10 minutes watching and oohing and aahing and eating Danish ice cream.


We traveled to our second hostel, also called Danhostel, and prepared for our night out in Aarhus. I ate dinner at a restaurant with a few friends and we got twenty dollar bacon cheeseburgers but they were really so delicious that it was worth it. Except when they charged us for a bottle of water and wouldn't give us tap water instead - weird. We walked around the shops on the canal and wound up joining a bar crawl of Danish physiotherapy students that all had numbers written with eyeliner on their cheeks. It was their orientation weekend and their tutors were herding them around like cattle. It was really entertaining to hang out with these students for a while but we eventually headed to a bodega to hang out with the other kids from our MPP program and ended the night buying snacks in the 7-11 around the corner.


Saturday, our final day of the trip, we went to see the Jelling Stones and got a tour of the museum there by this really kooky Scottish guy. The first rune-stone was created in the 10th century by King Gorm the Old in dedication of his wife Thyra. The second rune-stone was created by Harold Bluetooth, Gorm's son, and states Denmark as a Christian country for the first time. When we asked Adam what the stones said he told us they said "Denmark, bitches."
Denmark, bitches
After seeing the stones, we ate a Danish lunch of fish and meats and cheeses and then headed to a handball game in Fredericia. Very confusing sport, but very entertaining to watch the goalies stand stupidly in the goal and try to shield a mini soccer ball. After a weekend chock full of academic and cultural activities, it was nice to kick back with an ice cream and watch a sport I didn't understand at all.
Michelle gives handball a thumbs-up


This weekend was a whirlwind but very very fun indeed. I reunited with friends last night and today I slept until 1:30pm and lounged in bed and caught up with friends from Roch and spent 3 hours writing this blog on and off. I just made swedish meatballs that I accidentally stole from Ikea and even though I overcooked them, anything free still tastes delicious.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Ketchup Catch-up

Although I haven't written this in two weeks and it seems I have fallen into the Baltic Sea, alas I have not! I have been busy frolicking around in Cope and giggling with glee. Not really giggling gleefully but definitely frolicking. Ok. I'm rusty at this. Soo what I have done in the past two weeks? A trip through iphoto will help describe what I've been up to:

The first weekend we were here I went to Ikea to snatch some necessities for the room - somewhere in all those bags were pillows, towels, hangers, a pretty shower curtain, a skillet, and some desk organizers. In addition to carrying two very heavy bags I also lugged around a 39 kroner table to put our microwave on. It was well worth the struggle as we now have space to prepare our meals! (rather than using the top of the microwave as our cutting board - ew). Here I am on the bus home with all my precious belongings.
my excessive spending habits at ikea

DIS doesn't offer classes on Wednesdays so we have a day off in the middle of the week - it's a weird adjustment but it definitely helps break up the week and allows for more social and cultural exploring. So last Wednesday, I met up with three friends and we went on a canal tour and took in some Copenhagen scenery by boat.  The tour took us to The Little Mermaid and we were able to get out and take pictures - a touristy event we had all wanted to experience!
the (very) little mermaid

On Thursday, I was able to see a fashion show at Fashion Week for my Meaning of Style class and we saw collections from graduating TEKO students (TEKO is the Cope equivalent of Parson's)! I was standing strategically close to where the models stopped on the runway to be photographed, so I got a lot of cool pictures as demonstrated below.
justification for all my fashionable parkas
black is always slimming, even on models
 The winter onesie is very common among children. So naturally I needed to try one on too.

when i wear a onesie
when children wear onesies

On Saturday, I went to Kronborg Castle in Elsinore. It was frigid by the water so I whipped out my fleece-lined spandex, uggs, and a big warm scarf and called it a day.
i built this castle
kronborg castle, danish flag, sweden in the distance!
I have a few friends:
maia + lila = maila
friendz taking da bus 
Today I went to Laundromat Cafe with a few friends and here is one of them, Nicki, posing with the washing machines by which we were enamored. I met Nicki at the airport terminal all the way back in America (she was my first abroad frienddd!) but everyone asks us if we knew each other before the trip... so we tell them we've been best friends since fifth grade. We're traveling together over spring break to Budapest, Prague, and Vienna so accustom yourself with her beautiful face for it will be repeated in future posts!

wine and dine.. and wash
So yes that has been a pretty decent summary of what I've been up to. I really like my classes and I will list them for you now: Meaning of Style (I will come back from Cope a very trendy lady), Gender Differences on Human Rights (good ol' feminism), Danish Language & Culture (I will be able to pretend to understand what the signs say), Complexities of Cancer (nerdy science terms) and Human Health and Disease (my core course in the Medical Practice & Policy program).

I will elaborate on the MPP program. It is awesome. Each program (there are 15 I think) in DIS has a core course and you travel with the people in your class on a short weekend study tour and also on a week-long study tour. Our short study tours are this weekend so tomorrow at the ripe hour of 7:30 I will be whisked away on my chariot (a coach bus) and shuttled to Ebeltoft and Aarhus for the weekend where we will see many exciting academic and cultural scenes. I will be sure not to procrastinate and update immediately upon my return to Cope. Anyway, back to MPP. My Human Health & Disease class meets Tuesdays & Fridays from 2:30 to 4:30 at Frederiksberg Hospital and is taught by two doctors, hence why it's so late in the day because they still have to do their jobs. Our course assistant is a current medical student and it's really interesting to get all of their perspectives/experiences with medicine in ways that are similar and also different from our own. For instance, you must decide if you want to be a doctor in high school because it's your grades from these years that determine which medical schools you can apply to. A lot of American students have no idea what they want to do with their lives when they're still in high school, so it's hard to imagine committing so seriously to a profession at the age of 18, or in my case 16. (I am a baby genius. No, not really, I just skipped kindergarden. Why? Because I didn't want to finger paint. Real reason: I could read at a fifth grade reading level at the age of 5. Baby genius.) So yeah, in addition to shmoozing with our teachers, we actually get to do cool stuff like learn how to insert IV needles into dummies (and people) and how to give lumbar punctures (spinal tap) to dummies (and people). Yesterday we practiced all these skills on dummies and some people even tried it on each other - not the spinal tap, just inserting IV needles into people's hands. I did not want anyone poking my veins, no way.

Final words: in case you haven't been spending enough time out in the freezing cold, you can choose to sit and sip your Carlsberg with a nice free blanket covered in snow! Right up my alley.



That's all, folks!