Omslagafbeelding van de show Dr Tisdall Unfiltered

Dr Tisdall Unfiltered

Podcast door Dr. Philip Tisdall

Engels

Technologie en Wetenschap

Daarna € 9,99 / maand. Elk moment opzegbaar.

  • 20 uur luisterboeken / maand
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Over Dr Tisdall Unfiltered

Dr Tisdall Unfiltered is a candid podcast about how doctors actually learn, think, and reason. Drawing on decades of clinical experience, Dr. Philip Tisdall breaks down medicine through applied reasoning and pathophysiology—not memorization. This show explores anxiety in training, why traditional medical education often fails learners, and how to organize medical knowledge so it actually sticks. No dogma. No fluff. Just clear thinking in real medicine.

Alle afleveringen

18 afleveringen

aflevering Why Medical Students Feel Lost | Dr. Tisdall Unfiltered artwork

Why Medical Students Feel Lost | Dr. Tisdall Unfiltered

I’m building out our community where I will be teaching live online. For more information, head over to ⁠drphiliptisdall.com⁠ [HTTP://drphiliptisdall.com] In this episode of Dr. Tisdall Unfiltered, I sit down to discuss one of the biggest problems in modern medical education: why so many intelligent, hardworking medical students still struggle to truly understand medicine. We dive into the growing disconnect between learning objectives, compliance-driven testing, and real clinical reasoning — and why memorization alone is failing students. I explain why patient-centered learning matters, why students forget material even after studying for hours, and how fragmented teaching methods prevent learners from building a complete understanding of disease from patient presentation all the way down to molecular mechanisms. We also discuss the difference between apprenticeship and observership in medicine, why cadaver-based anatomy often fails to create clinically usable understanding, and how anxiety and poor learning systems contribute to medical school burnout. Throughout the conversation, I share stories from teaching medical students directly, including helping struggling students rebuild their approach to learning after failing major exams. If you are a medical student, premed, resident, educator, or healthcare professional trying to understand how doctors actually think through disease, this episode will challenge the way you think about medical education. We unpack many of the frustrations students expressed after one of our viral short-form clips discussing why medical school feels harder today than it did for previous generations. Topics include: * Why medical education feels overwhelming * Learning objectives vs clinical mastery * Why students struggle with retention * The problem with compliance-driven testing * Clinical reasoning and patient-centered learning * Cadavers vs clinical anatomy * Anxiety and performance in medical school * How to build a real learning system * Why medicine must be learned as a connected story Be sure to follow Dr. Tisdall Unfiltered for more in-depth conversations on clinical reasoning, pathophysiology, medical education, and how to think like a doctor. Get my free 6 week clinical reasoning series (12 high-yield multiple choice questions with MD-written answers): https://www.drphiliptisdall.com/mcq-email-series [https://www.drphiliptisdall.com/mcq-email-series] Clinical Pathophysiology (Edition 2) is now available for purchase! For the complete textbook, students should purchase both Volume 1 and Volume 2: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GY6JSBX3?binding=paperback&ref=dbs_m_mng_rwt_sft_tpbk_tkin&qid=1776937676&sr=8-1 [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GY6JSBX3?binding=paperback&ref=dbs_m_mng_rwt_sft_tpbk_tkin&qid=1776937676&sr=8-1] Watch the full video episode on YouTube: https://youtu.be/PpBmgiKQxXE [https://youtu.be/PpBmgiKQxXE]

23 mei 2026 - 31 min
aflevering Everything in Medicine Is NOT Equally Important | Dr. Tisdall Unfiltered artwork

Everything in Medicine Is NOT Equally Important | Dr. Tisdall Unfiltered

Most medical students are overwhelmed because they’re trying to learn medicine as if every fact carries the same weight. In this episode of Dr. Tisdall Unfiltered, I break down why that approach fails and explain how I teach students to organize medicine in a clinically meaningful way. I discuss the difference between foundational diseases, major diseases, and minor diseases, and why understanding pathophysiology matters far more than memorizing isolated facts for exams. Drawing from decades in pathology and medical education, I walk through real examples including cancer biology, HPV, lymphoma, cystic fibrosis, lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, apoptosis, molecular medicine, and clinical reasoning. I explain how foundational diseases teach the principles underlying clinical medicine, why modern medicine is increasingly molecular, and how students can stop cramming and start actually understanding what they’re learning. This episode is especially important for medical students preparing for exams like the USMLE, students struggling with information overload, and anyone interested in learning how experienced physicians think through disease mechanisms and patient care. I also discuss why I believe current medical education often emphasizes memorization over mastery, and why I’m building a new educational community centered around clinical reasoning and deep understanding. If you enjoy these discussions on medical education, pathophysiology, and clinical reasoning, be sure to follow Dr. Tisdall Unfiltered on Spotify and Apple Podcasts for more expert discussions and long-form teaching episodes. Get my free 6 week clinical reasoning series (12 high-yield multiple choice questions with MD-written answers): https://www.drphiliptisdall.com/mcq-email-series [https://www.drphiliptisdall.com/mcq-email-series] Clinical Pathophysiology (Edition 2) is now available for purchase! For the complete textbook, students should purchase both Volume 1 and Volume 2: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GY6JSBX3?binding=paperback&ref=dbs_m_mng_rwt_sft_tpbk_tkin&qid=1776937676&sr=8-1 [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GY6JSBX3?binding=paperback&ref=dbs_m_mng_rwt_sft_tpbk_tkin&qid=1776937676&sr=8-1] I’m building out our community where I will be teaching live online. For more information, head over to drphiliptisdall.com [http://drphiliptisdall.com] Watch the full video episode on YouTube:: https://youtu.be/yKC4iHyRG74 [https://youtu.be/yKC4iHyRG74]

15 mei 2026 - 21 min
aflevering From Step 1 Failure to Emergency Medicine Residency | Dr. Alyssa Makowski on Clinical Reasoning, Aphantasia, and Medical School artwork

From Step 1 Failure to Emergency Medicine Residency | Dr. Alyssa Makowski on Clinical Reasoning, Aphantasia, and Medical School

In this episode of Dr. Tisdall Unfiltered, I sit down with Dr. Alyssa Makowski, a newly matched emergency medicine resident whose journey through medical school was anything but straightforward.  Alyssa was one of the strongest students I had ever worked with, yet she repeatedly struggled to cross the exam threshold required to move forward toward Step 1. What followed became one of the most remarkable transformations I’ve witnessed. We discuss medical school failure, STEP 1 preparation, clinical reasoning, learning styles, mentorship, burnout, impostor syndrome, and what actually separates memorization from true understanding in medicine. Alyssa also opens up about discovering she has aphantasia — the inability to form mental images — and how that fundamentally changed the way she had to approach learning medicine, anatomy, and pathophysiology. This conversation is especially important for medical students, pre-med students, residents, educators, and anyone struggling with standardized exams despite being highly capable clinically. We explore why some intelligent students continue to underperform on medical board-style exams, how confidence and resentment affect learning, and why medicine ultimately forces every student to confront their weaknesses honestly. If you enjoy long-form discussions on medical education, clinical reasoning, pathophysiology, and physician training, make sure to follow Dr. Tisdall Unfiltered for more expert interviews and conversations. Get my free 6 week clinical reasoning series (12 high-yield multiple choice questions with MD-written answers): https://www.drphiliptisdall.com/mcq-email-series [https://www.drphiliptisdall.com/mcq-email-series] Clinical Pathophysiology (Edition 2) is now available for purchase! For the complete textbook, students should purchase both Volume 1 and Volume 2: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GY6JSBX3?binding=paperback&ref=dbs_m_mng_rwt_sft_tpbk_tkin&qid=1776937676&sr=8-1 [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GY6JSBX3?binding=paperback&ref=dbs_m_mng_rwt_sft_tpbk_tkin&qid=1776937676&sr=8-1] I’m building out our community where Dr. Tisdall will be teaching live online. For more information, head over to drphiliptisdall.com [http://drphiliptisdall.com] Watch the full video episode on YouTube: https://youtu.be/sJldsWiPBTY

10 mei 2026 - 41 min
aflevering Why Medical Students Struggle: Clinical Reasoning vs Memorization (with Dr. Nancy Selfridge & Dr. Eric Neilson) artwork

Why Medical Students Struggle: Clinical Reasoning vs Memorization (with Dr. Nancy Selfridge & Dr. Eric Neilson)

In this episode of Dr. Tisdall Unfiltered, I sit down with Dr. Nancy Selfridge and Dr. Eric Neilson to have an honest conversation about what’s really happening in medical education—and why so many capable students struggle when it comes time to apply what they’ve learned. Together, Dr. Selfridge, Dr. Neilson and I worked to build and implement a new approach to teaching medicine—one that moves beyond memorization and focuses on clinical reasoning, structure-function relationships, and how physicians actually think in practice. In this discussion, we break down what happens when students encounter board-style exams for the first time, why “knowing the material” often isn’t enough, and how small-group, patient-centered learning reveals the real gaps in understanding. We also explore how remediation, tutoring, and teaching others can transform struggling students into some of the strongest clinical thinkers—and why the future of medical education depends on training both better learners and better teachers. If you’re a medical student, pre-med, or educator, this episode will challenge how you think about learning medicine—and give you a clearer framework for what actually matters. Be sure to follow Dr. Tisdall Unfiltered for more in-depth conversations on medical education, clinical reasoning, and how to truly think like a doctor. Clinical Pathophysiology (Edition 2) is now available for purchase! For the complete textbook, students should purchase both Volume 1 and Volume 2: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GY6JSBX3?binding=paperback&ref=dbs_m_mng_rwt_sft_tpbk_tkin&qid=1776937676&sr=8-1 [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GY6JSBX3?binding=paperback&ref=dbs_m_mng_rwt_sft_tpbk_tkin&qid=1776937676&sr=8-1] Watch the full video episode on YouTube: https://youtu.be/owK2izhSwLQ [https://youtu.be/owK2izhSwLQ] Follow me on social @drphiliptisdall

25 apr 2026 - 54 min
aflevering The Student Who Couldn’t Visualize: Rethinking How We Learn Medicine artwork

The Student Who Couldn’t Visualize: Rethinking How We Learn Medicine

In this episode of Dr Tisdall Unfiltered, I explore one of the most important insights I’ve had in decades of teaching medicine: there is no single “right” way to learn clinical reasoning. I’m joined in conversation with my producer and collaborator, Ali Tisdall, as we unpack a powerful real-world example that challenges traditional medical education. I share the story of a former student with aphantasia—a condition where she could not form mental images—who was unable to use the “picture with a story” method I typically teach. Instead of falling behind, she developed her own system by translating every concept into structured, step-by-step algorithms using if/then logic. What emerged was a completely different, yet equally effective, pathway to mastering pathophysiology, differential diagnosis, and patient-centered thinking. This episode goes far beyond study tips. We break down how medical knowledge should actually be organized—from chief complaint to differential diagnosis, to pathophysiology, to natural history—and why memorization without structure consistently fails in clinical settings. I also discuss the role of real-time teaching, small group learning, and why understanding how to think matters far more than simply knowing facts. If you’re a medical student, pre-med, or clinician looking to improve your diagnostic reasoning and retention, this conversation will fundamentally change how you approach learning medicine. Follow the podcast for more expert interviews and in-depth discussions on how to think like a doctor. Clinical Pathophysiology (Edition 2) is now available for purchase! For the complete textbook, students should purchase both Volume 1 and Volume 2 by clicking here [https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GY6JSBX3?binding=paperback&ref=dbs_m_mng_rwt_sft_tpbk_tkin&qid=1776937676&sr=8-1]. Watch full video episode on YouTube: youtube.com/@drphiliptisdall [http://youtube.com/@drphiliptisdall]

5 apr 2026 - 38 min
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Super app. Onthoud waar je bent gebleven en wat je interesses zijn. Heel veel keuze!
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