R.I.P., journal clutter. |
It's funny. As a medical student, I cut out articles and carefully sorted them by topic in manila folders separated by organ systems in a large standup file cabinet for easy reference. I cherished that file system for it contained the latest and greatest articles on whatever topic I needed.
Next came the purview of the really cool docs: bound journals. Boy, did you look bad-ass having bound journals on your shelf (just like those in the library!). It only cost a minor fortune to send them to a binding company, wait several months and, presto, you were as cool as your professors and ALWAYS had the latest articles you needed close by.
But as fast as that moment arrived, it disappeared.
After all, the volume of journals you needed quickly quadrupled, quintupled, and expanded faster than vinegar to baking soda. Stacks and stacks of journals accumulated in my office so quickly that I found I never had time to read them all. So I triaged: New England Journal of Medicine? Nope. Annals of Internal Medicine? Nope. JACC? Sure. Heart Rhythm? Have to have that one. PACE? Not so much.
And on and on it went.
But now, thankfully, there's RSS feeds. And Google.
So goodbye my paper-backed friends, it's been wonderful. Thanks for all the memories and the security of knowing you were there.
May you now, officially, rest in peace.
Somewhere else.
-Wes
Wait...I shouldn't be cutting out journal articles? Hahaha
ReplyDelete2nd yr medical student
23 yr veterinarian who still reads paper journals...
Lisa Roberts, DVM
Wouldn't you know the times I don't bring those paper journals with me, I'm someplace where there's no electrical juice waiting for someone for an indeterminate time, like the time I was ready for work and someone's fender-bender sidelined me for an hour before the police arrived to take my report.
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