A man wearing a green shirt speaks to medical students at the zoo.
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Wilderness Medicine students take crash course in venom at Indianapolis Zoo

Members of the Wilderness Medicine Student Interest Group, offered through the IU School of Medicine, didn't have to travel to a foreign land for a crash course in venomous spiders and serpents. They simply ventured a few miles down the road to visit the medical school's downtown neighbor, the Indianapolis Zoo.

Rory Appleton  | Apr 02, 2025

Marching On

Missed the March deadline, so here’s a delayed post! This semester has been crazy busy! Obviously we have all the usual pressure of weekly exams

Roshini Selladurai

It’s been too long.. Clerkship Reflections/Wedding Post

Hello all! I hope all is well out there in cyber-land. I have been very busy with the wonderful challenges and joys of 3rd-year and

Oh Second Semester…

It has been a while since I last posted in here. Nevertheless, the last 3 months have been the toughest months of my educational career

Just Keep Swimming

Med school is hard. It’s not always fun. But thankfully, this week was pretty motivational for me. You should know that this past weekend, I

Roshini Selladurai

January Update

Just realized I haven’t posted anything this month. I’m such a gunner, you guys. For those of you who aren’t familiar with the term, Urban

Roshini Selladurai

MS2 Recap #1

Pathology: Use Pathoma to understand material. Read class notes to get test questions right. Focus on the underlined/bold terms. I don’t go to class, but

Roshini Selladurai

It’s Worth It

We were in the middle of the Women in Medicine meeting and one of the ER docs, just 2 years out of residency, eagerly leaned

Roshini Selladurai

Conferences

I just got back from San Francisco, where I attended my first scientific conference: the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology (ASH). The

Stefan Tarnawsky

1/8 MD

So the end of the semester is finally here. What a hustle. Coming into med school a lot of friends always told me how much

Pressure & Practice

The bone marrow transplant has been used as a cancer therapy for over 50 years. It is designed to replace a patient’s defective stem cell

Stefan Tarnawsky