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We’ve mapped the stars, plumbed the depths of the oceans, yet the human brain remains one of the greatest mysteries humans have ever encountered.
While the first two inspire enthusiastic exploration among astrophysicists and marine scientists, the third can inspire fearful avoidance among various medical professionals. This hesitation contrasts with the clinical reality of 15 percent of emergency department (ED) visits. certain cases related to neurology, and up to one-third of ED errors are the result of missed neurologic diagnoses.
If neurology is not a niche specialty but a cornerstone of acute and chronic care, what causes this difference in interest?
The greatest exposure medical students have to neurology often occurs before clinical rotations begin. The curriculum often emphasizes learning complex neuroanatomy and pathway mapping, revealing the degree to which the content can have clinical applications. While this can play an important role in ensuring that students have a basic understanding of certain neurology concepts, it can reduce the degree of clinical exposure and result in neurology becoming a set of disjointed events. It also misses just how much of an impact neurologists can have on a patient’s recovery from a neurological illness or adaptation to the symptoms of a chronic condition. In addition, it creates a perception that the major is “too hard” and students do not feel confident in their abilities to apply themselves or engage in it. This serves as the basis for a lifetime of fear from neurological manifestations and further perpetuates the notion of “neurophobia,” a term coined by Ralph Jozefowicz in 1994 to describe a “fear of the neurosciences and clinical neurology that results from students’ inability to apply their knowledge of the basic sciences to clinical scenarios.”
The reputation of neurology portrayed in preservice and clerkships as a grim specialty in which patients receive devastating diagnoses and little in the way of treatment is increasingly becoming an outdated narrative. While this may have been the case decades ago, developments in the field are often overlooked. Thus, the onus is on interest groups and neurology graduate programs to actively promote the specialty to students in creative ways. Unlike core rotations such as internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics, psychiatry, and family medicine, specialty neurology clinical experiences not universally required in all Canadian medical schoolswith some programs instead incorporating exposure to neurology through internal medicine, longitudinal comprehensive office experiences, or elective experiences. This limits the opportunities for students to study neurology and reduces the chances that students will find their interest in neurology.
A dedicated neurology rotation could play an important role not only for students considering the specialty but also for all future physicians regardless of their career path. They are neurological complaints met in almost every area of medicine, from EDs and wards to family medicine clinics and surgical services. Exposure to neurology during basic training would provide students with an opportunity to develop confidence in neurologic history taking, lesion localization, and physical examination skills in a supervised clinical setting. Whether implemented as a stand-alone core rotation or as an elective component in internal medicine, such an experience will help bridge the gap between pre-tenure neuroscience training and real-world patient care. Most importantly, it would ensure that all graduating physicians have a stronger foundation in recognizing and managing common neurological presentations.
A meta-analysis identified several educational factors that may contribute to neurophobia among medical students. Programs that rely heavily on theoretical and preclinical teaching are more likely to be associated with fear and lack of confidence in neurology, while prior clinical exposure, case-based learning, and greater integration between neuroscience and patient care are associated with more positive perceptions of the specialty. These findings suggest that reducing neurophobia requires moving beyond memorization-based approaches to clinically integrated neurological education.
Neurological complications and conditions are incredibly common, although it is easy to understand why there is such strong reluctance towards this area by non-neurological specialists. There is often no emphasis on maintaining skills in neurology, whether it be localization of the lesion, adequate neurologic physical examinations, or approaches to common disorders. This perpetuates the prevailing “neurophobia” in our medical system.
One of the important aspects of the residency is that it provides trainees with the opportunity to experience “off-duty” rotations, rotations that take place in various other specialties. This provides residents with necessary training in topics they may not be exposed to in their specialties. An emergency medicine resident will benefit from exposure to cardiology in the form of an off-duty rotation to have the basic foundation that will facilitate the treatment of a patient presenting with a possible myocardial infarction or exacerbation of congestive heart failure. However, do emergency medicine residents gain sufficient exposure to neurology during their training?
A review of the Canadian Medical Protective Association’s (CMPA) 2025 database made clear some of the most commonly missed diagnoses in the emergency setting include strokes, traumatic intracranial injuries, central nervous system (CNS) infections and cauda equina syndrome.
Based on publicly available information on the time residents spend on off-duty rotations during their training, emergency medicine residents in McGill University spend a total of eight weeks in neurology visits and neurology ICU compared to 24 weeks in internal medicine. Metropolitan University of Toronto Emergency medicine residents spend even less time in neurology with a total of four weeks compared to 20 weeks in internal medicine.
As a neurological condition continues to grow in prevalence across Canada, the persistence of neurophobia is not only a barrier to specialty recruitment, but a system-wide issue that can impact diagnostic confidence, delays in care, and patient outcomes. Patients may wait up to several hours to see a neurologist in the ED, although many could have been tried either on outpatient referrals or managed by their family physician. This over-reliance on neurology consultants can delay an already overloaded system and divert attention from more acute presentations. Addressing this challenge requires more than encouraging students to “not be afraid” of neurology. It requires substantial curriculum reform, earlier and more comprehensive clinical exposure to neurology training, and greater investment in accessible teaching tools that make the field accessible rather than intimidating.
If Canadian medical education hopes to prepare future physicians for the realities of modern health care, overcoming neurophobia can no longer be an afterthought. It must be made a priority.
Mohamed Elsayed Elghobashy
Kanish Baskaran is a medical student at the University of Toronto with interests in neurology, social medicine and medical education.
Edwin Wong (MD, M.Sc.) is a neurologist at the University of Toronto with interests in obstetric neurology and medical education.
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Previously Posted at healthdebate.ca with Creative Commons license
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