Saturday, August 26, 2006

On Being a Doctor

"As you learn to become a doctor, there is a frequent sense of surprise, a feeling that you are not entitled to the kind of intrusion you are allowed into patients' lives. Without arguing, they permit you to examine them; it is impossible to imagine, when you do your very first physical exam, that someday you will walk in calmly and tell a man your grandfather's age to undress, and then examine him without thinking about it twice. You get used to it all, but every so often you find yourself marveling at the access you are allowed, at the way you are learning from their bodies, the stories, the lives and deaths of perfect strangers. They give up their privacy in exchange for some hope - sometimes strong, sometimes faint - of the alleviation of pain, the curing of disease. And gradually, with medical training, that feeling of amazement, that feeling that you are not entitled, scars over. You begin to identify more thoroughly with the medical profession - of course you are entitled to see everything and know everything; you're a doctor, aren't you? And as you accept this as your right, you move further from your patients, even as you penetrate more meticulously and more confidently into their lives." - Perri Klass, M.D.

2 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

what about nervousness? you worried abt giving someone wrong diagnosis?

12:27 PM  
Blogger Aya said...

rai:not so much nervousness really...mebbe because the only medicine I've been exposed to till now has been "practise under supervision" as a student...I didn't do a house job back home you see.Reaching a diagnosis is actually like fitting pieces of a puzzle...it doesn't always fit in and you can be left perplexed.I think the nervousness goes away as you gain experience....but yes...I'd definitely be concerned about giving someone the wrong diagnosis(more so in the US...cos they'd sue me!...hehe).

10:39 PM  

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