A few years ago a group of recent medical graduates came to
our house for dinner. An exciting conversation of their hopes and dreams
followed. What would they do and where would they go in search of fulfilling
their dreams. One wanted to go and serve in the rural areas with a large
backyard where he could be “one with nature” and when duty called he would step
into his home/office and care for the patient. Another wanted to follow in his father’s
footsteps, become a sub-specialist and regale the specialty with new knowledge
through discovery. A third quiet and more subdued graduate sulked in the
background, not willing to express her desires.
As the dinner progressed the graduate magnetized towards the
rural bent stated, “I don’t get it,” he said, “Why do I have to go see another
surgical procedure?” He put his fork down with an emphasis. “You see one, you
do one and you teach one!” There was a momentary silence. As a host, I asked, “don’t
you think an aggregated knowledge would make for better decision making?” He
fired back immediately, “Repetition is not necessarily the best education.” Not
exactly true, but as a host, I volunteered, “But more exposure leads to more information
and that becomes a sort of experiential reference to draw upon, don’t you
think?”
Ah but for the infinite regress of a mental intent...
Ah but for the infinite regress of a mental intent...
“A cholecystectomy is
a cholecystectomy!” he stated with a smirk. “Fair enough,” I replied, “but each
individual is different and each gall bladder therefore is different. You might
find one gallbladder fixed from chronic inflammation to other tissues, another
might be filled with stones, still another might have a nidus of gall bladder
cancer in it stuck to the liver and so on, how can one know how to deal with
all those contingencies?” He remained quiet for a moment and then not to be
held down with a technicality suggested, “when you go in (operate) that is when
you find the problem and you deal with what you find. The procedure of going in
is the same!” This young Turk had a lot to learn and maybe he would in due
course of his residency, only time would tell.
The sulking violet meanwhile quietly listened to the
exchange and the cloud over her head seemed to darken. I asked her what was
bothering her and she replied, “I wouldn't know what to do!” she said haltingly
in veiled terror. “What do you mean?” I asked. “In the ER for instant a patient
with abdominal pain, you cannot open the text book to look through all the
differential diagnoses, how would one go about determining the diagnosis and
the right treatment?” Ah, I thought from the bullish to the bearish the entire
spectrum was covered here. “That is why you have the residency program to help
you sort out the problems. It gives you the confidence based on the knowledge
you accumulate from your peers, experienced nurses and attending physicians.
That is the purpose for the residency, to help put the didactic into the
practical format. Medicine is difficult both in the expanse of its
knowledge-base and in its practice. The sorting and weeding out of what is
right and wrong, is done early on in the residency to help gain confidence in
one’s ability and in proper management of a patient’s illness when you embark
on the life-long journey of being a doctor.” That might have sounded pompous,
but it had the elements of truth in it. She sighed unconvinced and her head
went back into the thoughtful repose. She would benefit from the experience of
the residency “baptism under fire!” I thought. They had no idea what kind of an
immediate future they were up against. Yet it would come and readiness was all
they needed.
The night ended with laughter and fun. As we closed the door
behind our departing guests, it struck me how arduous a path it is to becoming
a doctor. All these graduates had their hopes and dreams, some had the
arrogance of youth and others the timidity and fear of the unknown. Graduation
from a medical school is only the first step towards the learning process.
Residency is an important bridge between what one knows and how it is utilized.
But learning goes on for the lifetime of a physician!
The recent legislation passed in Missouri to cover for the
physician shortage is a bit discomfiting. Not only does it speak volumes about
the expert policy makers but it broadcasts the potential future. What kind of impact
would it have upon the actions of the “fearless” and the “timid” without
supervision and their behavioral impact on patient care?
Maybe it will all work out. But in medicine, a lot of maybes
can lead to a lot of oops!
Well, I believe people have their own choices and refereance when it comes to profession as well as where they want to use their professional skills and sometime self satisfaction is more important than earning a big money. However, it was an interesting post.
ReplyDeletegreat article! fresh opinion on medical residency uk.
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