February 23, 2015

Parting Note. . . . .

Life comes full circle. . . . .so does this blog.
And we must move on to bigger things. . . . . so after a brief hiatus I shall be back. . . . on WORDPRESS though!
I'm currently preparing for post-MS entrance examinations and exploring avenues and basically enjoying life.
Some posts from this blog shall be posted on the new blog by yours truly....so watch THAT space, not this one.
Coz sadly all "bad" things must come to an end. . . . . .

January 18, 2015

The doctor's rant. . . . . on CORRUPTION et al.

Read this forward..... thought I'd share it on my blog.
Dunno who the original author is..... whoever s/he is.... THANK YOU!

Guys this may take some time to read but it's worth it!..... an article by an eye surgeon on corruption in Indian Doctors:
This article is also a test of how our society tolerates the truth.
Recently read a flash news about eminent doctors taking cuts / referral fees. There cannot be any justification. But if a whole system based upon corruption, a whole society facing inflation expects only one of its components to be sane, it’s insanity.
Hence these thoughts. . . .
I apologise in advance if this hurts some feelings. This isn’t a placebo though.
For the “nautanki” people who appear so shocked to hear about corruption in the medical field, here’s the naked truth:
 There is corruption in every aspect of every field including religion, law and judiciary, government, politics, police, press, military, film industry, YOUR FIELD, and also medicine, as the doctor is a part of this very same society, not from Mars. There is corruption in every aspect of the medical field: referring a patient, lab tests, CT/MRI, Surgeries, Cross referrals, almost everything.
But as in every field, there are people who do it by choice, there are some who have to be a part of the system to survive in India, and some who refuse to be a part of it all, facing many other problems including a perpetually low income.

Think simple: why would a person with highest of merit, hardest of hard work, tendency for helping others want to become corrupt? Not by choice. No one becomes a doctor for greed (Someone might attempt, but these people drop out in the first six months or a year: Those not dedicated to a hard life cannot endure medical education in India).
Every doctor wants to do good to his patient and also live a decent life. After a lifelong meritorious career, why should he be expected to toil in villages / rural areas without any rewards for it? Why should he not want his kids to go to the best schools? Why should he not want a decent lifestyle? Why should one give up a lucrative career in the west and return to the homeland feeling patriotic, to just be told that in your own country you are doomed to a life of sacrifices just because the society expects so?
“Someone who wants money should not become a doctor” said a dropout actor who is seen doing all immoral things (from peeing openly in a garden for press in real life to cruel crimes and revengeful murders on film, while running a show to change India to an ideal country.. I hope he and his family only use Indian things, medicines etc.). Why?
Why should a doctor not want money for a decent life? Why should he endure the humiliation of so many non-meritorious people from his class living in luxury because they chose not to be a doctor, while he chose the noble profession?
 Listening day-in and day-out to patient’s problems, tears, cries, allegations, threats, and expectations, not ever having a peaceful sleep for a week at a stretch, not eating on time, not having enough time for family, why should a Doctor NOT want to earn well?
We are not supposed to refuse a case in emergency. Does the Judiciary or the Police or the Politicians behave in a similar manner?
We are fined crores for medical negligence. What if the Judge is wrong? What if the police are wrong? What if the politician is wrong? What do they pay even when proven wrong? Why the presumption that the negligent doctor’s intention was bad? Negligence is possible in all fields (reactors/ bridges/ buildings/ food/ trains/ public transport), can cost life in many, how come the doctor alone pays in crores for a life that he was attempting to save, while in all other cases the motive was profit, not saving life…?
How come the judges decide the amount of fine? In a recent case, the fine was in crores. If the patient had survived, would the court have ordered the same payment for the doctors? Doctors save millions of lives. Some through heroic / exceptional efforts, without thinking of rewards. If a young patient is saved, shall we charge according to the income he can make in his future? Then, why this criteria for fines?
The world has become a global village. People travel to the developed world often. Highly specialised doctors in India are expected to be at par with their western counterparts. They often are, because half the world travels to India for medical advice.
But the Indian community is yet to awaken to the Doctor’s fees. An average specialist in the developed world charges between 10,000 to 30,000 INR for the first consult. Appointments are very difficult to get. They don’t work out of 8 am -4 pm slots except in emergencies (some honourable exceptions). And yet they get so many benefits from the hospitals they work at, and also from the government. THEY SEE NO FREE PATIENTS. Most doctors live in luxury in the western world.
 An Indian doctor on an average charges 200-1000 rupees for an OPD patient. Sees many free patients (almost 40-50%) everyday. Continuously has to be occupied with:
 1. Patient’s health and benefit
 2. Relative’s expectations, their anger (many think that every patient must get well irrespective of his / her health status). Many hold the doctor responsible for their illness / failure to improve/ complications.
 3. Continuous suspicion: Many patients think Doctors are out to loot! Every investigation is with an intention to get more profit out of the patient. They want the best, but like “sabji”, they want to bargain.
 4. There is also a widespread belief that pharma industry is actually serving the doctors, not patients.
 5. Google searchers who think they know better medicine just because of what they recently read about a tiny drop in the ocean of medicine. They eat up a lot of time, but don’t want to pay for that additional time.
 6. The very relatives who shout at the doctor seldom know what medicines the patient is taking: it is all supposed to be the doc’s responsibility.
 7. So many Toms, Dicks and Harrys coming over and threatening: this is everyday nuisance in ALL casualties in India. There is no sensible Director in Bollywood to have realised a Doctor’s plight while working under threat in casualty. Everyone loves the populist “Doctor-Threatening” hero!
Next comes the seemingly innocent weapon (the secret bleeding wound in many a Doctor’s heart!!),
“But Doctor, You are like God / Next to God. The whole society respects you”
That respect is divine for us, that respect and the satisfaction of doing something godly by saving lives, helping people live better lives alone keeps us from going on and not quitting the profession for better incomes. Don’t you think we had the option of making more money had we used our talent elsewhere, especially in today’s IT world?
But that respect does not substitute for our children’s fees. Not for our rents, electricity, travel or  ANY other expense. Almost all doctors and their family members end up paying full bills for themselves at the very hospitals that they work in… with some minor exceptions. Everywhere a doctor goes, he pays the same money that any other citizen does. There isn’t a separate queue for a doctors anywhere in any office just because he / she has patients waiting. There is no pension. There is no security. I can show you some highly successful (in patient care) ethical doctors who can’t pay for their own treatment TODAY!! If a doctor is sick, his / her income is zero as long as he does not work: No one cares if he has treated hundreds for free.
 The respect does not substitute for the stress a doctor bears: of years of listening to and attending pain and tragedy, years of sleepless life, fasting days, lost precious time with dear ones.. as with anyone else, the DOCTOR ALSO HAS ONLY ONE LIFE… WHICH HE CHOOSES TO SPEND HELPING OTHERS.. is it a crime to be living well for such a person?
And if Doctors are next to God, very respectable, how come their mistakes become villainous immediately when something goes wrong?
As for the other side:
There are corrupt doctors, corrupt practices. But please understand, a single doctor did not create them, nor did a group plan them These developed over time as the system evolved. One had to fall in line or quit the profession for want of a better life.
 Like in every field, there are some rotten apples. They ruin the reputation of themselves as well as the doctors around them. But a single doctor cannot do anything. Those who try to change the system are boycotted, thrown away, maligned. There are some continuously fighting this.
Every doctor cannot afford to start a hospital of his own. He has to choose a speciality hospital which has all the facilities to practice his speciality. These come at a price. I appeal to the people who feel bad about investigation prices to just enquire the rates of the machines/ skills/ licences/ manpower/ maintenance required to make these facilities available. The government makes it compulsory to attend to many of its employees free / at subsidized rates, and never pays.. who will pay for them?
So hospitals have their systems. A single doctor cannot change them. Also, not all hospitals are corrupt.
The Medical councils do not have any protocol / system to protect a doctor who faces vindictive attitude from hospitals if he / she wants to argue. Many specialists DO NOT RETURN TO INDIA OR HAVE ALREADY LEFT INDIA AFTER RETURNING due to this one reason. Because specialist practice is based upon referrals, and where most of the referral system itself is corrupt, one has little hope of survival especially in a decent city / town.
Doctors who want to run their own hospitals face same bribery, same licencing scams, same corrupt government practices that any other business does. The rates are probably higher, and the regulations stricter.
Doctors are a weak vote bank., hence not on priority of any party. It is more practical for the politicians to openly criticize the doctor / profession in hope of gaining public sympathy / attention. No one wants to attend to their problems, which are many.
The medical council never protected any doctor against court cases or hospital victimising them for fighting against corruption. The regulations made are ancient, primitive. When a whole medical system is corrupt in almost every step, they have taken the approach of superficial actions against individual cases: typically populist and sensationalist. The medical councils KNOW every aspect of corruption, but have opted to fit in some screws where the whole building needs extensive repairs. One’s degree and education of fifteen years becomes meaningless in the eyes of medical council just because there is delay in renewal of licences. How can rules be applied only partially in a system? While many people practice without degrees or knowledge, the councils choose to target the qualified for not renewing their licences: a process that involves acquiring CME points, the money for most such events, travel etc. comes from pharmaceuticals, the patient pays. They do not have the online option of CME / licence renewal like most western countries, even in this advanced age! So a doctor is expected to leave his town and practice, get involved in events sponsored by pharmaceuticals, travel with help from pharma companies, stay in hotels with their money so as to renew his licence. But not online. And there is no compulsion that he has to attend the event for his specialty. So a Neurologist could attend a gynaecology event just for CME points and its okay for the renewal of his Neurology licence!! One can easily get such CME credits without attending the event! There has to be an online option, or a rethinking of this whole business. And an option to do it without involving pharmaceuticals.
Average number of books read by a specialist to get to where he is. . .

The whole Medi-claim business in India is a fraud: they don’t pay for
1. OPD consultation / investigations of a patient: even if serious.
 2. Patients with genuine illness, but without injectables or surgery.
 3. When they do not understand the diagnosis or the fact that some cases do not have a proper diagnosis.
 4. Emergency / Critical care / Specialist charges etc.
 5. Even when they pay, it is their choice how much.
This results in many a wrong practices, or the patients can't afford treatment at all.
So in a medi-claim case, no one benefits except the company: Patients, Hospitals, Doctors all lose. Still, the Medical councils do not want to do anything. In fact, they don’t have a say.
Add to these:
Incessant calls / emails/ whatsapp messages for any enquiries that pop up in the patient’s or relatives (usually the cousin in America) mind at any time of the day or night: and bitter words to follow if reply is delayed. (That doctor has advised so so… what is your opinion?... I just read on Google about stem cell therapy to improve my anger… what say? Etc. etc.).
Then there are sons and daughters who stay in US / UK etc., but leave their parents back in India. They expect the same care but at a low price, and also a daily update by the treating doctor. NO WESTERN DOCTOR GIVES OUT HIS CELLPHONE or EMAIL ID TO PATIENTS, THEY KNOW THIS, but they talk from there as if from the top of a mountain. They don’t want to come and attend to their dying parents, but vent out this guilt in the form of anger towards the treating doctor: Do everything doctor, don’t worry about the money. I am unable to come to attend to my MOM because of business meetings/ no tickets / kid’s exams etc. I lose my patience here often.
If a Judge / lawyer is ever reading this article. Your Honours, please consider these when you next fine crores to a doctor (even if insured, he has to pay huge):
A doctor should not be held negligent if
1. The patient does not follow advice as written.
2. Patient continues to drink / smoke / eat tobacco/ or does anything that the doctor has prohibited.
3. Does not follow up as directed (most patients miss their follow up dates: doctors are supposed to jump from illness to illness).
4. Does not show the same care towards his own life that the doctor is expected to take.
5. Has not given all correct information about himself / herself  and/or  his/ her illness
6. Hidden some information from the treating doctor.
7. Has lost treatment details.
8. Self medication / cross consultation without knowledge of the earlier doctor, resulting in multiple medications.
9. Has had unknown allergies / reactions in the past.
There should be a doctor’s board for each speciality which opines about every particular medico-legal case before the court makes its final decision.

I always wanted to be a good doctor, like most other colleagues I know. I have always heard the courts of justice demand that one speaks the truth. Here it is. Hope I am not punished for speaking the truth. I am not always correct, I am sure some of my friends will correct me. I will keep learning too.
A warning: If the whole medical system becomes non corrupt, patients will end up paying far higher consultation / surgical fees than what is paid now. This is inevitable. Add the legalities to everything, and many specialists will become non-affordable / non available to most. The many "phukatchands" who get free treatment now, will be denied that.
Or the next generations will see less and less specialists opting to settle in India.
I love my profession. I love my country. I love my patients too.
But I also deserve a good life. It is time I stop thinking I am God because the society has presumed so.
 May God confer best of health upon all humanity. May God guide me to always do good to my patient.

August 25, 2013

Thanatology: Death and the Doctor. . . . .My Perspective.

It was supposed to be a free weekend; one that I'd been aching for since weeks. You never expect a post double-emergency weekend to be free for a Trauma Registrar..... but, yeah, I did manage that feat in the middle of the week, thanks to people not drink-driving, falling, stabbing, hanging precariously outside locals, etc. etc. on Sunday or Monday (surprising!!!).
Anyways, today I got a call from my colleague in the wee hours of the morning that one of my patients in the Trauma ward had expired. To the best of my knowledge, I had no patient admitted under my care in the ward. So this statement raised a few eyebrows! On further probing, she was the trauma patient who I had shifted to the General ward around 2 months ago after stabilisation and had to be shifted back in view of poor general condition. Despite our best resuscitative efforts, the patient could not be revived and was declared dead.
I remember the situation around 3 months ago when this patient presented to our casualty as a case of Road Traffic Accident (RTA) with head injury. She was referred from a private hospital, intubated and on AMBU support. She definitely required a ventilator. I was the Trauma Registrar on call that day. We had no free ventilator in our Trauma Ward and I was forced to refuse the patient and asked them to take her to another public hospital where they most likely would have a ventilator available. The husband begged me to admit the patient. In such cases, we take an AMBU consent from the patient's relatives stating that they are willing to perform AMBU ventilation on their patient till the time a ventilator frees up (yes, considering it's a public hospital and with our limited resources and high volume of patients, we have to!!!). The husband appeared desperate. Apparently he had spent lakhs of rupees on her treatment in a private hospital and had run out of money and could see no results in his patient. Hence, the referral to a public hospital (a very common scenario at our hospital and hence the portrayed high "mortality-rate" despite the optimum care given).
This patient was under my care in the trauma ward for almost a month. I will not go into details of how she was resuscitated, stabilized and shifted to the ward after almost a month of being on a ventilator, being tracheostomised and then being weaned off the ventilator, undergoing a PEG (feeding procedure) etc. etc. All I can say is that I put in my best efforts to save this patient!
Shifting her to the ward after stabilisation was one of my biggest personal achievements given her co-morbid conditions as well (morbid obesity, Diabetes Mellitus, borderline hypothyroid).
To hear of her death got me thinking for a while.....
Back to this morning.......... After I heard the news, I cut the call, pondered for a while wondering what could have gone wrong and went back to sleep. Yes, that was my reaction. And, this similar non-sympathetic behaviour HAS become my reaction to the death of any of my patients! Am I heartless??? Think not.....
Death is an irreversible cessation of life- that state of the body that shows complete loss of sensibility and the ability to move..... the complete cessation of the functions of the brain, the heart and the lungs, the so-called "tripod of life" which maintain life and health. Death is a part of life and a part of my JOB. That is an unwanted reality that we as doctors have to face on a regular basis (especially in a trauma set-up). Initially, I'd be quite taken aback and found myself being emotionally involved. as a student in my MBBS days. After graduation, when I was authorised to declare death, I really couldn't bring myself to shed a few tears over someone else's loss, even if I wanted to. I gradually began to realise how and why this happened and why it mattered. As a doctor, I cannot let death take an emotional toll on my life. Yes, you may call me stone-hearted, heartless or whatever. But, I guess this is in the best interest of all the future patients that I will be treating. If I had to shed tears over every death that I have witnessed and had I let each of them shake me up emotionally, I would have given up being a doctor long ago! All I'd be thinking of were dead people! I wouldn't be able to work, to eat, to drink, to sleep..... just imagine!
Yes, I'm heartless during such situations and I have to be. I can empathise with the relatives but that's that....... I CANNOT let my emotions overcome me. And that is what my profession teaches me.......
There have been a lot many occasions like these, where I have given my all to save a patient, to see them eventually die. Frustrated, check.....Angry, check......Sad, check...... Unhappy, check. And a whole gamut of emotions- check, check and check again! Do I portray those emotions......NO! Can't get myself to either. It just dies down till I witness another death!
I can just imagine what you must be thinking but unless you're a doctor, I don't really expect you to understand.
So far, in my short surgical career (many years to go.....still), working in one of the best Trauma centres in our country, I feel as if I've seen it all. Victims of railway accidents with dismembered limbs, some carrying their own leg in their hands (YES!!!), electrocution injuries, stab victims, gun shot victims, burns with trauma, road traffic accidents with their wide gamut of presentations, month old babies falling off God-knows-what-not. (image alongside says it all, I guess. A concrete slab impacted into this young boy's skull with damage to the underlying brain matter successfully extirpated by our neurosurgery team. He was discharged, with just a scar at this site!). Lots more to see, I guess....
All I know is that those who have the strength and the love to sit with a dying patient in the silence that goes beyond words will know that this moment is neither frightening nor painful, but a peaceful cessation of the functioning of the body.
That's some food for thought, I guess. . . . . .
 

June 16, 2013

Why I think doctors deserve the money they make.....

Here's a well written piece by one of my junior colleagues.....  Sriniket. Good job, dude!
(Edited for this blog by yours truly)


     Doctor bashing seems to be the trend today. Everywhere I go, I get to hear a medical horror story about how some satanic medical practitioner had the balls to ask for 500 bucks after giving a measly injection or scribbling gibberish on a paper with his name on after asking some idiotic questions like "what did you eat on that day?"; " is it a throbbing pain or a bounding pain"(like one can make that out!) and of course the biggest sacrilege of them all "that bloody quack had the audacity to tell me where to get my xray /usg/ blood work, he must be getting a commission..... all doctors are just white coated pimps!"
         
It has been just more than a year since I have qualified to become a practicing physician but already people look at  me as if I am Ambani or at least a Birla in waiting who will very soon be driving around in a BMW bought by money which apparently we get by looting the pained, already much taxed masses. Let me make it clear at the outset when I graduated from my institute I didn't get anything other than all my SSC and HSC documents and threatening words from the office that very soon I will have become a medical officer in the govt. public health centre nearby where i will spend the rest of my days giving out malaria pills and pain killer injections to 'tatya , bandya aajibai and others' (no disrespect implied). I was told in most cases by my own batch mates we will get a princely salary of 25k. WOW!!!! I wonder which other 24 year old gets that much money at that age and then the answer came" every moron who ever graduated from college with any lame ass degree gets more than that! In fact most people who didn't bother with graduation get that". Independent sources tell me rickshaw-wallahs in Thane get more dough than that. Why should I ask for more? ALL I EVER DID WAS GET A GOOD RANK IN A HYPER COMPETITIVE EXAM AT THE THRESHOLD OF ADULTHOOD. I only gave 4 sets of freakishly subjective examinations in which my fortunes can be decided in the end by what I wore to the exam hall, my caste, my language skills, my relations with the college departments and MAYBE  by my knowledge and I haven't even begun ranting about my experiences with post graduate entrance exams!
            Let me be very clear i have nothing against any of my friends who are into any other stream, good for you guys you had the good fortune to steer away from this field by design or by accident! I am sure all of you are doing great now and you all deserve every dollar, every euro ,every pound and every rupee(for the few that still live here) that you make. Nor will i trivialize for a moment the troubles you people go through in your graduate lives. My problem here is on a whole  different level . I want to know why does the layman have a problem with a medico earning big money . of course we as medical students are also to blame here. My 66 months in Kolhapur taught me that many students are not comfortable with this idea and their ideas of success in this world come across as rather weak and limited in scope  (again a personal opinion with no disrespect implied whatsoever)  while i don't believe even for a moment that a fat pay is worth losing one's good name , I believe it's reasonable to expect reasonable remuneration for your skills , abilities , aptitude and work.
       
  Let's get the numbers straight. My information about branches other than medical and engineering is painfully limited, but i am sure that won't be a issue here. There are 18 government medical colleges in Maharashtra and around 20 private ones. Engineering- I think there were 639 in Mumbai-Thane region..... there were 620 last week and it will probably hit 700 by the end of this month. Aspirants for both fields give the same exams almost with the obvious variation being Bio and Math. Because of the sheer numbers even if i consider there are 20 great colleges in this state) that will come to a figure of at least 5000 people who end up with good quality peers , teachers , facilities and by extension good prospects. and these guys wont even be close to the best in the country. The best guys are studying in the IITs, NITs and BITS. All together this comes to around another 20 thousand students with excellent prospects. My basic point is you can expect to be Maharashtra rank 3000 and still graduate from a very good institute. What happens in the medical side of the entrance is that in Maharashtra unless your rank is within 500 you have a steep climb ahead. All those people who say all government colleges are the same and they are all good are DELUDED! The reasons are many and I won't get into them...... this write up is already too long. Somewhere around rank 700 rank you have three choices- pick up below average (read baaaad) college or take up a BDS (dentistry) seat which are even fewer and third option is give up, pick up an engineering seat which is always there or give another attempt!
My point here is that at rank 700, a medical graduate is probably studying in a very bad place where he is deprived of many facilities and opportunities. These guys are all mostly very good students,  toppers in their respective schools, cream of the milk pot that is the PCB stream. These guys are now stuck in very mediocre places for a very long time and that has an effect.. ...believe me it does!  These people are those who are within 1 percent of the state.  Even if they come out unscathed still with the fire in the belly to tackle the big monster that is PG entrances what will it lead too! Again if I consider only the popular PG choices which is about 8-10 subjects..... each has not more than 20 seats in our state....maybe 30. And again this includes the who's who of crap such as Nanded, Akola, Yavatmal and Ambejogai! To complicate matters further there are about an equal number of people arriving at the starting line from the private colleges which have hundreds of seats but all off which are auctioned to the highest bidder! People put their life savings to get their children into these courses....for what?...... private colleges where there are no patients and government colleges where there are no facilities and almost no teachers.
                 So once again, there is a cohort formed by 1 percent of the population and among these only 2 percent can move to the next level! Now you go and do the math! I am sure this is the equivalent of doing your engineering from the BIG SEVEN IITs and then wanting to get into one of the IIMs! These are the odds the very best off the PCM stream have.....each and every medical student has to go through the same odds to get even the most pathetic seat in the worst possible college. If I talk about the odds of doing the medical equivalent of a IIT + IIM. the odds get mind numbingly small!
              We as a society are so used to throwing money , " ooh he is a consultant , he did his B.E from VJTI and MBA from IIM-A ' he should obviously get 40 lakhs per annum, he deserves it!!!" What is the salary that a surgeon passing from KEM can expect.. I will be damned if it's more than 40-50 thousand and he is still not done with his studies, mind you ! And that's the best possible outcome! The guy is 28-29 years old, he hasn't slept properly for the last 4 years at least! He has cleared India's second most difficult exam (IAS tops the chart obviously) with  flying colours and he has sacrificed his whole youth. He basically smells of phenyl ! Also bear in mind that Infosys and TCS are not waiting around to hire this guy. His only option is to stick with a government seat if the decision he took as an 18 year old has to make any financial sense in the long term. When this guy finally turns 35 and decides I need to start enjoying the good things in life and enter private practice, he comes upon people saying "If you wanted to make money, you shouldn't have become a doctor(thank you very much Aamir! I am sure the next batch of people who believe you and stick to dialysis for years thinking transplant is a luxury and not a necessity in renal failure will remember you in their prayers as they hurtle towards their painful and inevitable ends!)".
             
So my appeal to all my non-medical friends.....never question a doctor's fees if you are satisfied with the outcome. You are paying remuneration for the struggles and sacrifices he makes in his youth. You are paying for the fact that he depended on his parents for basic living expenses well into his late twenties and in spite of being among the best in the state he gets treated like something that fell off a garbage truck! As for my medico friends- let's stop selling ourselves short, we are an elite bunch and it's time people realize it! Expecting to get good money for the efforts is not a bad thing. And let's be frank......the pay for interns , residents even super-specialist residents is pathetic. Let's change our outlook!
                    -DR. SRINIKET RAGHAVAN


PS: Check out this blog too..... http://doccartoon.blogspot.in/

I'll be back..... and here I am!!!

Been a long three years.....
I started this blog when I was preparing for my Post-Graduate Entrance Examinations as a distraction. Although updated infrequently, I tried to incorporate as much of my personal & professional experiences in this blog.

What have I been doing for the past 3 years?
That is another amazing journey........ which I shall share with you in due course of time.
Here's a peek: I secured admission to a branch that I love and wanted to pursue......at one of the premier medical institutions for that particular branch. I have been pursuing M.S. (General Surgery) at LTMMC & LTMGH, Mumbai a.k.a. "Sion Hospital"!
 
 
Hoping to update the blog more often......!
 

November 21, 2010

MEDICINE AS A LEARNED AND HUMANE PROFESSION

People have always asked me what it feels like to be a doctor. That "oh-so-noble" profession that everyone keeps referring to. When you introduce yourself as a doctor, people's perception about you automatically changes. It's like..... you are someone to be revered and respected; the adulation and at times, awe are all part of the package. But is this what being a doctor means??? I think not....... Read on.
Becoming a physician has meaning far beyond completing medical college. It is the entry to a way of life, the one characteristic common to every true profession. It may sound old-fashioned, but the learned professions are really "callings" from which the members cannot separate their lives. There are no "part-time professionals", at least in this profession, having accepted such a calling, one is bound to live it or leave it. A physician can also be a good spouse, a good parent and a good citizen of the community; however, the role of a spouse, parent and citizen, is inextricably intertwined with the calling of being a physician.
Medicine is not just a science, but a profession that encompasses medical science as well as personal, humanistic and professional attributes. The process of becoming a physician and being committed to lifelong learning requires that an individual possess the scientific base not only to acquire and appreciate new knowledge but also to see new ways for applying it to patient care. Every physician must delight in learning the new, correcting the old and perfecting the future. Much of what medicine now accomplishes depends on large-scale testing of procedures, interventions, vaccines and new drugs.
Being both professional and caring is an acquired skill. A physician can diagnose and prescribe in a technically correct and scientific, but insensitive way. The patient may be made better, even cured, but still feel unsatisfied with the interaction. In these cases, patients are likely to ask the questions:
1. Does my physician really care?
2. Does what happens to me matter to the physician?
3. Does my doctor show sensitivity and compassion beyond mere technical ability?
Patients want and deserve compassion and understanding. They want their doctors to be interested in them as individuals who seek advice, as well as relief from pain, disease and suffering. They want to sense that they can safely share their deepest thoughts and their most heartfelt confidences with their doctors. In short, they want to value their physician as a trusted friend. My own experiences during my rural internship have shown that a kind word is all that is needed in allaying part of the fear and anxiety associated with visiting a doctor.
Patients also expect to be kept informed while they are receiving competent professional service. As a caregiver, it is the sharing of oneself that is so very important. To some, it may seem odd to talk about caring as a learned skill, but it is just that. In studying to be a physician, one must learn both compassion and caring. Easy, supportive interaction with patients and others less fortunate, is a skill that comes readily for some and with great difficulty for others. In learning how to demonstrate compassion, Kahlil Gibran taught us: "You give but little when you give of your possessions.....it is when you give of yourself that you truly give". The giving of oneself with ease, with grace and with meaning is, for most persons, an acquired skill. Sometimes a deep sense of awakening within is required to release the innate sensitivity and compassion that perhaps have not been expressed since childhood. Nevertheless, these traits remain imperatives if the aim is to become a "complete physician".
When patients seek medical attention, they entrust their doctors with their very lives. The physician must earn such complete trust. Technical abilities and skilled treatment of disease alone do not suffice. Patients must believe that their physicians care about them as people, not just as patients. Physicians, in turn, must understand that they do far better as professionals if they err on the side of being human with their patients
A particularly difficult time comes as physicians deal with patients who become old, frail, dependent, crippled or cognitively impaired. These are circumstances from which the most sensitive among us truly learn what it means to give of ourselves. Sometimes we may find once again that our patients are the "best teachers".

On second thought, I really can't define what being a doctor encompasses..... because it is something that goes way beyond mere "definitions"..... for me, I guess, it's a way of life...... as said before, something that is inextricably intertwined with my very being.....

Adapted from: Cecil's Textbook of Medicine