Monday, July 18, 2011

Congratulations, Interns of 2012!

The job offers have starting trickling in for next year's interns.
I can't believe it was only one year ago that this was me. So much has changed since then. My career aspirations are still the same, but a lot of other things have shifted slightly sideways.

So, to next year's interns, I can share with you some things that happened to me, and you may also experience in the first half year of your working life as a doctor:

You will find your feet as a junior doctor. Granted, like me, you may spend the first couple of weeks absolutely scared out of your skull. But you'll get used to it and after a few months, you will manage to have some nights where you don't dream of clinical scenarios and ward rounds all night long . . .

You will face challenges, both personal and professional, that you will overcome with varying degrees of success.

People will find their way into your lives, if you let them, and these people will change the way you see the world.

Some people will loosen themselves from your lives and move on and you may miss them for what they used to be to you, but that is okay because we all change.

You will grow up, some of you will become more cynical, but some of you will become more zen and learn how to enjoy the small things in life, and many of you will do both.

You may go from being terrified at choosing to write and dispense that first script for a drug (probably an antibiotic) to writing them in 30 seconds flat and knowing the number in a box off the top of your head.

You will hopefully come to see that being a doctor is a job, not some mystical calling sent out to you from the universe. I think this is good. If you see it as a job rather than an entitlement or a state of being, you are more likely to realise that you need to work hard at it to be good, and more likely to leave it at work when you can. You may also realise that other doctors are people just doing their jobs, too.

You will encounter death, grief and loss. If you can meet this with compassion, dignity and humility, it will be better for everybody involved.

The first death you need to certify will probably be in a room full of grief-stricken family. Know what you are doing and have a plan before you walk in, and although this is your first time, hide your uncertainty and terror. Be kind.

Document, document, document. This will be reinforced whenever you look back at your notes after something has happened, and you find that you clearly documented what you needed to. Document!

Good luck! And don't forget to take care of yourselves, both physically and mentally.

7 comments:

Terra said...

Great post! Thank you for those words of wisdom! It is all a bit surreal!

Waiting for it to sink in...
TerraNik

*C said...

I'm going to bookmark these posts for a later date. I have a feeling I might need some reminding of your wise words a bit later down the track.

Thanks for sharing.

The Girl said...

I'm sure you will both be fine when the time comes. :)

Little Doc said...

My advice at 4th year out - usually you can wait until the family have had their time with the patient before you certify them. If the nurses are pressuring you to certify with the family still present just very politely state that the patient's condition will be unchanged after the family leave. Although sometimes families like to be told 'officially'.

The Girl said...

I think they quite like us to do it in front of the family if they are there - a sense of closure or something like that.
Unfortunately they also need to clear out the rooms as soon as possible for new admissions waiting in emergency. Sad but true.

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Sparkles! said...

Thanks for those words of wisdom :)
They will definitely be helpful next yr