On July 1st, four years ago, I walked through Mass General and Brigham & Women’s Hospitals with an odd mixture of fear, relief, and excitement. Now, as I leave the hospital after my last shift of emergency medicine residency training, I am filled with a similar hodgepodge of emotions and reflections.
#1. “You were terrified of being a doctor!” I mentioned this article to the attending who
oversaw my first shift as a newly-minted doctor. That day is forever etched in
my mind; did he remember it? Much to my great embarrassment, he chuckled and
said, of course. “I kept telling you not to worry if you don’t know something, but
you were scared of everything!”
Though I knew that I was
there to learn, it took me a while to get over my insecurities about not
knowing so that I could focus on learning. And the learning was everywhere—on
every single shift, I learned from great clinicians not just about diagnosis
and treatment, but also important lessons on how to lead a team, how to teach,
and, most importantly, how to help people who come to us in their time of need.
I’ve been incredibly fortunate to have learned from many colleagues along the
way, including the amazingly skillful and compassionate nurses
at Brigham & Mass General. As my mentors say, it is called the practice of
medicine for a reason, and we should embrace, rather than fear, the learning.
#2. “Mistakes will happen.” Every
doctor has made a mistake some time in her life. Whether it’s a technical
error (i.e. inserting a long IV into an artery rather than a vein), a systems
error (i.e. ordering a medication for the wrong patient), or a communication
error (i.e. angering a patient or colleague), all of us graduating residents
will have made some kind of error. I myself made all three of these errors, and
more.
With the volume of
patients we will see throughout our careers, being the cause of medical error
and interpersonal conflict is a terrifying and humbling thought. A wise
physician said to me that just as residency is the time to learn how to
practice medicine right, it’s also the time to learn skills like how to
disclose mistakes to patients, and how to deal with conflict. “Don’t shy away
from difficult situations,” he told me. “Put yourself in the middle of them to see
what others do, and then develop your own style.”
#3. “That man has a name, and it’s not ‘the chest
pain in room 8.’” As busy
residents with long to-do lists, we often fall prey to the tendency to
dehumanize our patients and brand them as chief complaints to quickly decide
their disposition. On the surface, this might appear to save time, but dig a
little deeper, and such algorithmic, depersonalized medicine results in
unnecessary tests, misdiagnosis, and worse patient experience.
Furthermore, practicing
cookbook medicine is not why we chose to become doctors. My work became
much more meaningful when I made a commitment to connect
with each patient, no matter how busy I am. I learned that the “old guy
with dementia” was a world-renowned philosopher, that the “the onc patient with
fever and neutropenia” had ten children with her preschool sweetheart. As
physicians, we are privileged to hear so many stories from so many people.
Cherish this gift we’re given to share in our patients’ rich lives. Our
healthcare system isolates patients and disenfranchises families; we have the
power to practice real patient-
and family-centered medicine.
#4. “Residency is hard, and you have to take care
of yourself.” My best friend
from medical school, who had just completed his pediatric residency, warned me about
this before I started intern year. How right he was. Work hours may have
improved since our forefathers trained, but residents still work a lot and are
exposed to high-stress situations with life-and-death consequences. Studies
have shown that rates of depression and burnout increase sharply during
training, yet the “hidden curriculum” of medical training still favors bravado
over openness. Residents are taught to “suck it up” instead of talking about
difficult situations and taking care of ourselves.
This is not the way it
has to be! I learned this lesson the hard way during second year of residency,
when my
mother died. I
suppressed my emotions rather than seek help, and saw how easy it is to
feel isolated. Fight this impulse and stay connected. Find peers you can
reflect with and openly speak about your experiences. Nourish the other people
in your life and recognize their critical role in helping you through this
process. For me, it was my wonderfully supportive husband and my friends who
sustained me and kept me grounded. Make time for these people in your life. I
cannot think of anyone who regrets the time spent with our loved ones and
laments, “if only I spent that day reading one more research article!”
#5. “Emergency medicine is a phenomenal field.” The first grand rounds lecture I heard as an
intern was by Dr. Larry Weiss, then President of AAEM. He spoke about how
emergency medicine is an ideal specialty for advocacy: as the frontlines of
medical care who interact with every aspect of the healthcare system, we are the
most well-positioned physicians to advocate for our patients, our communities,
and our society. We see the problems with public health—smoking, obesity, gun
violence, etc. We see the problems with under-, over-, and misutilization of
healthcare. And we have the ability and power to act on these problems every
day.
In my fourth year of
medical school, I selected emergency medicine as a specialty because I wanted
the ability to treat any patient, anywhere. Being one of the emergency
providers who
took of care victims of the Boston bombings made me grateful for my
training and for the skills I’ve learned along the way. We in emergency
medicine have the incredible opportunity to utilize our training to do what we
love while making a difference to improve care for our patients and to transform
our healthcare system.
What else can I say
about these last four years? It’s been a rollercoaster ride. Now that I’m about
to embark on the next journey as an emergency medicine attending physician,
health policy professor, and Director of Patient-Centered Care Research at the
George Washington University in D.C., I am filled with exactly the same
emotions of fear, relief, and excitement that I came to Boston with. I have
learned so much from so many incredible people along the way, and will forever
be indebted to the amazing attendings, residents, nurses,
physician assistants, and other colleagues at Brigham & Mass General
Hospitals.
Now, what will the next years
bring? I’ll be on leave for the next month, but stay tuned for more dispatches
and reflections, soon to be from the nation’s capitol.
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