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Showing posts with label education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education. Show all posts

Thursday, November 18, 2021

Should I become a DOCTOR?

Medical career is such that it sucks you in and never lets you go.  Basically, once a doctor, you are always a doctor.  It is very rare for somebody to be both a doctor and a high achiever in any other field, be it another profession or even a hobby.  

The thing is, medical education demands so much of your time and attention that there is hardly any time left for you to upskill yourself in any other field.  If you do manage to achieve this, it is often through compromise; you might have to cut down on your medical practice significantly to attend to your other interests, or vice versa.  

Students are often misled into believing that the medical profession is glamorous (as shown in films or media) and/or one can get name, fame and authority just by becoming a doctor.  First of, it is anything but glamorous.  If anything, it involves getting your hands dirty and being ready to attend to a person in distress at any time of the day or night.  This means being groggy eyed, disheveled, harried, and running around like a headless chicken most of the times.  

Name and fame are to be gained; they will only come to you after you have been through the grist and worked your way up to a position of some authority, if at all.  I have had instances during my days as a junior doctor when patients have refused to see me because I was not a consultant. 

I also believe that many enter the medical field due to false notions of grandiosity; just to prove to their extended family and friends how special and intelligent they are.  These people typically hanker after multiple PG degrees to put after their names, and to spruce up their CV, and to exert authority over their hapless juniors and nurses.  It wouldn't be farfetched to suggest that their ego is directly proportional to the number of letters they put after their names!  

Students also make the mistake of assuming that they will go on to become neurologists, cardiologists, pediatricians, orthopedicians or radiologists, even before they enter the medical field.  Such preconceived notions are bound to lead to disappointments because only a small percentage of them get such coveted specialties; the rest have to 'compromise' and settle for other less lucrative specialties.  

I have seen parents becoming depressed because their son did not get the coveted seat even after several years of studying for PG entrance exams.  Finally the family had to sell off property to fund his higher educational desire. 

Actually, MBBS is the easy part.  Even though you might think that cracking the NEET/COMED exams is challenging and the subjects taught in the UG course are difficult, you are likely to breeze through the 5-6 years of MBBS course because you are so involved with friends, studies and extra-curricular activities.  It is what happens after MBBS that is most daunting; that's when the harsh realities of medical life sink in, and you will be caught between the opposing prospects of working in a medical setup on the one hand, and studying for PG entrance exams on the other.

Please also be open about the possibility of NOT getting to work in a clinical field.  That is, you may not get to work with patients in a clinic or a hospital.  Depending on your performance in the PG entrance exams, you may end up in a pre- or paraclinical field, such as Anatomy, Physiology, Pathology, Pharmacology, Community Medicine or Forensic Medicine.  In that case, you might have to take up faculty/teaching post in a medical college, or do lab/research work, depending on the field.  

Mind you, pre- and paraclinical careers are equally respectable and rewarding, but it's just that students never consider these when they think of entering the medical field.  I am reminded of a friend who had to give up his ambition of becoming a surgeon only because he was a Hep-B non-responder; that is, he was prone to contracting hepatitis from his patients.

I often recommend a trimurti, or a holy trinity, of entry criteria that aspiring medical students should consider before taking the plunge into the medical field: super rich, super intelligent, and from a family with a medical background.

It helps immensely if your family is already endowed with wealth to fund the seemingly never ending and financially draining medical education.  This wealth will come in handy particularly when 'management seats' are the only options left after your underwhelming performances in the entrance exams.

You can alleviate this financial burden somewhat if you happen to be super intelligent, or, as is required for medical exams, if you are smart enough to learn the study techniques necessary to ace the PG entrance exams, and can walk through the seat selection process with a plum specialty.  Easier said than done.

At the very least, it is helpful if you have an understanding father, mother, brother or a sister who is already an established doctor and is able to understand your predicament, and is willing to support you through the tough post-UG phase until you make it.  It is much easier to explain why you need to burn the midnight oil studying for PG entrance exams after finishing MBBS to a family member who is a doctor than to one who has no idea of how medical education/career works. 

If you feel that you are deficient in these criteria, please look for an alternative career.  Do not go through decades of struggle only to realize that this profession is not for you.  And don't ever listen to anybody, not even your family, when it comes to your course/career: your career, your life, your decision!  Nobody is going to come to your aid later on when you are disillusioned and despondent and stuck in a career that they wanted you to take up. 

I have raised these issues in this video in English with text in Hindi and Kannada:

https://youtu.be/DrfGigouuRs

Quite apart from the issues mentioned above, I have also written about a couple of other bugbears of this profession: assaults on doctors and draconian rules and regulations that govern the profession.  Read them too, just so you are aware what you are getting into.

Having said that, not for a moment am I suggesting that nobody should become a doctor.  If you are absolutely passionate about the medical field, if you genuinely care about the human condition, if you have the aptitude to deal with the issues discussed above, if you can put your ego behind and prioritize your work and career development for the sake of patient service, you can do wonders in this field (note the key words/phrases in red).  

If you are confused, seek professional help from a career counsellor.  Also consider taking an aptitude and/or personality test to see if you are cut out for this profession.

If, in spite of doing all that, you still have an iota of doubt about entering the medical profession, my sincere advice is: DO NOT!




Resources:
Background music: Wave in the Atmosphere, Dan Lebowitz
Pictures: 
https://pixnio.com/free-images/2017/04/03/2017-04-03-10-02-15.jpg
https://cdn.pixabay.com/photo/2016/09/29/19/55/doctor-1703644_1280.jpg 

Friday, January 26, 2018

69th Republic Day: Wishlist for the Nation

26th January 2018. 

It is that day of the year when we gather to witness the Nation's military and cultural razzmatazz.  The only time of the year when we get to see some discipline on display!

When I am asked what I would be doing on the 26th, I nonchalantly say 'watch the parade.'  Others generally laugh at the answer, as though I am being facetious. 

They probably expect me to say that I would be doing something worthier instead, like visiting overcrowded malls.  No people, I mean it.  I do watch the parade.  If that's odd, so be it. 


This year's observations:

1. Touching moment when the President shed tears after presenting the Ashoka Chakra posthumously to the deceased soldier's wife and mother.  Never seen this happen before.

2. The same President in high spirits; laughing and cheering towards the end of the parade when the BSF women's contingent did the acrobatics on motorbikes.  Extremes of emotions!

3. The best tableaux (IMHO): Maharashtra with Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, followed by Assam with its depiction of masks - Ravana and other characters of Ramayana. 

4. Unique tableau by Karnataka: only animated animal models; no people on it (P.S.: the baboons rocked!).

5. Not one, not two, but TEN chief guests!  The Singapore PM was right next to PM Modi, and was probably taken aback by the discipline on display!  

6. Mesmerizing effect when the overhead camera showed the cadets marching away with robotic precision.

7. But the highlight this year had to be the BSF women's daredevilry on motorbikes; another first this year!


All these are fine.  But I do not want the discipline, decorum and bonhomie to be confined to the annual jamboree.  I want good things to happen in our Nation 365 days of the year. 

So here's a wishlist of things that I would like to see happen for the collective good of the country and humanity in general:

1. Population level to come down.  There are one too many of us!  This, IMHO is the most urgent need of the country, because every other civic problem, arguably, is related to this one factor.

2. Poverty eradicated!  Poverty, quite simply, is unacceptable.  Economic prosperity to reach all individuals, even the poorest of the poor; no more rich/poor divide.  There should not be a single homeless person on the streets, or for that matter, any stray animal on the roads.  And I don't just mean cows; all animals to have shelters in all towns and cities of India.

3. Everybody obeys traffic rules.  No wheelies, no jumping red signals, no driving on the wrong side of the road, no jaywalking!  Discipline on the roads, people!

4. No reservations!  Only merit based admission or employment; not based on caste/religion.

5. No dynastic politics or nepotism of any kind.  No place for such phenomena in any public service institutions of a democracy.

6. Terrorism rooted out!  No safe havens; no closing the door after the horse has bolted.  Constant vigilance and prevention of attacks rather than chasing terrorists after the attacks.

7. Speedier justice for all - because justice delayed is justice denied.  No influence by the rich and famous; more errant politicians/celebrities brought to justice.   

8. Common education curriculum for the whole country across all levels: primary & secondary schools; and professional colleges, including engineering and medicine.  No divisions such as state, ICSE, CBSE, etc.  Career guidance counselling and aptitude test for all students before they embark on professional courses.  Dharma/ethics/culture to be the basis for formative education; not blind western fact based bookish education.  And yes, no capitation fees!  Parents not to be reduced to beggars to admit their children to schools.  RTE to be fully implemented.  Government schools upgraded to match city schools.

9. Health for all.  And health coverage and/or insurance for all.  Custodians of healthcare delivery to have better life.

10. More care, concern and efforts to upkeep all natural habitats and national monuments; such as our rivers, pilgrimage centres, historic buildings, architecture, arts & crafts, scriptures, forests, flora & fauna, tribes, and indigenous cultures.

11. No conversions!  No place for bigoted, narrow-minded interpretations of religious scriptures that lead to enticement/coercion to lead the gullible away from their culture/heritage/faith.  Likewise foreign residents/illegal immigrants overstaying their welcome and/or creating law & order problems to be deported back to their countries.

12. India, primarily, is a spiritual place.  Sanatana Dharma to show the way for spiritual oneness; full realization of the potential that is inherent in sanatanic statements such as: vasudhaiva kutumbakam; ekam sat vipra bahu vadanti, and sarve janaha sukhinobhavantu.  Divisionists and secessionists to be rooted out!


Wishful thinking, do I hear you say?  Maybe. 

I am well aware that these are complex, complicated and multifarious issues subject to the vagaries of multiple variables. 

But wishing, thinking and doing are the only things that are under my willful control.  And the wise say that there is a lot of power in thoughts and words.  So I will wish away!  

The above list is by no means complete, but I feel these are the most pressing needs of the Nation if it has to progress and really achieve its immense potential.  

Here's hoping that the governments and we the people work towards realising this potential.

Kale varshatu parjanyaha
Pruthavi sashya shalinim
Deshoyam kshobha rahitam
Sajjana santu nirbhayaha!

(Listen to this shloka in this video: Prarthana shloka)





Image source: 
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiT0czMJIfLWvInl4uldd26KHX1kjXTYz-jQ4ffMfx1JparGxlP_9vDitxmN_JaVM3O9iCX14d9Vza0ZwWOA-TewJg6G9bJClial0YLRS14S_thIveROrzNx01cGocugB5tbOaQOCJnaNMC/s640/26+January+Republic+Day+2018+Hindi+Speech+Anchoring+Script+Wishes+SMS+Quotes+Message+%2526+HD+Images.jpg









Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Article on lack of medical facilities in schools

Are our schools equipped to handle health and safety of children who attend them? 

What happens if a child has a medical emergency during school hours?  

Can we trust the schools to handle these incidents appropriately and report them truthfully?  

Find out in this medical educational article...










Film conversations: Dhurandhar

Chapter 1: The movie-going experience Due to prior horrid experiences related to  popcorn prices rivalling real estate rates in Bengaluru, ...