Chap-9 Mental Illness and Medication “Why Doctor committing suicide? ” “Doctors can been as vulnerable as anybody else in any profession, but is hard to relate a physician that spend years of studies inside a medical school , and put themselves on the most strenuous level of stress , to get the most sophisticated way of knowledge as physician, to cure , control disease, and expand save people’s life.” Every year according the statistics, 400 physicians and new grads student of medical school are in risk to commit suicide, this news are alarming concerning. The statistics shows that physicians are more than twice as likely to kill themselves as no physicians. Females are more likely commit suicide three times more than male Physicians. Study shows that this news intern physician at the beginning of their training are vulnerable, they present symptoms of depressions and social thoughts.
These had concerned the hospitals and intern programs for news physicians by recognizing the importance and the
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They jobs is the most difficult to accomplish without been overwhelm. Our expertise toward doctors should be more real and humane. We trust that they would know bets and how to take care health. They need more support than everybody else during those years of hard work and study, lack sleep, discomfort, their emotion when they have to face and sign the first death certificate and they are not allow to talk about it, their worries about mistaken prescriptions that had order. Or as simple as not knowing or forgotten the answers to a news medical students. All this factors need to be consider in order to help a new resident or physician that might be in risk to commit suicide. We need good doctors. Let support all their sacrifices that they going through to become to be ours doctors, to cure disease and help us to live healthy
They serve as pillars of wisdom and guidance while exhibiting communication adroitness with care teams and patients to engineer top-notch medical care. To maintain high standards, effective medical professionals are constantly taking in new information through continuing education, placing providers at the pinnacle of knowledge. Moreover, physicians require affective aptitude as they must convey empathy during patient interactions. All these attributes draw me to seek the personal challenge and resulting responsibilities that are demanded. I desire to become an important contribution to society in a field I am passionate
Melvin Kooner, an anthropologist who entered medical school in his mid-thirties, characterizes physicians as “tough, brilliant, knowledgeable, hardworking, and hard on themselves.” (Kooner, 1998, pg. 374) Many personal conversations with medical students, residents, and attending physicians from a variety of specialties confirm Kooner’s assessment. Doctors work hard, work long hours, deal regularly with life-and-death situations, and make substantial personal sacrifices to practice in their field. These attributes of medical practice can provide a great deal of satisfaction to the aspiring or practicing physician, but can also be a source of professional and personal distress. Burnout or the experience of long-term emotional and physical
In addition, teaching is a significant part of any doctor’s life. As physicians, we are constantly educating not only our patients and their families, but also other physicians, residents and medical students. A physician may know all the medical information in the world, but the care of a patient is primarily predicated on that physician’s ability to successfully
Social awareness of the doctors has made them dedicated to their job. Since other stakeholders are delinked from the problems that face the public, the doctors have to stand in and ensure that they do their best to preserve the heath of the people. Both books demonstrate that doctors are dedicated to their jobs and invest more energy and
Students go through four years of medical schools and countless years of residency just to learn and practice medicine and its connection with humanities. Once they are done with rigorous training, they believe that they, themselves, know everything and that every patient will leave the hospital or clinic cured, treated, and happy. However, that is not the case. No matter how one does on their med school boards, physicians are prone to mistakes. Physicians have encountered at least one mistake during their career. Different people have different perspectives concerning errors in the medicine field. Atul Gawande’s “Complications: A Surgeon’s Note on an Imperfect Science” and Dr. Goldman’s TED Talk emphasize errors in a hospital or clinical setting.
Although doctors go through more than 6 years of very intense and extreme preparation before actually treating patients, the truth is, no human being is perfect, and even though we often strive for perfection and greatness, most of the time we make mistakes. Of course, when you’re a doctor the consequences are much worse and bigger, since people’s lives are at stake.
It is obvious to the TV viewer that under the banners of compassion and autonomy, some are calling for legal recognition of a "right to suicide" and societal acceptance of "physician-assisted suicide." Suicide proponents evoke the image of someone facing unendurable suffering who calmly and rationally decides death is better than life in such a state. They argue that society should respect and defer to the freedom of choice such people exercise in asking to be killed. This essay intends to debunk this point of view on the basis of mental illness among those patients involved.
Assisted suicide is viewed as a way to maintain human dignity, which is why there is a campaign to try and legalize physician-assisted suicide. It’s prideful for a terminally ill patient to “die with dignity”, however, most policy makers in our society have rejected the campaign. It’s a social debate regarding high cost of treatment in terminal phases as well as an ethical debate, because the struggle for life is a universal and natural thought for people within our societies. However, as a rule, the family doctor who has known the patient for years is the best judge of condition along with
Therefore, medical professionals must learn how to prevent malpractice litigation, rather than fighting them out in a court of law. An attitude of care and concern, a relationship that bespeaks, thoughtful professionalism and a humanistic approach many a times solves more problems, melts more hostilities, and eliminates more suits than almost any other single recommendation. Doctors in training must be aware that they are expected to seek advice and assistance where they lack experience in order to preserve public safety. Sometimes mistakes done by doctors are so dangerous that a patient has to suffer immensely. Being in such a profession where sick, ill and sufferers are your customers who look upon you as the almighty, an absolute amount of care is
Although, commonly neglected suicide has become a major issue regarding college students. The website Suicide.org, report on a couple international suicide statistics saying that, each year over one million people die by suicide worldwide. They also report that on average, one person dies by suicide every 40 seconds somewhere in the world and in the past forty-five years, it has led to a sixty percent increase globally (Suicide.org). The World Health Organization (WHO) ranked 170 countries by suicides per 100,000 people per year. They reported that after Guyana, South Korea is the second leading country with the highest suicide rates in the world, Japan is ranked number seventeen, the United States is ranked number fifty and Cambodia is ranked number seventy-five out of a total of 170 countries. In the data collected by WHO, the reported statistics also show that the majority of suicidal behaviors or deaths associate with males in all the countries analyzed. According to Mark Stibich author of the article, “Top 10 Causes of Death for Americans Ages 15-24: U.S. Mortality Causes and Prevention Methods,” after accidents and homicide, suicide is the third leading cause of death in college campuses and the second leading cause of death among young people aged 45-34 in the U.S (Stibich 2016). Sydney S. Smith and colleague’s authors of the article, “Mediating Effects of Stress, Weight-Related Issues, and Depression on Suicidality in College Students”, note that within the
The world is full of sick, helpless people, and there is one group of heroes that provide assistance to those who cannot help themselves. These people are known as Physicians. The people of America that maintain this influential title do not have it handed to them. These hard-working people work a long time to change the lives of not only others, but themselves as well. The responsibilities physicians have, the requirements to be one, the things they go through, and the rewards are why physicians play such an important role in the world.
Ivan Illich said that medical professional practice is indeed a threat to health and identified a syndrome he call the medical nemesis (Blaxter, 2010). The history of medical professional practice along with its major threats to health will be discussed in the essay. In addition, this essay will further highlight, with suitable examples, how these major threats are confounded in everyday society with or without the knowledge of the public. Good professional practice will be explained and compared to the actual threats experienced in real life. In addition, examples will be provided to further explain how medical practice is a major threat to health.
Saint Augustine once said, “What does love look like? It has the hands to help others. It has the feet to hasten to the poor and needy. It has eyes to see misery and want. It has the ears to hear the sighs and sorrows of men. That is what love looks like.” The profession of medicine can be traced back to the 5th century BCE this signifies how important the relationship between a patient and the doctor is. The fact that this profession until now stands out, let alone speaks for itself. The fact that when someone speaks about a doctor that treated them everyone in the room pays their respect. The relationship of a doctor and a patient isn’t something that was recently created, but rather a
After my sophomore year had ended, I spent time over the summer staying at a close friend’s home, whose father, a practicing emergency physician, became somewhat of a mentor to me. While perhaps unintentional on his part, and unknowing to me at the time, the conversations I had with Dr. X lead me to develop a curiosity for the medical field. It was in the pure and passionate way that he talked about why he chose to practice medicine, with a strong
“My passion: the duo of family and medicine”. “A profession that complements one’s passion is a way of life”. This is my philosophy. I was introduced to the world of medicine through my father. He suffered from severe asthma and got treatment from a nearby primary health center. I always saw him leaving the consultation room with the symptoms alleviated. As an innocent child, I thought of doctors as magicians who cured the patients in the blink of an eye. My childhood curiosity molded me to who I am today; “a Medical Doctor”.