love people. But I hate the horrible things they do.
What would possess anybody in their right mind to go into an
elementary school and shoot a gun at children? My heart breaks when I hear
tragic news like this. Where is God in this situation? I can only pray that he
is holding the broken hearts of the parents, family, and friends as he leads
the new little angels home. I simply can not imagine this situation, and want
to be home with my babies so I can hug them so tightly and cherish all my
moments with them.
Life is too short, and I have seen firsthand the tragedies
and diseases that can rip families apart from one another. They say that by the
end of medical shool, you’ve usually seen enough to become numb to terrible
events; you lose your empathy so that you are capable of doing your job and
moving on to the next patient who needs your knowledge and attention. This has
not happened to me, I still am considered to be overly empathetic, which is
clear to the others around me at the airport as I’m crying my eyes out over the
children in CT. Furthermore, I do not want to lose my empathy – it’s part of
who I am, and the reason that I will be a great doctor. Who wants a cold,
emotionless psychiatrist? Certainly not me! Surgeon maybe, psychiatrist
definitely not.
I loved the NICU, and believe I would have made an excellent
neonatologist and would have loved it, however, I would go home in tears nearly
everyday. I still pray for the patients
that I cared for last month in the NICU, though I heard from one of the
residents the littlest baby of mine passed away about a week after I left L
Maybe I am too emotional to be a doctor.
Worst experience thus far as a medical student:
Toward the middle of my two weeks in Emergency Medicine this
year, a young girl was wheeled into the ED - clearly she was extremely anxious,
face pale, hyperventilating and holding her chest. I immediately recognized her
as a patient I had worked with previously on my Internal Medicine rotation a
few months earlier. She had the misfortune of having post-partum cardiomyopathy
(in english this means that a few weeks after delivering her baby, her heart
went into failure for reasons we still don’t understand, it is a rare and very
severe occurrence after pregnancy). She had been discharged to another hospital
the last time I saw her, so that she could get more specialized care.
Apparently, in the meantime she had been released and though her outcome was
hopeful, she had basically given up on life. Her mother reported that she had
not left the house, rarely talked to anybody, and was not taking care of
herself – not showering, eating, or even getting up from the couch to use the
bathroom. She also blamed her beautiful baby girl for her killing her, she said
she knew she was going to die. Obviously she was going through some major
depression, and she also suffered from panic attacks, fearing her imminent
death. I felt sad speaking to her, and wished I could just hug her.
She had been on the way to the hospital for a blood
transfusion when a panic attack set in, as being in a hospital made her
endlessly nervous that she would never leave again. After only a few short
minutes in her ED room, her heart started racing, her heart that was operating
at only about 15percent of normal. Unfortunately, her heart could not handle
the stress, and stopped altogether.
I was there for the whole thing. I watched as they pushed
medication after medication into her veins. I observed tubes being shoved down
her throat to get an airline in. I
performed chest compressions on her, pushing with all my might to the beat of
“staying alive” as I had been instructed (how ironic). I watched as the
cardiologist hurried to her side and did an ultrasound of her heart. As I was
pumping on her chest, which was covered with dirt, sweat and cigarette burns,
the cardiologist showed me how I was making her heart work, and when I stopped
compressions, her heart failed to push any blood on its own. And I was there
when they told me to stop compressions and she was pronounced dead. It was
truly awful.
What was worse was being there as the ER doctor and the
cardiologist sat down with her family and told them that, despite their best
efforts, their daughter was gone. The mother’s cry of horror, and the patient’s
baby girl staring at me with unknowing, innocent will haunt me forever.
I still had three more hours to work that night, but I
simply could not handle it. Without telling anybody, I walked out the door to
my car, and left, crying tears for the mother who lost her daughter, and for
the baby who would never know her mother.
Sadly, this is only one experience of what will be many
unfortunate events. I don’t know how many more I can handle.
On that note, I’m gonna look at pictures of my happy babies
to cheer myself up . . .
I have so much respect for you, and every other doctor, that fights to help people stay alive on this planet. I will pray for you always.
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