Doctors are routinely accused of being callous towards their patients’ suffering; of treating them like projects to complete. Here’s my perspective, for what it’s worth.
I have always maintained that after a certain while of being in a profession, barring a few exceptions, you become your profession. A construction worker will behave like a construction worker. Doctors are no exception and you can pretty much tell a doctor apart from, say, a lawyer or a journalist.
I brought this subject up because I am more than a little moved by one recent news story that talks of doctors not being able to empathize with their patients’ suffering. I give you the thread:
http://www.themedguru.com/articles/doctors_lack_empathy_study-86111898.html
Doctors deal with pain and suffering every single day of their lives. If they let all the hurt and trauma they experience around them affect them, they’ll go crazy... or become saints.
Instead what it does to them is, since they constantly try to block it all out, make them immune to patients' suffering after a while. And doctors NEED to be immune to others' agony, and not get carried away in emotions themselves, to be able to do their job objectively.
Medical professionals have got no way out. The best they can do is acclimatize themselves to the misery around them. Harden themselves and not be fazed by the sight of blood and gore like an uninitiated common man would. I mean if I see a patient getting the surgeon’s scalpel I’ll pretty much collapse there. Less than a minute of action in the operation theatre will be enough to make me run.
But can the doctor take a flight like I can? Like you can? That’s his job. He’s got to perform it and perform it in a way that saves lives.
Now, I’m not saying that doctors have to be these cruel, unfeeling, objective robots. My perspective is that doctors need to shut away their subjective sensitivity when they start their shift. Since they are dealing with lives, doctors' is the most demanding job of them all, one that requires objectivity. In a place where he needs surgical precision and superlative concentration, the last thing a surgeon wants is stupid emotions coming in the way.
Of course, by being sensitive to the patient, the physician might give some moral support, but, on the downside, sensitivity can take his mind off his real job, which is to treat the patient. Let the relatives provide the necessary moral support for the patient.
Personally, I’ll never accuse doctors of not being sympathetic enough. I wouldn’t need their sympathy anyway (onus of that lies with my near and dear ones). They can be callous long as they are doing their job right; diagnosing correctly, operating rightly, and prescribing medication precisely. But I’ll raise an eyebrow when they botch up their job of saving lives. Falling short of emotions is excusable, playing with lives is not.
By Harpreet Bhagrath
The writer is the Chief Editor at themoneytimes.com and can be contacted at editor@trustsquare.net Or harpreet10jan@hotmail.com
I am not a doctor and I
I am not a doctor and I never wanted to become one of them. I think that this profession requires a lot of strength and knowledge. As you said doctors need to shut away their subjective sensitivity and it would be really hard for me to act like they do. We can’t accuse them of being unfeeling because doctors or health care providers are one of the hardest professions and not everyone has the capacity to be a doctor.
I agree that emotions need
I agree that emotions need to be contained and controlled in the work enviroment but the day I become unfeeling and immune to the pain of my patients is the day I shall leave the profession. Doctors do more than save lives...sometimes we are unable to cure and so must help to simply improve or maintain quality of life. At other times, we must help people die with respect and dignity. One cannot do this effectively if one has lost feeling or has become immune to human suffering.
That's very noble of you to
That's very noble of you to think like that, Victoria. For some, it's a calling and not just a profession. I'm not a doctor, you are; so I value your opinion more than I value mine on this. But I doubt that majority of the medical fraternity share your perspective.
Post new comment