purple_dye wrote:. If you were to get viciously hit by a car would you prefer to be treated with some turmeric to reduce inflammation or would you prefer to get some morphine?
Is pursuing a modern medical career and rightful and just decision?
In answer to the first question I would choose diacetylmorphine hydrochloride, at a dose of 10mg IV.
The second question is a little trickier to answer because it really depends on the system in which you would practise ie totally private vs state-subsidised, or even a mix of the two.The 'bottom line' does vary between these modes of practise.
Getting a medical degree is no mean feat and demands dedication and alot of cash/rich parents/willingness to take onboard alot of debt.Its very competitive to get in to and the career itself has its ups and downs.Plus many 'eminent' practitioners are arrogant individuals and not the kind of folk one would like to be around.And as a group, they have a low opinion of mavericks and those who are vociferous in challenging the status quo.
The upsides include the challenging cases which are not the everyday fayre, the job security, the appreciation of the patients youve aided, the obscure diagnoses made, the authority the title 'Dr' gives (eg the ability to write a letter to help out someone with work-related stresses, the ability to declare someone dead without being challenged, the capacity to tell LEO patient X is not up to being interviewed,"so I would be grateful if you would come back when I tell you they are fit!" etc, etc), the salary, practical knowledge of all things pharmaceutical ...
Downsides include the long hours early in the career, the callousness which inevitably comes from being confronted with numerous very ill acute patients for whom you are totally responsible-so much so that if one dies before being attended to its not unheard of to simply strike the name off the list whilst thinking 'Right, one less to see'; the mental effects of being confronted with an array of modes of dying daily whilst fully aware of ones own mortality, being enslaved to a pager which cannot be ignored, a vast amount of paperwork....... the list goes on.
On a more cheery note, medicine is a large field and there are some disciplines which have their own ups and downs eg radiology, anesthetics, pathology etc.The breadth of the discipline usually means one can find something to their taste once they have the degree, and the hurdle of post-graduate qualifications has been crossed.These exams are bloody hard, very expensive and need to be studied for whilst working long long hours.
As a career, its a fine choice but it gives alot whilst also taking its due.Its no surprise that so many doctors love a drink, and many end up topping themselves.
I am paranoid of my brain. It thinks all the time, even when I'm asleep. My thoughts assail me. Murderous lechers they are. Thought is the assassin of thought. Like a man stabbing himself with one hand while the other hand tries to stop the blade. Like an explosion that destroys the detonator. I am paranoid of my brain. It makes me unsettled and ill at ease. Makes me chase my tail, freezes my eyes and shuts me down. Watches me. Eats my head. It destroys me.