When Practice Questions Become Real Life


“That looks so sad. At least they can fix it,” I thought. I was a first-year medical student in anatomy class glancing at a slide about cleft lips and palates. Two years later, while navigating an emotional reproductive journey, my husband and I looked at an ultrasound revealing a cleft in our baby. My mind jumped back to those slides, and I couldn’t help but think, “This actually happens to people?”

A week after I delivered, I was pumping in the middle of the night in a hotel room across the street from the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) where my 6-day-old son was still admitted. Beyond exhausted, I called for the first time at that hour just to check in. “How did you know?!” was the nurse’s response. “He just had a bloody diaper and we’re talking to the doctor. We’ll call you back with the x-ray results.” Twenty minutes later, but what felt like forever, the doctor called to confirm a diagnosis of necrotizing enterocolitis. He said it was every neonatologist’s “worst nightmare.” I started gasping for air. I used to be happy when I identified the diagnosis of necrotizing enterocolitis on an examination question. It was an easy answer. The baby always died.

The difficult news continued to arrive as my baby’s problem list grew longer. After 2 months, we finally identified the cause of apneic spells that made him turn gray until we bagged oxygen back into his lungs: it was seizures that could be suppressed with phenobarbital. As any third-year medical student would do, I pulled up the UpToDate article on neonatal epilepsy. My stomach dropped as I had a flashback to reading this same page 6 months ago during my pediatrics clerkship.

There is a high incidence of early death (15 to 20 percent) associated with neonatal seizures….The following long-term outcomes have been reported: Global developmental delay (55 percent), intellectual disability (20 to 40 percent), cerebral palsy (25 to 43 percent)…1

The list of poor outcomes went on and on. I remember that young patient who presented with shock-like jerks. At the time, I was perversely grateful that I wasn’t the child’s mother. But now I was that mother.

Not only do I have to navigate the many diagnoses associated with having a medically complicated child as I return to complete my clinical rotations, but I’m constantly surrounded by reminders of how atypical my experience has been. Every part of my obstetrics and gynecology rotation was challenging. Assisting with normal vaginal deliveries that I had so desperately wanted for myself. Observing Cesarean deliveries that did not end with the infant being intubated and whisked away to the NICU. Participating in prenatal appointments where patients expressed anxieties about their otherwise picture-perfect pregnancies. But the moment that finally got me to break down, sobbing in the call room was a simple shelf-examination practice question. The question described a newborn with a cleft lip and palate, microcephaly, shortened fingers, and a murmur and asked the reader to identify the cause. The answer: maternal consumption of phenytoin. The explanation depicted a cartoon of an affected infant. I wanted to scream at the question writer: “Do you know what it’s like to have a baby with a cleft and microcephaly! This was not caused by anything I took. And now he is on antiepileptics that are saving his life!” How ironic.

Before my son was born, life as a medical student biased me toward focusing on the worst possible outcome, even when such an outcome was statistically unlikely. I can understand why. When you are clinically responsible for a patient, it’s important to be prepared for all possibilities and plan for worst-case scenarios. My now 6-month-old son has taught me, however, that when interacting with patients and families, it’s just as necessary not to forget the most likely scenario. In fact, an estimated 89% of full-term neonates with necrotizing enterocolitis survive2; about 45% of neonatal seizures are successfully managed with first-line medications3; around 70% of clefts do not have an identifiable cause.4

When clinicians present the facts but emphasize the positive, this optimism is more than just a fuzzy feeling; it has practical benefits. It can translate into genuine empathy via a few extra minutes of presence at the bedside, a compliment on a baby’s appearance, or an anecdote about how a similar child prevailed. As a parent, it has become easy to tell when a physician thinks deep down that a child will not recover. I also notice when someone focuses on my son’s big, curious eyes rather than trying to match his overall clinical picture to an infographic or statistic every time she examines him. More often than not, parents are just searching for that glimmer of hope and human connection.

Source: JAMA

3 Ways to Follow Your Passion While Still Working a Full Time Job.


Choose a job you love, and you will never have to work a day in your life. ~Confucius

We have all been there – sitting in our cubicle staring into the distance, dreaming of the day when you could leave it all behind and really follow your passion.  Safe inside those four walls it sounds so nice, and just outside your grasp.  But how do you really develop the skills and income needed to leave your job, while still working at your full time job?  It’s hard to stay motivated and pursue your passion when you don’t have that much extra energy after work.

3-Ways-to-Follow-Your-Passion-While-Still-Working-a-Full-Time-Job-

Here are 3 ways you can keep nurturing your dreams and following your passion, so that when you’re ready to leave the full time job, the path is laid out before you.

1. Keep the Inspiration Alive

Whatever your dream is, make sure it stays alive and real.  Don’t let your ideas fester in your head, only to wilt away.  Feed it, give it a life of its own. Connect with your passion in real life – take classes, go to lectures, attend meetups with folks interested in similar activities.  If you’re passionate about becoming a life coach, attend a coaching seminar or workshop in your area.  If you long to become a yoga teacher, make sure you’re taking classes at a yoga school that also helps train new teachers.

Join online communities of likeminded folks, so you start building your network of people with similar ideas, dreams and passions as yourself.  Tell your old friends and new community about your dream.  It helps make it real and gives you invested stakeholders to support you on your way.

2. Connect with Other People Farther Along Your Path

You can learn from them what to expect, and what the potential pitfalls and benefits are.  It’s a fine line between connecting with people who are doing what you want to do and idolizing people who are years ahead of you.  It can be damaging to look at highly successful people and try to map your journey to theirs, because the distance is daunting.  Especially if you’re just starting out, this can cause paralysis and overwhelm.  We want to avoid that and keep you moving towards your dreams in an informed way.

Mentors are an amazing thing.  Build relationships with people that inspire you, and ask them to mentor you.  It’s a fast track for learning more about your chosen path, quickly.  Mentors can inspire you, support you, and help you understand the next steps in your journey.

3. Gain Experience

As much as possible, get your feet wet before leaving your job.  This way you will know if you really like it, or just loved the idea of it.   It’s totally fine to like an idea more than the reality of something – and it’s good to know if that’s the case before you cut ties (and loose a paycheck).  If you do love it as much as you think you do, it’ll only motivate you more to keep following your passion – and the time gaining experience will give you a solid boost when it’s time to spread you wings and fly on your own.

All of these things can be done after work or on the weekends.  Generally, the more we love something, the more reward we feel doing it, the more motivated we are to invest more time in it.  So don’t be surprised if these start out as one or two hour a week activities that end up taking most of your time! That’s a good thing, it means you’re on the right path, following your passion, making your dreams happen.

If you do follow your bliss you put yourself on a kind of track that has been there all the while, waiting for you, and the life that you ought to be living is the one you are living. Follow your bliss and don’t be afraid, and doors will open where you didn’t know they were going to be. ~Joseph Campbell

Source: http://www.purposefairy.com