Iatrogenesis: Essays on Becoming a Physician


Book Description

In iatrogenesis: Essays on Becoming a Physician, medical students share coming-of-age stories that illustrate the rigorous, rewarding, and sometimes unforgiving journey into medicine. In Greek, iatro- means doctor, and -genesis means origin: Iatrogenesis thus describes any effect, good or bad, brought forth by a physician's actions. This essay compendium looks beyond a physician's impact on patients, instead turning inward to examine the impact of medical training on student doctors. These essays written by University of Michigan medical students span from the donning of the White Coat to graduation. Along the way, each writer weaves a story, the threads of which unite in a tapestry highlighting the universality of this coming-of-age journey. These essays breathe life into each stage of medical apprenticeship, displaying the full spectrum of human emotion as medical students find ways to reinvent themselves as the physicians of tomorrow.




On Being a Physician


Book Description

On Being a Physician by Roman W. De Sanctis, MD is a compelling and inspirational essay that captures, with remarkable grace, humility and authenticity, responding to a call to care for the sick. Roman retired from the Massachusetts General Hospital after a storied, 59-year tenure as a practicing Cardiologist. He has been an inspiration to generations of doctors and this essay, adapted from his 2014 speech to Harvard Medical School's graduating class, distills the essence of practicing medicine at the very highest level. Every medical school graduate, new or old, should read this little book and be inspired to emulate the ideals that animated and the practices that defined the career of one of the truly great physicians of our era.




The Midnight Meal and Other Essays about Doctors, Patients, and Medicine


Book Description

Essays discuss the physician's role in the health care system, the doctor-patient relationship, what doctors can learn from their patients, and relations between colleagues







On Being a Doctor 3


Book Description

The sorrows, difficulties, and magic of medicine are all captured in the pages of this book. It is a compilation of stories, essays and poems which capture the sorrows, frustrations and difficulties of medicine.




Becoming a Better Physician


Book Description

This book offers insights from doctors and doctors-to-be about successes they’ve enjoyed and obstacles they’ve faced, personal and professional. Some of these essays are easy to celebrate, and others are painful to absorb. All encourage the reader to reflect upon their own stories, embrace vulnerabilities, forgive shortcomings, celebrate resilience, and, by doing so, become a better physician. The topics covered in these essays are divided into six chapters titled Learning and Training, Career, Caregiving, Physician as Patient, Personal Growth, and Love and Loss. Authors discuss a wide range of experiences that include combining marriage and residency, navigating racism, honing communication, forging relationships with patients and colleagues, battling addiction, getting fired, facing death, and more. Becoming a Better Physician is a beautifully written volume that will enlighten physicians, future physicians, and anyone interested in learning how physicians grow as medical professionals and as human beings.




Essays That Will Get You Into Physician Assistant School


Book Description

The PA School esay is your ticket to the interview. In fact, your essay (personal statement) may be the most important single piece of medical writing you will do in your medical career. Andrew J. Rodican, PA-C has been helping PA School Applicants get acepted to PA school since 1997. This book is his third book and includes of 40 essays that worked.




Becoming Doctors


Book Description




Essays in Medical Sociology


Book Description

This outstanding collection of essays by Renee C. Fox encompasses almost thirty years of original, pioneering research in the sociology of medicine. Based on fieldwork in a variety of medical settings in the United States, Belgium, and Zaire, these ethnographic essays examine chronic and terminal illness, medical research, therapeutic innovation, medical education and socialization, and bio-ethics. Within this framework, three empirical "cases" have been singled out for special scrutiny--the process of becoming a physician, the development of the artificial kidney machine and organ transplantation, and the evolution of medical research in Belgium. Without ignoring social structural or psychodynamic factors, Dr. Fox has explored basic cultural phenomena and questions associated with health, illness, and medicine: values, beliefs, symbols, rites, and the nuances of language: ethical and existential dilemmas and dualities; and the complex interrelationships between medicine, science, religion, and magic. She draws systematically and imaginatively upon anthropological, psychological, historical, and biological insights and integrates observations and analyses from her own studies in American, Western European, and Central African societies. This second, augmented edition includes Professor Fox's more recent contributions to the expanding field of the sociology of medicine. They are "The Evolution of Medical Uncertainty; The Human Condition of Health Professionals; Reflections on the Utah Artificial Heart Program; Is Religion Important in Belgium?; Medical Morality is Not Bioethics"--"Medical Ethics in China and the United States; "and "Medicine, Science and Technology. "The work also includes a new introduction, "Endings, Beginnings and Continuities." Now, anthropologists, sociologists, medical educators, scientists, researchers, and students can join her on her "journeys into the field" and share with her the priceless insights to be gained from the physicians, nurses, medical students, patients, and their families, who are working, living, and dying on the edge of what is known, scrutable, and remediable--on the edge of medical science.