Sunday, April 22, 2012

Crawl...Walk...Fall...Walk Again


A baby learn to walk is no easy feat. It will start with a small steps, small and uneasy steps. The gait is waddling, the toes are in-curling. There will be numerous falls and bumps. Numerous bruises on forehead, scratches over limbs and endless cries. Given enough time and practice, small steps become big steps, uneasy become steady, then there is no more falling down, Walking become the second nature.

Isn't it the same with life? House officers learn from experience, numerous failures, many ups and downs, to become a safe doctor, and a better person?

New ruling created by the day to help these 'underpriviledged' group of people. First come the rule of house officers not allowed to follow in ambulance. Then came the shift work system to cut back the working time to 60 hours. Now there are hospitals that won't allow them to clerk case and examine patients! Looking at all these rules, it follows after certain events.

First, there were an incident of a house officer in Melaka Hospital involved in road traffic accidents while transporting patients. While we cannot predict the future, shit does happens to anyone. I witnessed a case of a staff nurse sustained a fracture of the radius bone while transporting a pregnant mother to general hospital for delivery because the new ambulance driver hit on a wild boar and the ambulance go turtle. Do we bar the nurses from sending patient? Certainly not! While I cannot say the ambulance is the safest ride home, even a fully registered doctors like us cannot prevent any untoward things to occur.

Then, house officers complaining of long working hours in the hospital. Hospital basically become the second home. There is no social life, love life or party life next to working. Then came the shift work implementations. Initially was full of glitches, but thing smoothed out in the end. The draw back is the oncall claims was with held. Then complaints starts again become there is not enough money to cover the car installment and side expenses, so another 600 bucks given on top of the shift work. What they didn't realized that without the adequate exposure, there is simply a disaster in the making. Not only more officers will be extended for the lack of skills and knowledge, they will be less equipped when sent to places that has no senior people to back up. The situation is similar in most of the government hospitals.

Are we doing them any good? Ask yourself, in years to come, will you want to go to any government doctors when you fall sick? If the answer is no, then please review the system again. For me, to be a great person, one have to fall many times, then when he stand up one day, he will be standing up tall. The scar is to mark how resilient you are, and prove to the world that you are not a weak doctor! 

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