
Anonymous wrote:This is why medicine is full of privileged whites and increasingly Asian profession. There is no room for people from lower SES backgrounds many of whom are POC to make mistakes. I feel like richer parents can make these types of mistakes go away.
Anonymous wrote:As an employer it’s just too much liability to have her in a situation where she has access to powerful drugs and holds patient lives in her hands. Orthopedic Surgery and ER were possibly among the worst choices for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Medicine has always been very unforgiving of drug or alcohol use which makes sense given that physicians have incredible access to drugs. What happened to this girl is not unique.
The fact that she killed herself sadly supports medicine's decision not to train her. There are many people who attend medical school and can't complete residency training for a variety of reasons (addiction, financial, academic).
They go on to use their MD without doing a residency (research, pharmaceutical work , etc). These people have table their dreams, shift directions and make it work. They don't decided to end it all.
Also, given that she completed an internship year (first year of residency) means she was eligible to work as an attending MD ...
This. The bolded.
I hesitate to speak ill of the dead, but she did elegantly make their point for them.
This is so nasty.
This woman was not well, and was troubled, and you know what? There are plenty of successful practicing physicians who have similar mental issues.
I know of at least one highly successful physician who recently passed away from a drug overdose.
Anonymous wrote:And her choices, Orthopedics or Emergency Med are both difficult to match.
Had she gone the route of family medicine in possibly a more rural area she likely would have matched. Slog through residency and then move if you need to. Not kill yourself.
I feel sad for this woman and her family. Honestly, someone close to her should have recognized that this might not be the best path for someone with mental illness. But in our society we tell everyone they can become whatever they want, when that’s not always the best advice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Medical professionals who experience addiction often have to choose between treatment of their careers because of the ability to prescribe drugs. It happens to people mid-career as well.
These are the stories our preteens need to hear. Len Bias scared the crap out of me as a teen.
You know, you're not the first person to tell me that (Len Bias). It seems to have hit a certain generation of 1980s kids like a sternum punch. That he could go so easily was frightening. I've seen drug counsellors tell his story to kids even today.
My husband is 40 and never tried the (abundant, would have been free) cocaine at his college even one time because of Len Bias.
Anonymous wrote:Physicians are human and you will find plenty of doctors who use drugs. I know someone who climbed out of that hole. I dare anyone in that industry to contradict me.
It's terribly hypocritical to have denied this talented young woman a chance to have a brilliant career in the medical field. She had left the drugs behind. It's unbelievable that she was ostracized for mistakes she made as a teen. Seriously disappointing.