Medical Doctor Essays

  • Pursuing A Career As Medical Doctor

    755 Words  | 2 Pages

    longstanding undiagnosed ailment. The same applies to my grandmother who became fully blind after receiving several doses of harmful traditional medicine. Thus, I decided to pursue a career as medical doctor in order to serve poor West African communities like my grandmothers’ that sorely lack qualified doctors and affordable health care. Unlike my grandparents, I grew up in the more urban side of town in Port Harcourt, Nigeria and attended a Christian secondary school. I still vividly remember the

  • Medical Ethics: Patient Wishes vs Doctor Actions

    1276 Words  | 3 Pages

    A conflict between a doctor who wants to treat his patient a certain way, and a patient who wants to be treated by the doctor the way she wants. The doctor feels the that certain treatment that the patient wants is dangerous and warns the patient that he will pronounce the patient mentally unstable. This is exactly what happened in the case of Mrs. Jackson and Dr. Lowell. The conflict in this entire article is if weather the doctor can, or can not, accuse his patient mental instability to go about

  • The Unprofessional Relationship between Medical Doctors and Pharmaceutical Companies

    1366 Words  | 3 Pages

    The relationship between doctors and medical or corporate representatives is an old time practice in which the corporate representative primary goal is to directly inform the medical profession of the company’s products. There is nothing wrong with this practice, but it becomes situational when the medical representative is being offered financial incentives or on the company’s pay policy. Recently, GlaxoSmithKline publicized that they stop paying physicians to promote their products and try new

  • Education and Career of a Medical Doctor

    709 Words  | 2 Pages

    Medical Doctor is my top career choice. A career in medicine exemplifies my second and third career choices. Clinical Psychologists rectify maladjusted individuals, empowering them to be happy, healthy, and well-adjusted. Professional bodybuilding demands vast time commitment, dedication, and work ethic. Bodybuilders engage in extensive practice and personal progression, in order to master the skills of their trade. As a physician, I intend to integrate all of these fundamental principles. I desire

  • My Experiences in a Nursing Career

    679 Words  | 2 Pages

    Nursing “Nursing is an art: and if it is to be made an art, It requires an exclusive devotion as hard a preparation, as any painter´s or sculptor´s work; for what is the having to do with dead canvas or dead marble, compared with having to do with the living body, the temple of God´s spirit? It is one of the Fine Arts: I had almost said, the finest of Fine Arts.” Spoken by a true nurse, Florence Nightingale; a pioneer of nursing and a reformer of hospital sanitation methods. I have many goals

  • The Complexity of Arnold-Chiari Malformation

    823 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Complexity of Arnold-Chiari Malformation To the medical doctor, Arnold-Chiari Malformation, which may have a genetic link, is characterized by a small or misshapen posterior fossa (the depression in the back of the skull), a reduction in cerebrospinal fluid pathways and a protrusion of the cerebellar tonsils through the bottom of the skull (foramen magnum) into the spinal canal resulting in a multitude of sensory-motor problems and even some autonomous malfunctions (1). These many symptoms

  • College Students and Stress

    1315 Words  | 3 Pages

    Jul. 1999. MayoClinic. 3 Dec. 2000. http://www/mayohealth.org/mayo/9609/htm/college.htm Knight, Chris. Personal Interview. 27 Nov. 2000. Posen, David B., MD. "Stress Management for Patient and Physician." The Canadian Journal of Continuing Medical Education. Apr. 1995. 3 Dec. 2000. http://www/mentalhealth.com/mag1/p51-str.html

  • The Problem With Excessive Religious Freedom

    1581 Words  | 4 Pages

    A little boy lies on his deathbed because his parents refuse to take him to a medical doctor. Two men were fired and were refused unemployment benefits for smoking peyote, an illegal narcotic. One man looks to change part of a national recitation because two words of it offend him. A woman and her husband are trying to prosecute a man for a letter he sent to members of their church. These four situations may sound strange and unrelated, but all of them fall under the issue of religious freedom and

  • Robert and the Dog

    591 Words  | 2 Pages

    Robert, one must look a bit at his background. Ken Saro-Wiwa has left several clues in the text that can tell us a lot about this. Before Robert was employed by the young medical doctor, he had worked for several different households. It is indicated in the text that these had not been as pleasant a workplace as with the young doctor. It seems that Robert had been used to his employers' shouting and losing their tempers. And never calling him by his first name. Also the gratitude Robert feels towards

  • coma

    2235 Words  | 5 Pages

    is going to have an operation in OR room 8. Something happens during the operation, and Nancy becomes brain dead. Susan Wheeler, a medical student, is waking up for her first day in the field after two years of studying to become a medical doctor. She is very attractive with blond hair. She has blue, brown, and flecks of green in her eyes. When she and five other medical students go the Boston Memorial Hospital, all that the nurses think of them is that they are nuisances. They find Mark Bellows, who

  • Richard Gatling - The Gatling Gun

    641 Words  | 2 Pages

    he assisted his father in the construction of machines for sowing cottonseeds, and also for thinning cotton plants. He spent a lot of time in the fields with his father who helped him build some of his inventions. Richard Jordan Gatling was a medical doctor with numerous patents for his farm equipment inventions. To his credit he came up with the famous 1862-model Revolving Battery Gun, that is now referred to as the Gatling gun. The 1862-model was one of the first reliable Revolving guns, but still

  • Galileo Galilei

    750 Words  | 2 Pages

    February 15th, 1564. His father, Vincenzo was a music teacher and musician. After his family moved to Florence, Galilei was sent to a monastery to be educated. He was so happy there that he decided to become a monk, but his father wanted him to be a medical doctor and brought him home to Florence. He was never really interested in medicine and studied mathematics at the University of Pisa. He was especially interested in famous mathematicians like Euclid (geometry) and Archimedes. In fact in 1586 he wrote

  • Aldous Huxley

    686 Words  | 2 Pages

    England. The infamous Huxley family possessed both scientific and literary fame throughout Europe. As a teenage, Aldous developed a bizarre eye disease which left him blind for over two years. This traumatic event changed Aldous's career as a medical doctor to a writer instead. "…I should infallibly have killed myself in the much more strenuous profession of medicine." But he was used to work, even in the literary world. During the 1920's, he lived in Italy and France, and then immigrated to the

  • Use of Imagination in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Study in Scarlet and Sign of the Four

    1506 Words  | 4 Pages

    While reading Robert Louis Stevenson's The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Arthur Conan Doyle's A Study in Scarlet and Sign of the Four, I found myself impatiently competing against Mr. Utterson and Sherlock Holmes to find out the solutions to the crimes.  Stevenson and Doyle cleverly use the imagination of their protagonists to display through fictional literature the concern late Victorians felt about the rise of a new science.  The characters of Utterson and Holmes resemble each other

  • Nicole Jumper

    2157 Words  | 5 Pages

    com/newlook/, claims that the catabolic diet is so effective that, “[It] works three times faster than starvation.” Yet, after making this statement the site also says that the “Catabolic Diet is a medically created diet. . .” Needless to say there is no medical doctor’s endorsement found a... ... middle of paper ... ... REFERENCES Astrup, Arne. “Dietary Approaches to Reducing Body Weight.” Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism. Ed. Jeff P. Holly. New York: AMA 1999. 109-120. Berstein

  • Hypothalamic Lesion

    2272 Words  | 5 Pages

    factors including disease, trauma, infection, or neoplasm which is an abnormal growth of tissue, such as a tumor (Healthopedia.com, n.d.). For the purpose of this paper tumor and lesion will be used interchangeably. As a neurologist I am a medical doctor with specialized training in diagnosing, treating, and managing disorders of the brain and nervous system, including diagnosis of brain tumors. As a professional I act as the primary care provider for patients with chronic neurological problems

  • Medical Mistakes: Doctors Should Learn To Own Up

    943 Words  | 2 Pages

    People have a misconception about doctors. They believe that doctors are know-it-alls and that they are incapable of making mistakes. The people who believe that are, unfortunately, misguided by a doctor’s title. The sad truth is that mistakes are a part of doctors’ daily lives. Critical care physician and anesthesiologist at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Dr. Peter Pronovost, says that if all the deaths caused by doctor errors were added up, it would be “the third leading cause of death” (Bonifield). Consequently

  • Life Experiences Contributing to my Decision to Become a Medical Doctor

    879 Words  | 2 Pages

    skating rink. This gave my five siblings and me unique opportunities, such as being employed at the rink, inline speed skating and experience in a culture separate from "normal kids," which all influenced my choice to strive towards becoming a medical doctor. Inline Speed skating is an activity that I continue to participate in today. Over 15 years of competing has taught me many lessons applicable to my future. Firstly I along with my teammates had to be dedicated to train and practice week in and

  • Doctors? Listening Skills

    2284 Words  | 5 Pages

    Doctors’ Listening Skills When people go to the doctor’s office they want the doctor to listen. Competency and a correct diagnosis are appreciated too, but more than anything, patients value doctors’ silence (Richards, 1407). In addition, patients want “more and better information about their problem and the outcome, more openness about the side effects of treatment, relief of pain and emotional distress, and advice on what they can do for themselves” (Meryn, 1922). Doctors’ technical role is in

  • The Knee

    659 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Knee Most doctors agree that the dehumanization in the clinical setting can lead to the loss of a patient because of the lack of respect they are given. That is a great incentive for doctors to try to get to know their patients and make them feel as comfortable as possible. When a patient attends a teaching hospital where aspiring doctors exam patients in groups, there is no real reward for them learning personal information about the patient. They will move on to start their own practice and