Doctor's Diaries: The Journey To Become A Doctor

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The profession of being a doctor has always been known as a difficult journey: one that stresses a person mentally, physically, and socially. However, I expected the outcome of the struggles doctors face throughout medical school and their residency to dwindle down once they settle into their careers. After watching the documentary Doctor’s Diaries I found out this is not always the case for all doctors. Observing doctor Jay Bonnar throughout the documentary one can see the effects each stage of becoming a doctor had on him. The first stop on the route to becoming a doctor starts with attending medical school, which I assumed would be the hardest process of becoming a doctor. It involves learning and being tested on material of all health specialties, even those separate from a person’s interest, in the medical field. Jay Bonnar attended Harvard University School of Medicine, where the academic environment is very competitive and stressful. Bonnar made it very clear that his interest was not specifically in medicine but in helping others; and believed he could not be a businessman or take on another career. I would presume the most difficult part of medical school is all the new information and first interactions with patients doctors face. Students’ schoolwork changes from completely performing bookwork, to beginning hands on material. Bonnar mentions in the documentary how he …show more content…

This is expected however; doctors must learn information that is used to help others as well as performing different specialties. They are entrusted with a person’s life and required to learn all they can to save that life. Jay Bonnar is a great example to see the tough influence becoming a doctor has on a person. This is not to say all doctors go through the same effects; but I do believe the pressures of becoming a doctor effect each person differently within similar aspects of

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