Friday, September 14, 2007
a day in the life of an orthopedic surgeon...
After working in an orthopedic surgeon’s office this past summer, I have cemented a better idea of a typical day in the medical profession. The day begins early, probably waking up around five in the morning and heading off to one of the many hospitals where he operates. He spends about an hour “rounding” on patients, meaning he checks on the ones that recently had surgery or the ones with surgery to come. Then, he is on to actual surgery. He might have three surgeries in the morning, one replacing an elderly woman’s hip, another setting a young boy’s broken fibula, and another repairing a mother’s patella. Usually he trains an intern or resident throughout the day, they assist in operations or perform them under the surgeon’s watchful eye. He is off for a quick lunch and then to the office where he will see around thirty patients, all with different pains and ailments. Some are returnees, some are children, some want a second opinion, and others simply have no idea what is wrong with them. Most patients have some type of insurance to pay for the visit, but he even sees the ones he knows cannot afford it. Around six o’ clock he attends a dinner meeting, where orthopedists gather and discuss new medical breakthroughs and different surgery techniques. Overall it is a typical, busy day. He heads home to rest and try to finish dictating a few charts.
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4 comments:
Sounds like it's a fast paced day, I'd say a key quality would be time management. Also patience (pun not intended) would be a virtue. He sounds a little detached from the patients, however, and that might be a flaw in surgeons, maybe a quality that is inherent but not well known or prevalent.
Interesting look at the profession. The hurried demeanor of the doctor raises an ethical dilemma that plagues the health community. I've heard horror stories about gynecologists who basically have an assembly line set up as a medical practice and shoo each patient through the combine.
I thought it was really cool thay you chose a profession that you have personally witnessed, giving you an inside view to what an orthopedic surgeons typical day is really like. It seems as though they are very dedicated and passionate. Both these qualities are essential for professions because they exist to help and support the common good. Although I could never be a surgeon myself, I think it is a very respectful and admirable profession.
Wow. If every doctors have that kind of schedule evey single day I think it will be stressful not only for the doctor himself but also for his family. Some professions serve the society very well but not so much their own well being.
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