I always knew that I wanted to become a doctor when I was a little kid. I would play with the doctor’s kit (including stethoscope and scalpel) when I was a little girl and pretended that my Barbie doll was my patient. Little did I know that I’m now living my dream!
Training to become a Consultant Surgeon is indeed very challenging, physically, mentally and emotionally. The long hours, the on call shifts, weekends and nights, clinics, monitoring your juniors, research and postgraduate exams and degrees, PhD.
The never ending work-based assessments, exams, and so forth. There is no end to gaining knowledge in medicine and surgery, every day is a new learning experience. It challenges your patience and virtue, your ability to work under pressure and stressful environment.
Sometimes, I do ask myself, why am I doing this job when I could be doing more glamorous job with better work-life balance and perhaps more money? If you choose to do medicine/surgery for either status or money,
I would highly recommend you to reconsider. It’s a long road and it’s a brutal truth. There were times when I cried for tiny little things that happened at work, for patients that I lost, for those sleepless nights studying for exams.
When you decide to become a doctor, it’s not just a job or a title, it’s a way of living. You’re dedicating your life to help those in need and most importantly it needs to come from your heart. #workhardplayharder#ilooklikeasurgeon#independentwomencan
P/s: Picture taken yesterday when we were about to start a trauma laparotomy.
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That is torture, bukannya membantu. Kalau lepas bersalin, kenalah minum banyak air, especially if you’re breastfeeding, otherwise you’ll get dehydrated.
Dan satu lagi, makan ayam tak akan membuat luka jahitan gatal ye. Selama saya jadi doktor and operate orang, tak pernah pulak saya tak bagi pesakit saya makan ayam. Kena makan healthy meals, fruits and veggies kena makan (nanti kena sembelit, lagi lah memudaratkan badan).
Sometimes, if you have a C-section, immediately after the operation, your gut might stop working (it’s called post op ileus), which is quite common after an operation. It’s advisable to keep nil by mouth, and normally we will prescribe you IV fluids and insert an NG tube.
FYI - baca betul- betul dulu, I didn’t say don’t follow pantang at all, but choose what suits you based on your medical history. Jangan cepat melenting ya?
Only just watched the first episode. My comment on the first scene in the OT? Realistically, it’s very quite rare to do an open appendicectomy nowadays, we normally do it laparoscopically (key-hole surgery),
but maybe this patient has some other contraindications to laparoscopic surgery that we don’t know about. 🤷🏻♀️
At the end of a 30-hr shift (working non-stop), anyone can become delirious, you’re exhausted, no matter how senior you are, people can make mistakes. That’s why in the UK and a lot of other countries (to prevent doctors from making mistakes) we have a limit of 13-hrs per shift.
My consultant always tell me, treat your patients like you treat your own parents and siblings, you always want the best for your own patients like they’re your families. Have that attitude in you, and you will do your best everyday!
Every time when I see a patient, towards the end of the consultation, I will always say, ‘I hope I won’t see you again in the future’. That’s me praying so that every single patient that I see will live a normal and healthy life, and won’t have to see a doctor ever again!