Like Father… Like Daughter (Almost)

Medicine has been a part of my life since the day I was born. I was born in the hospital my dad was working through the beginnings of residency in. His training was the reason we would move, the reason he was late to recitals (and yet somehow still there at just the right moment when it was my turn on stage) and the center of many memories. Growing up I would follow him around the hospital if he got paged on the way to dinner. I would listen to people’s hearts in their stomach (because I could reach there and thought it was there). I would break nurse diets with my killer girl scout cookie sales. I would sit beside him as he went through stacks of patient charts and dictate into a dictaphone, then later as he started pulling them up on the iPad. 

I remember when my grandpa needed heart surgery when I was young. He told his surgeon to send the films to his son for a consult. My brother and I got to go to the hospital to see grandpa’s heart on the hospital monitors, since the hospital was the only place that could run the program on the disc. I thought it was the coolest thing ever. Then my other grandpa needed heart surgery and told the surgeon to send the films to his son-in-law. Those films came via email and we could view from the iPad. The progression of technology in medicine alone has been astounding to watch. 

So needless to say, it has been around me since day 1. I mean, my mom has a picture of my brother and I in the doctor kits they sell for kids, but my dad brought us masks, hair nets and shoe covers from the OR. So we looked ridiculous if you can imagine. But I was not pushed to medicine. I always thought I would be just like dad, going into medicine. But any time I would have wanted to change career plans, I was told I would be supported. 

But I will say, I had to convince interviewers that this was my dream, not his. Sure, he keeps talking about how excited he is to hood me at graduation (I mean really excited) but this is my dream. I don’t want to be in his field anyway (at all). There have been some who think it is expected of me to be a doctor, but if that were the argument, my brother would also be in medical school. Spoiler alert, he is not. 

Along the interview trail, there were some concerned as I applied DO. Why is that significant? Well, my father is an MD. What would they think? (And yes, this was a real question at an interview I got) To me, that was an odd question. My father was supporting me as I applied, and was excited when I got into a DO school. To him, he thinks it fits my personality and is confident the school will help me toward my goals. Why was this a question though? Apparently, there are some out there that think if you are an MD and your child goes DO, it is something to be ashamed of. Maybe in some families, but not mine. And now that I am in a DO school, I came home for Christmas break and he wanted me to show what I learned and practice on the family. He was really interested to see how I could improve different somatic dysfunctions he might have acquired from his golf game, or my mom when she did too much in the yard again.

You know what is nice about having family in medicine? They get it. They get the long hours and hard work it takes. If I don’t respond for a few days, no one freaks out. My mom and dad were together throughout his medical training and my mom is the daughter of a doctor. So not only does my father get it, but my mom has seen it firsthand in more ways than one. I don’t have to worry about my mom calling and wondering why I cannot talk when I need to study for a block of exams or my dad asking why I cannot come home. Now, every once in a while, Dad has to remind Mom, but they are very understanding and that I appreciate. I see classmates who have to explain to their parents about these things over and over, so it is nice to know they get it. 

I do take advantage of the fact that my father is a doctor. I call home or text for answers constantly. Sometimes, he is faster than any professor email. Come the unit of his specialty, he knows I am calling daily. If I start sending too many, he just calls or FaceTimes because he is tired of typing. During the block that covered his field, he even offered to answer questions of other students via FaceTime. He was where we are once so he knew. I might not be doing as well as I want to be, but I know he gets it and will remind me “But did you pass? Because that is what matters the most.” Or his favorite line, “What do you call the person who finished last in medical school? A doctor.” Other family, they expect high grades and perfection. My father, passing, doing well, and learning everything I can. And Mom would add, be humble and kind at the same time. 

You know, I am still not sure who was more excited for my acceptance email, me or my father. I had been applying for so long, I almost gave up. But he kept encouraging me. He had been through it and he seemed to know I could handle it; I just had to get there first. He still encourages me. He understands the lingo, the occasional humor that comes up as I try to learn every possible detail. He understands the struggle and the hard work it takes to get where I am and where I need to be. My father was my first role model and he still is today.

I appreciate everything my father is and does for me. I would not trade him for the world. 

We Had How Many Exams?

Hi Ya’ll.

So, I just wanted to say that this past year was full of constantly being tested and pushing myself to my limits. Medical school is designed to do that: which is why only a select few are chosen each year and many either fail out or have to return to repeat that year. It can be rough if you aren’t on your game.

I wanted to take a look back at all of the exams, quizzes, and other testing hurdles I had as a first year. Before I even begin to take a look, I already know it’s going to be a lot.

I do know that they are changing the way they did things from my year to the class of 2023’s first year. I have a suspicion that you all will get tested less often, but that you may get more questions per exam. That is how they are planning on testing my class (2022) for our second year; or at least what they told us anyways.

Pros and cons to this:

Pros: Less exams constantly creeping up on you. There were many weeks this year where I had to either pick and choose which exams I wanted to focus my time on, or just do a bit for each exam and potentially not score as well as I wanted to. Simply, because I would have multiple tests (in any form) in that particular week as scheduling wasn’t ideal.

Cons: More questions. Which means longer exams. Longer endurance. Harder to focus. May be harder to come back from one bad test grade.

Ya’ll get my point.

Anywho, here is the breakdown:

Name of the CourseQuizzesWritten ExamsPracticalsCSA's or CPA's
PCM0231
OS5203
MCM2200
MSK0220
HDM0020
CP0210
Renal1200
Bioethics9000
Med Info6000
Total 1st semester: 47
Name of CourseQuizzesWritten ExamsPracticalsCSA's or CPA's
PCM0221
OS5203
GI0210
Endo/Repro0210
Neuro0320
MOD1300
Intro to Research14000
Med Info6000
Total 2nd semester: 50

Looking at it in table form, it doesn’t seem like so much. However, when counting it out–> Yikes!

Now, for things like Med Info we usually worked together. They changed this course from the 2021 year to our year so that way we’d have 2 years of Med Info instead of 1…. I’m honestly not sure this class was super helpful. Particularly because a handful of students did research before coming or in COB (at least my year) we had a mini-thesis. So myself and my fellow COB-to-COMers already had an idea of how to use the databases that KCU had.

For the Intro to Research course, I did all of these in one day on my spring break. They weren’t necessarily difficult, just time consuming. There were a few CITI trainings we had to do for this course as well that I didn’t count. But maybe I should have…because they were very long and tedious.

All in all, it was a lot. It seemed like every week we had a quiz, test, or some sort of competency. Sometimes we had multiple in one week. I’m hoping that the school took at least our classes’ concerns about scheduling/testing into consideration for future years to come!