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小樵
注册日期: 2013-01-12
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· 杜甫 咏怀古迹其三
· 杜甫咏怀古迹五首其二
· 欣赏杜甫咏怀古迹其一
· 当前疫情下人们关心的三个问题
· 尖峰时刻访谈:疫情这就结束了?
· 会当凌绝顶 一览众山小
· 楷书 桃花源记
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分类目录
【小海龟】
· 为什么没有什么给父亲节的诗?
· 哈佛不录取,录取,与录取官
· 浩鸟焉知燕雀之志 ---常春藤值
· 起来,对抗正在成型的反亚裔种族
· 假冒的金项链:太平洋两岸的亚裔
· 美国亚裔孩子为什么自杀?
· 哈佛家长周末
· 永远向前看 - 朝气蓬勃的毕业讲
· 父亲节的意外惊喜
· 高中毕业家长寄语
【唐诗欣赏】
· 杜甫 咏怀古迹其三
· 杜甫咏怀古迹五首其二
· 欣赏杜甫咏怀古迹其一
【说医道医】
· 当前疫情下人们关心的三个问题
· 尖峰时刻访谈:疫情这就结束了?
· “我需要活下去”- 一位单亲母亲
· 第三剂疫苗和德尔塔变异
· “与病毒共存”有问题吗? -消
· 尖峰时刻访谈:疫情和疫苗
· 尖峰时刻访谈:怎样选择疫苗
· 疫情第一线:罗莎算不算英雄母亲
· 12床去哪儿了?抗疫最前线故事一
· 一个抗病毒神药的起落后面的故事
【渔樵诗赋】
· 会当凌绝顶 一览众山小
· 楷书 桃花源记
· 好莱坞山上的日落月升
· 楷书醉翁亭记
· 一人之心千万人之心 - 楷书阿房
· 人生参透又如何?--- 读东坡后赤
· 楷书后赤壁赋
· 母亲节
· 夜读东坡赤壁
· 楷书前赤壁赋
【医生经历】
· 疫情最前线:我在故我思
· 拒绝接种疫苗后,她走了...
· 关于目前疫苗和疫情
· 疫情最前线:我们真需要口罩
· 纪念刘老师
· 急性高山病的生理医学常识
· 方先生病例的后续影响 — 在美国
· 总统咋跑后台去了? ---EBOLA政
· EBOLA最新介绍
· 埃波拉准备好了 (半小说)
【可世界逛】
· 张伯伦悬崖小道 - 什么是“路”
· 就着龙虾看月升 - 缅因海岸线
· 亚马逊的智慧---巴西旅游记
· 平静的亚马逊河 —巴西游记
· 印地安人的歌——巴西旅行记
· 黑河湾清晨 - 巴西游记
· 月下寻鳄 - 巴西游记
· 钓食人鱼的启发
· 黑河夜渡 - 巴西旅行记
· 巴西华人不巴西 — 巴西旅游记
【屠龙彩云之南】
· 赌石腾冲 - 屠龙彩云之南
· 山里的孩子 - 屠龙彩云之南
· 去西双版纳的加拿大医生
· 普洱茶记 -屠龙彩云之南
· 傣家女儿到底睡在哪儿? ——屠龙
· 岩响的决定 - 屠龙彩云之南
· 景海村外-屠龙彩云之南
· 腾冲和顺大救架
· 感恩节的礼物 - 英文ZT
· 太平时节英雄懒 - 腾冲景色
【胡批】
· 跪着想的正义 - 加拿大总理对中
· 有必要想一下的幽默
· 二百五十一个情人
· Steve Jobs与Bill Gates最近一次
· 医院里的事儿 以及不是医院里的
· 今年圣诞节桑塔的遭遇(幽默)
· 候诊室里的老杂志(幽默)
· 该哭该笑
· 英文中的老庄哲学
· 回国长的又一个见识
【故国神游】
· 张家口娘子山长城
· 涪陵武陵大裂谷
· 浑源悬空寺
· 郭亮村挂壁公路
· 三位女性的世界
· 藏族小丫
· 青藏高原上防治高山反应之艰难过
· 临汾天下第一 - 柴静是不看还是
· 少林寺内外
· 少林神功如何体现?
存档目录
02/01/2023 - 02/28/2023
12/01/2022 - 12/31/2022
09/01/2022 - 09/30/2022
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01/01/2015 - 01/31/2015
12/01/2014 - 12/31/2014
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10/01/2014 - 10/31/2014
09/01/2014 - 09/30/2014
08/01/2014 - 08/31/2014
07/01/2014 - 07/31/2014
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感恩节的礼物 - 英文ZT
   

每年都去云南参加义诊。义诊除了为村民提供免费医药,也借此为有志医学的学生们提供接触医学,接触社会的机会。作为“带队教授”,自己也同样受益,每次回来都有灵魂净化的感觉。

今年感恩节,收到一位实习生寄来的日记。

懂英文的,也许也会和我一样受益。


My Mid-Pre-Med-Life Crisis:  China California Heart Watch Internship, July 2013


By: Briana, University of Colorado


This summer, China California Heart Watch (China Cal) invited me to work with their organization holding medical clinics in Yunnan Province, China, an experience that was nothing short of culturally awakening, intellectually challenging, and emotionally engaging. As a Post Baccalaureate Pre-Med student, I believe that the most valuable aspect of this learning excursion has been how to cope with the humanistic and emotional side of medicine: the dichotomy between “human care” and “clinical care.” This is an issue I did not expect to face until well into medical school, one I thought I would be able to handle with flying colors.  Surprisingly, I discovered just how difficult this could be on Day 1, the first day of our 3 week internship and the day I wondered for the first time if medicine is truly the right fit for me.
 
Clinic Day 1: After 2 full days of lecture about basic heart anatomy, the circulatory system, auscultation, and congenital cardiovascular disease, we finally held our first clinic.  The patients who came to the China Cal headquarters were not local villagers, but rather individuals who had traveled a long way to see Dr. Robert Detrano, M.D., PhD., founder of China Cal, and who had seen him several times before.  These patients were not elderly adults with high blood pressure or obesity.  Instead, they were children with congenital heart disorders.  As a Pre-Med student whose dream is to work in Pediatrics, I was thrilled; what could be better than spending time with kids all day, helping them heal and giving them hope and a smile?  What I seemed to have strangely forgotten on this day is that doctors are not omniscient, and there isn’t always a solution to every patient’s ailments.

Day 1 brought in several adorable children, some of whom were candidates for surgery and who would most likely grow up as healthy as their parents dreamed.  But one small child, a one-year-old infant with a 40-year-old mother, would not.  This baby had the works: VSD, ASD, and interruption of the aortic arch, among others. Upon examination, she was lethargic and showed signs of cyanosis, but her little smile never faded. After taking the infant’s vitals and reviewing her ultrasound and EKG, we had to tell the mother that her only baby is not only inoperable but likely would not live more than a few months.  The look on the mother’s face is an image I will never forget.  She was defeated and scared but strong as she fought for her baby, confident that something could be done to help her.  Suddenly, I felt helpless, and it brought a tear to my eye when I knew I should not show it. How, as an aspiring pediatric physician, can I care about children as much as I do while dealing with such heart wrenching moments? How can I handle the rigors of a life in medicine, not academically but emotionally? Sure, when there are cures and solutions, being a doctor must feel like a wonderful gift. But I lacked confidence that I could deal with moments like this, especially in the field of cardiology where life threatening conditions are all too common.

The rest of the day had me stewing in my emotions as the impending mortality of that beautiful little girl sunk in, forcing me to question my life-long dream of working in the healthcare field at all.  But I will never forget what Dr. Detrano and Amy Poole, our head nurse, said to me in response to my worries, something I now believe will carry me through medical school and my career: “For every ten patients you cannot help, there is always one that makes it all worth it.  Your best is all you can do.  And that is what keeps you going in medicine.”
 
While on one of our many bus trips through the Chinese countryside, I read an inspiring article in Scientific American that answered my worries in a different light, discussing surgeons and psychopaths and the unique qualities these individuals share.  What it says about physicians that I find relevant to my mid-Pre-Med-life crisis is their ability to separate themselves from emotional ropes to make confident decisions and upon success (or failure) transform into one of the most compassionate and sincere individuals there is.  I worked on training my brain in this way during village clinics in the weeks that followed Day 1, greeting patients with the utmost warmth but switching on my concentration and focus when examining them.  This idea has given me a glimpse into what being a compassionate and life-changing physician really means.  I walked away from China Cal with a more confident and tangible approach to medicine and an excitement I have never had before.
 
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