Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Nobody: 10:32am On Mar 12, 2017 |
Luiz1: Plz don't be offended o. Lol. I was jst joking with u. I love gingering up d thread sometimes.......Lol. U guys r doing great nd I appreciate ur works. Have a nice day ahead Doc. thank you. Doctors are human too. But we really did ginger the thread though. |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by VanBommel(m): 10:33am On Mar 12, 2017 |
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Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Nobody: 10:37am On Mar 12, 2017 |
funmisticqueen:
thank you. Doctors are human too. But we really did ginger the thread though. Lol.... Chop knuckle. Lol 1 Like |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by VanBommel(m): 10:38am On Mar 12, 2017 |
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Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Nobody: 10:48am On Mar 12, 2017 |
Amarabae: Must Med.docs be treated specially? My dad as a Doctor hustled, got money and build his hospitals.. So go and hustle, govt. must not be pampering you all the time. Every Profession is Important.. Even Apart From my Nursing Career, I am also into other business ventures! This is what I call a pair of perfectly sculpted b.oo.bs. Dazzling.... |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by noziz(m): 10:59am On Mar 12, 2017 |
which kind long text book be this self! o boy i no dey prepare for master exam o |
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Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by samwise99(m): 11:26am On Mar 12, 2017 |
Will read this after my exams |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by BobbyDean(m): 11:29am On Mar 12, 2017 |
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Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by trilobite: 11:50am On Mar 12, 2017 |
bigfrancis21:
. do you know that you are very wise. you quoted the whole thing only to put full stop. you are wise!! |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Jman06(m): 11:56am On Mar 12, 2017 |
I laugh at these doctors! Some of you think that everybody wanted medicine but were given other sciences. Fyi, many of us have passion for other health professions. I did biochem before going back to study pharmacy. My post DE result was high enough to offer me medicine but i chose pharmacy instead because I prefer it to medicine. 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by divinelove(m): 12:08pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
BobbyDean: we feel like we're next to God? Maybe we're actually next to God. Exactly the OP's point, people like you. And you think having not seen a Dr in that much time cos you have 'lab men & pharmacist' is smth to brag about? You're a joke my man I brag BC God is my healer, if u have comprehension ability u would have noticed dt d next to God description is for some 17 yrs old medical student probably enjoying the parents resource but graduate doctors kw d thing is over rated already after he cant complete a decent bungalow after 20yrs of practice. 3 Likes |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by clems88(m): 12:35pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
Diced:
Abeg me sef go like follow lay that egg, because I couldn't read it lol |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Cyberfreak(f): 12:35pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
F |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by pimper24: 12:38pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
She will be 20 in May. I guess she started her medical career at 16 or there about. Uchemus: she graduated from medical school at the age of 19? how manage? |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by HaneefahRN(f): 12:42pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
Why do they always cry like they don't have it much better than others?
Yes, Drs deserve to be treated well, but as bad as Nigeria is they are still one of the best treated cos they know how to sway things to their side usually being at the helms of affair but still their cry is usually the loudest. Let's all continue crying jare, when the Country gets better, I believe everything will be set in place. 2 Likes |
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Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by AreaFada2: 1:19pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
Healthcare profession is a calling. Much like clergy & law.
But I won't fool myself.
Many in these professions today are not called to do it. It is for the money. Sometimes parents pressure their kids into it.
If you safely deliver a baby & you feel no personal fulfilment, then it is not for you. If a patient brought in a bad shape is now talking to his family & eating again yet you feel nothing, then it's not for you.
Try your real passion. |
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Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by buffalowings: 1:25pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
this guy just hit us with a giant wall of text what happened to paragraphs |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by highbee02: 1:39pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
Keep quiet op! If doctors are complaining of poor remuneration, what about we teachers? Our salary is meager and not paid promptly, or are we not professionals (B.sc. (ed.)) plus TRCN. Teaching is 24 hours job. Doctors only take care of sick persons 1 Like |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by HyDef(m): 1:44pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
Paragraphing! |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by BobbyDean(m): 2:05pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
divinelove:
I brag BC God is my healer, if u have comprehension ability u would have noticed dt d next to God description is for some 17 yrs old medical student probably enjoying the parents resource but graduate doctors kw d thing is over rated already after he cant complete a decent bungalow after 20yrs of practice. divinelove:
I brag BC God is my healer, if u have comprehension ability u would have noticed dt d next to God description is for some 17 yrs old medical student probably enjoying the parents resource but graduate doctors kw d thing is over rated already after he cant complete a decent bungalow after 20yrs of practice. whatever man |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by allenbaker5(m): 3:35pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
funmisticqueen:
very true as far as the residency is not in nigeria.
Any reason why you wouldn't do it in Nigeria? |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Nobody: 4:22pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
Nigeria we hail thee! Hustling don take over, profession no be eego. |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by sammyscholar(m): 5:58pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
Nigerian graduates always feel *being owed* by Nigeria from a time I cannot recollect. What do you say about plumbers, bricklayers and the likes out there who earn just peanuts for the physically-demanding job that they do? oh! they are not human beings? Has the government ever cared about a welder or painter who has stayed for months at home without getting jobs? Are this people not caught up in the mess of the nation, too? Why is the tantrum only from our graduates? prof1999: It was fashionable while I was growing up to see parents choose the career path of their children and wards. You’renot going to “amount to anything” if you’re seen reading a single honours course in the university. Parents boast about their children reading medicine, engineering and law; you’ll be forgiven as a young student if you think the university is all about these courses.But over time, things started changing when business administration and related courses started taking the front burner buoyed by the emergence of “wonder banks” and other fast means of making money. Suddenly values that we hold dear started eroding as “making money” became the norm. Nobody cares anymore how the moneywas made, all that matters is that you are rich.That was the beginning of the ‘demystification’ of medicine, engineering and law. Why bother spending years in the university when you’re not sure of what the future hold became pronounced. People started questioning whether reading these courses was worth all the troubles afterall.Last week I met a young medical doctorwho expressed regrets for studying medicine and qualifying as a doctor. “If I had a singing talent like Dr. Sid I wouldhave jettisoned my stethoscope for the music scene,” he said to my surprise. For the records, Sidney Onoriode Esiri, who goes by the stage name, Dr. Sid is aNigerian singer, songwriter and dentist.We discussed at length for more than an hour because this came as a shock to me especially as I have always held doctors in very high regard and would have loved to be one had I been a science student. This is because my lifestyle, comportment, deep reading culture and discipline correlate with what makes a good doctor.As I struggled to encourage this young doctor that he has nothing to regret, mymind went back almost fifteen years ago to a discussion I had with a doctor friend while I was still in the university. This doctor also expressed regrets at the poor human resources planning and structures, unsatisfactory working conditions, poor remuneration, and fewprofessional development opportunities back then. I am made to understand that this is even worse today.When he saw the “progress” his colleagues who read Economics and Business Administration were making during the banking “boom” of the Abacha era, he told me he was in “the wrong profession.” In my young mind then, I remembered telling him that all that was happening was a bubble that will burst someday. And true to my prediction, the bubble did burst and myolder friend said I should consider calling myself a prophet!During that period, 19 banks collapsed leading to the Failed Banks Decree promulgated by late General Sani Abacha which was decreed into law to teach Nigerian bankers who mess with depositors fund a lesson. Unfortunately, there were other bank failures later before the sanity we are now witnessing. When I related all these, the young man felt a bit relieved,especially as I pointed out that even thepresent day society does not see the doctor as “relevant” as they were up to the 90s.After much probing, I discovered that he truly love the profession even though the stress associated with it is not commensurate with the financial rewards. “As a medical doctor, it’s an endless journey of reading and personal development. There are new discoveries almost on a daily basis and if you do not keep track you’ll be left behind. Keeping track means you have to prepare and pass your professional examinations otherwise there’ll be no room for advancement,” he told me, “but one of my major problems is the way the society treats doctors.”I agreed with him. If you doubt that take a look around and see how the society is now obsessed with “celebrities” of various hues and shapes; some are even instant celebrities because they participate in ashow or event or feature in a movie. The society doesn’t even bother if an individual is an illiterate moneybag, corrupt public official or a person of dubious character. It is no longer a secret that this has been taken notches further when such individuals are awarded honorary doctorate degrees by our universities. These are the “doctors” our society recognises and adore!One stark reality about contemporary Nigeria is the dearth of reliable statistics for research and planning; thisreality permeates almost every facet of our national life. Take the doctor patient ratio for instance. Nigeria, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) currently posts a poor doctor-patient ratio of 1:3500 as against the standard of 1:600. It also said the entire medical schools graduate between 3,500 and 4,000 new doctors annually. Another statistics has 1:6500 doctor-patient ratios.One would expect a call to action irrespective of which ratio is used because we have a dare situation in ourhands, but that does not seem to be an issue here like in other things. It is the Ebola issue that seems to shake us out of our lethargy. The doctors showed their magnanimity by suspending their strike. I think this period should providethe opportunity for the government and the society to seriously look into some of the issues the doctors tabled before their strike action.Delivering a lecture titled “Medical Education in Nigeria: The Quest for World Standards and Local relevance,” held at Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) in 2012, the Minister of Health, Professor Onyebuchi Chukwu said only 5 percent of applicants gainedadmission to read medicine. Of these, 2,701 trained in Nigeria left the country to other countries to work in the last four years prior to 2012.It is amazing that with this exodus of our doctors we don’t seem to get it. Dr. Amayo Adadavoh and other doctors who have remained and have now died as a result of Ebola are professionals who have spent years in training. The late Dr. Adadavoh was a consultant, and do we really know what it takes for a doctor to become a consultant? We have lost, and may still lose some of our finest professionals because of the way we treat them.It is not rocket science to understand why some of them are leaving as the working conditions is getting worse, thereby making other countries more attractive. Some of our doctors are presently working in the US, Britain, South Africa, Ireland, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Trinidad and Tobago and other neigbouring African countries that treat their medical personnel better.Whenever I encounter medical practitioners and I see the evident lack of rewards for people who save lives, I always feel pained. To compound issues, whenever they demand what should ordinarily be their entitlement after spending years in medical school and a longer period preparing for otherprofessional examinations, society is quick to condemn and remind them of their obligation to the same society thathas scant regards for their own plights.Recollect that prior to the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) suspending its strike, there appears to be nothing, either from the people in government or those of us outside, to show that we appreciate the fact that lives of ordinary Nigerians are already hanging in the balance as a result of the strike by doctors working in public health institutions across the country. But does it matter in a system so perverted that public officials now make it a culture that they are travelling abroad for simple medical check-up that can bedone in Nigeria?My advice to young Nigerian students who have the love of the profession at heart is this: Go ahead and read medicine in the university because it will always remain a noble and dignifiedprofession. You should not look up to society or the government for your fulfillment; just follow the conviction of your heart. Everything about life cannotbe viewed from the narrow prism of money. There are still things money cannever buy, and being a qualified medical doctor is one of such. |
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Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by vislabraye(m): 6:26pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
Poor write up. How could you write over 1,000 words essay without a single paragraph.. |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Nobody: 6:27pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
allenbaker5:
Any reason why you wouldn't do it in Nigeria?
too many strikes and salaries are not paid |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by bigfrancis21: 6:37pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
VanBommel: you're a big ph00l trilobite:
do you know that you are very wise. you quoted the whole thing only to put full stop.
you are wise!! I was at work and wanted to comment but couldn't so I decided to come back to it later. You can read my post now. |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Dareomo(m): 7:06pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
Study what interest you, and the business of your choice. When challenge comes it will be easier to overcome, because challenge is inevitable. |
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by VanBommel(m): 11:56pm On Mar 12, 2017 |
bigfrancis21:
I was at work and wanted to comment but couldn't so I decided to come back to it later. You can read my post now. ok, sorry then |