Anyone else squeamish?

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theblinkmeister

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Unfortunately, I'm easily squeamish, which might be a minor problem for a doctor.🙄 Volunteering in the ER or Trauma ward would be the best way to see if I can overcome my problem. I'd be disappointing to think that this would keep me from medicine.

Does anyone else on SDN have this problem? Were you able to overcome it? Do you have any advice?

Thanks.

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Looks like someone might have already given you all the answers you need, but I am TOTALLY squeamish. I found that spending a lot of time around it helped, and when I got dizzy or light headed, leaving for a sec, putting my head between my knees and breathing helped. Then I would go back and be good for the rest of the night. I got over it after a while, but I think having two kids made me a bit more sensitive to others pain than I should be as a physician, if that makes sense.
 
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I'm squeamish about the admissions process and waiting to hear from schools.
 
Yes. And it actually came up during my Loyola interview. I fessed up to it, and the interviewer/doctor said that it wouldn't stop me from being a great doctor BUT that I would always have that impulse. Ugg. Here's to hoping that he was wrong!
 
I think the real-life stuff is not as bad as it looks in the pictures. Seeing something like a bedsore or a rash in a picture can be pretty disgusting - it's in focus, the colors and lighting are bright, and they really exaggerate the nastiness. But when you see such things in real life, they don't really look that bad, since there are many other stimuli surrounding you and distracting you. And with exposure, you'll get used to anything.
 
I think the real-life stuff is not as bad as it looks in the pictures. Seeing something like a bedsore or a rash in a picture can be pretty disgusting - it's in focus, the colors and lighting are bright, and they really exaggerate the nastiness. But when you see such things in real life, they don't really look that bad, since there are many other stimuli surrounding you and distracting you. And with exposure, you'll get used to anything.

Actually, what made me faint when I was shadowing a fellow who specializes in prostate cancer, was a simple examination of a patient. The fellow was very nice, and gestured me over to hear the sounds of fluids in the man's lungs, and then to push on his belly to feel the fluid building up. While I felt completely calm and rational, all of a sudden I started to feel nauseous and dizzy. I was confused why I felt like I was about to black out, when I felt completely calm. I think that it was the emotional/psychological gravity of the situation, and what this man was facing. I think I started to get dizzy when the fellow was explaining how many times a week he needed to be drained, etc. Needless to say, I held it together for three more minutes, and then as we crossed the hall back into the doctors' lounge I literally blacked out as I sat down into the nearest chair I could find. Granted, I'd just moved that weekend and didn't have much of a kitchen and thus hadn't had anything to eat that day, but I was MORTIFIED. They were very nice and put me in a clinic bed (it was at the VA hospital) with some juice, but I was so mortified that I never went back to shadow again after thanking the doctors profusely. I see now how silly I was to make such a big deal of that in my mind, but there was some small amount of terror in the back of my head that maybe that meant I couldn't handle being a doctor. This was about two years ago. I still worry that I'm a little too sensitive, but I suppose I will eventually become desensitized enough to be useful to someone. Regardless, I have every intention of avoiding surgical specialties (I will of course do my rotations as required). But the type of thing that really knocks me out seems to be more emotional than gore. Then again, gore might do it too. Ugh. Maybe I am in trouble. Lovely.
 
Actually, what made me faint when I was shadowing a fellow who specializes in prostate cancer, was a simple examination of a patient. The fellow was very nice, and gestured me over to hear the sounds of fluids in the man's lungs, and then to push on his belly to feel the fluid building up. While I felt completely calm and rational, all of a sudden I started to feel nauseous and dizzy. I was confused why I felt like I was about to black out, when I felt completely calm. I think that it was the emotional/psychological gravity of the situation, and what this man was facing. I think I started to get dizzy when the fellow was explaining how many times a week he needed to be drained, etc. Needless to say, I held it together for three more minutes, and then as we crossed the hall back into the doctors' lounge I literally blacked out as I sat down into the nearest chair I could find. Granted, I'd just moved that weekend and didn't have much of a kitchen and thus hadn't had anything to eat that day, but I was MORTIFIED. They were very nice and put me in a clinic bed (it was at the VA hospital) with some juice, but I was so mortified that I never went back to shadow again after thanking the doctors profusely. I see now how silly I was to make such a big deal of that in my mind, but there was some small amount of terror in the back of my head that maybe that meant I couldn't handle being a doctor. This was about two years ago. I still worry that I'm a little too sensitive, but I suppose I will eventually become desensitized enough to be useful to someone. Regardless, I have every intention of avoiding surgical specialties (I will of course do my rotations as required). But the type of thing that really knocks me out seems to be more emotional than gore. Then again, gore might do it too. Ugh. Maybe I am in trouble. Lovely.


Haha, yeah, if I find smth particularly nasty, it's usually because I had a problem with that bodypart myself. For example, when I was a kid, I had a chronic sinus infection, and this ENT managed to cure it, but it involved her showing these horrible wires up my nose and then making me sit still for 30 mins. I would freak out (I was 9) and have all these visions of my brain leaking out this way or smth - I had read about the ancient Egyptians used hooks to extract the brain during the embalming process. Needless to say, I won't be an ENT after this.... :barf:
 
You get over stuff like that pretty quick. You may puke the first couple of times you see some gruesome cases, but soon you realize it's just life, and your job is to fix the problem.
 
Used to think I couldn't handle it, now I can manage pretty well.

There's one exception I've found so far: skin grafts.
 
I saw a digital fecal disimpaction the other day...nice way to wake up at 8am.
 
I honestly think unless you are fainting at any sight of blood you'll be fine. Medical school is a gradual desensitation. After a while you wont even blink an eye at stuff. Trust me.
 
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My limited exposure to "goriness" (via scrubbing in for multiple thoracic operations) was fine - I loved it and got a liiiitle lightheaded only once.

However, if I or anyone I'm close to gets hurt, I feel nauseous. I almost fainted when I cut my thumb while peeling a potato, and I felt ill when my friend fell while ice skating, cut his head, and was knocked unconscious.
 
I am incredibly squeamish.

But the last few weeks working in Triage has helped me a LOT with that. I've had countless people walk up to me with massive cuts, severed fingers, puke feces etc. I find that when i'm focused on what i'm doing, or on the patient as a whole, it makes it much easier. I'm starting to disconnect myself from the situation.
 
Wow. It's good to now I'm not alone. I figured I was blowing it out of proportion. Thank you all of you for your help.
 
I think the real-life stuff is not as bad as it looks in the pictures. Seeing something like a bedsore or a rash in a picture can be pretty disgusting - it's in focus, the colors and lighting are bright, and they really exaggerate the nastiness. But when you see such things in real life, they don't really look that bad, since there are many other stimuli surrounding you and distracting you. And with exposure, you'll get used to anything.

I think thats the most important part. I disagree with the first part of your post though. Medical images sanitize and depersonalize disease which from a psychological perspective should make them easy to digest and look out without an emotional response. Seeing these diseases/traumas in complete human beings in front of you is much more intense, in my opinion.
 
Okay - so I experience vasovagal syncope. Giving blood, shots, or even a simple TB-test will do it to me. I've never had a problem watching other people give blood, IVs put in, etc., it's just the reaction I have when I am stuck with a needle.

Of course, I haven't seen too many gross things in the hospital yet, so I was wondering if there is a correlation. Does anyone know if people who pass out from needles have a higher occurence of passing out from watching/smelling/hearing these squeamish-type things?

P.S. I am a girl...I think this is more common in men?
 
Okay - so I experience vasovagal syncope. Giving blood, shots, or even a simple TB-test will do it to me. I've never had a problem watching other people give blood, IVs put in, etc., it's just the reaction I have when I am stuck with a needle.

Of course, I haven't seen too many gross things in the hospital yet, so I was wondering if there is a correlation. Does anyone know if people who pass out from needles have a higher occurence of passing out from watching/smelling/hearing these squeamish-type things?

P.S. I am a girl...I think this is more common in men?

check out the following thread:

http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=460104

if you pass out, maybe there's a correlation. Volunteer at a level one trauma center to help desensitize you, and be sure to get your fill of the gross stuff.

edit: the stuff that could potentially test your vasovagal syncope were censored out of the thread....so, never mind about that.

My sister has that same thing. She applied to med-school two years in a row, but after not getting in she is now an MBA.
 
check out the following thread:

http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=460104

if you pass out, maybe there's a correlation. Volunteer at a level one trauma center to help desensitize you, and be sure to get your fill of the gross stuff.

edit: the stuff that could potentially test your vasovagal syncope were censored out of the thread....so, never mind about that.

My sister has that same thing. She applied to med-school two years in a row, but after not getting in she is now an MBA.

Haha - I already looked at that thread - (when the pictures were there too). Blood and gore doesn't seem to phase me... I just wonder about the first time I see some gangrenous foot that's crawling with maggots. Actually I probably would vomit - I hate insects and maggots!!
 
Haha - I already looked at that thread - (when the pictures were there too). Blood and gore doesn't seem to phase me... I just wonder about the first time I see some gangrenous foot that's crawling with maggots. Actually I probably would vomit - I hate insects and maggots!!

Well, I've seen some pretty nasty feet, although no maggots. Usually, when it's happening right in front of you, you tend to be more concerned with the patient than the grossness of the wound, although you could smell it from 4 rooms away. I just kept wondering how anyone would let their feet get like that. The doctor asked him what he did to take care of them, and he said he just washed them every night in warm water. That was it. He then went AWOL before he could be admitted, probably gonna lose his feet.
 
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it will cure you of your ills
 
Shadow a forensic pathologist sometime (if the rules of the hospital allow it)... you'll get over any qualms pretty quickly when you see those guys gut a corpse like a fish...
 
Shadow a forensic pathologist sometime (if the rules of the hospital allow it)... you'll get over any qualms pretty quickly when you see those guys gut a corpse like a fish...

my suggestion is better
 
Some days I can handle anything (when i'm tired and i care less). other days i'm too sensitive. the other day i was watching a resident put in a central line in this man's groin and she kept messing up. She stuck him like 10 times and since there was no other doctor in the room to reprimand her, she kept plugging away. Blood was gushing everywhere and she kept telling me how applying pressure to any open wound in the body would save a person's life. so she kept poking and applying a towel for pressure. out of nowhere i realized i was dizzy and my vision was going so i lied and said i had to use the bathroom and bounced. i almost passed out while i looked for an empty chair, but i recovered without anyone realizing haha. i gotta be more careful and learn to deal with stuff.
 
I'm frighteningly comfortable with blood and the likes
 
Haha - I already looked at that thread - (when the pictures were there too). Blood and gore doesn't seem to phase me... I just wonder about the first time I see some gangrenous foot that's crawling with maggots. Actually I probably would vomit - I hate insects and maggots!!

Don't be so sure unless you've seen it in person. Sometimes these experiences don't set in immediately, and sometimes they are permanently repressed, but I guarantee that constant exposure to trauma like this has some psychological effect on people. As prospective doctors we are willing to expose ourselves to this psychological trauma to help others/make money/add your motivation here. Of course some of us will choose to pursue careers that limit this psychological trauma (derm vs pediatric oncology for example).

Well, I've seen some pretty nasty feet, although no maggots. Usually, when it's happening right in front of you, you tend to be more concerned with the patient than the grossness of the wound, although you could smell it from 4 rooms away. I just kept wondering how anyone would let their feet get like that. The doctor asked him what he did to take care of them, and he said he just washed them every night in warm water. That was it. He then went AWOL before he could be admitted, probably gonna lose his feet.

I worked at a foot clinic for the homeless for a while. The smell would stay with me for days.
 
Some days I can handle anything (when i'm tired and i care less). other days i'm too sensitive. the other day i was watching a resident put in a central line in this man's groin and she kept messing up. She stuck him like 10 times and since there was no other doctor in the room to reprimand her, she kept plugging away. Blood was gushing everywhere and she kept telling me how applying pressure to any open wound in the body would save a person's life. so she kept poking and applying a towel for pressure. out of nowhere i realized i was dizzy and my vision was going so i lied and said i had to use the bathroom and bounced. i almost passed out while i looked for an empty chair, but i recovered without anyone realizing haha. i gotta be more careful and learn to deal with stuff.

Its too bad people feel the need to lie to cover a very normal reaction as if its something to be ashamed of. I guarantee you that doctor felt the same way at some point in time, whether or not she seemed like it at the time. I'm not trying to criticize, I can't say for certain I wouldn't feel compelled to act in the same way. I think it does say something about the repression that goes on in medical education though. You are just supposed to "get over it."
 
well the way she was talking about it sounded like she expected me to be cool with it. i sensed that "get over it, get tough, this is what u signed up for" attitude.
 
I work in a pathology lab. As such, every day I see 30-40 bloody organs (breasts, legs, kidneys, gallbladders, moles, ovaries, uteruses, penises, fingers...). At first, sure I was a bit grossed out (especially when an intestine full of feces was opened in front of me). In time, I learned to accept it and even at times make light of the situation with humor. You just gotta get used to it and, most of all, realize it is very important work that must be done.
 
For years I thought I was and now I want to be a doctor. I think I just psyched myself out but it's really not that bad anymore.

I'm still squeamish about needles going in me like for shots or giving blood but as far as putting them in other people, no problem with that🙂
 
I can't stress swap.avi enough as a tool to get over squeamishness.
 
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