- Joined
- May 3, 2011
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I've noticed that in medical school, esp. during the first 2 years, we are told that it is important to ask open-ended questions and to take in a lot of information because it could all be relevant to the patient's problems. That compassion and empathy are the basis of a great doctor.
As we proceed in training though, I see a change. Questions become problem-focused. We are told to start asking direct questions and to look for a diagnosis rather than take in a lot of information about many different things. In third year, we find more and more that asking open-ended questions and listening to patients talk about whatever, more often than not, leads to a lot of irrelevant information that is useless in taking care of them.
This, combined with the facts that medical school does NOT train on you how to take care of patients, and that 3rd year tends to kill empathy in most medical students, makes me think that empathy and compassion tend to be overblown and sensationalized because they sound nice, and that the real basis of a great doctor lies in competence, and not empathy.
As we proceed in training though, I see a change. Questions become problem-focused. We are told to start asking direct questions and to look for a diagnosis rather than take in a lot of information about many different things. In third year, we find more and more that asking open-ended questions and listening to patients talk about whatever, more often than not, leads to a lot of irrelevant information that is useless in taking care of them.
This, combined with the facts that medical school does NOT train on you how to take care of patients, and that 3rd year tends to kill empathy in most medical students, makes me think that empathy and compassion tend to be overblown and sensationalized because they sound nice, and that the real basis of a great doctor lies in competence, and not empathy.