The potential for his immune system to collapse and die is enormous in this situation
imo, I don't think medicine would be the right occupation for him. For one thing, to spend more years in a grueling state of studying and stress wouldn't be the best way to live his remaining years. Although there's a small possibility that his strain will respond well to medication, he should not waste his time hoping/praying.
It's obviously his prerogative to do whatever profession he wants, but deliberately putting yourself in extended daily contact with loads of resistant pathogens when you're immunocompromised sounds pretty unwise to me.
(why should a med school admit someone with a known terminal disease that causes immune system fragility?)
😕😕😕 What are you people
talking about?!
The friend in question has HIV,
NOT AIDS. There's a crucial difference.
AIDS means that your immune system is not working, and that you have fewer immune cells than you need to have normal function. HIV just means that you have the virus that eventually, if left untreated, will cause AIDS. By talking about his "immune system fragility," etc, you make it sound like this guy is dying on his feet. But, as long as he hasn't progressed to AIDS, he'll be just fine.
If the OP's friend takes his HAART therapy faithfully, keeps in frequent contact with his ID specialist, and has an undetectable viral load, he is in perfectly good health. He's as healthy as you are.
And there is a VERY GOOD chance that his strain will respond well to medication. There is a wide variety of anti-virals that are currently in use, and it is likely that the OP's friend is already on a regimen that works.
While I understand that many of the people posting in this thread are pre-meds, or have just started MS-1, I find it appalling that any of you would presume to comment on the state of this guy's health when you clearly don't understand very much about HIV, AIDS, and HAART.
😡 I think that the decision to pursue a career in medicine is up to the OP's friend and his ID specialist. It's NOT up to us to comment whether or not he's "too frail" to pursue this path.
How is someone in pathology not exposed to pathogens. That's exactly what they are looking for/working with. You periodically hear about someone in the path lab not closing the lid on something tight enough and the whole lab getting sick...
On my recent pathology block, all that work was done almost exclusively by PAs and lab techs. The pathologists just read the slides that had been prepared by someone else. Similarly, all the truly pathogenic stuff was handled by technicians and technologists.
Aside from the surgical pathology block (in which you deal with specimans that have already been removed from the patient), I don't think I ever saw a pathologist get his hands dirty.
It probably varies from program to program, but I don't think that you're necessarily exposed to pathogens, just because you're in a pathology lab.
While I agree that it probably isn't the wisest decision (the disclosure- clarification), you really aren't going to be able to put yourself in his shoes. If your friend has accepted his situation and is willing to accept the challenge of applying openly as an HIV+ applicant, then go ahead and support him through it because you clearly understand that it is going to be a difficult road.
👍 Best advice in this thread.