- Joined
- Apr 18, 2015
- Messages
- 817
- Reaction score
- 696
I disagree lol answering that you would do something illegal is not okay.
So, if the question is euthanasia with terminal illness, you're going to answer by simply asking "What state are we in?"
I disagree lol answering that you would do something illegal is not okay.
Well, not in those words, because I don't have state policies memorized...but you can be sure I would mention that the local/state laws where I practiced would influence my decision. I can't help anyone if I'm locked up.So, if the question is euthanasia with terminal illness, you're going to answer by simply asking "What state are we in?"
I disagree lol answering that you would do something illegal is not okay.
Well, not in those words, because I don't have state policies memorized...but you can be sure I would mention that the local/state laws where I practiced would influence my decision. I can't help anyone if I'm locked up.
Now, I would also probably allude to my thoughts on what the law should be, and/or what I would do in the case where both options were legal, but at the end of the day I am bound by legislation.
If I am asked a question that I have fair reason to believe that is borderline offensive or "illegal" in an interview setting (e.g. religious beliefs, what other schools I'm interviewing at, etc.), what is the best way to respond? I've never been in that situation before, so I don't know how to best react if placed in that situation. Is it even OK to ask if the question is "illegal"?
The original question posted wasn't a difficult question to answer. I'm not an idiot; obviously in an interview my response wouldn't be limited to "I would follow the law". Come on, now. But realistically, this original question didn't present an ethical dilemma. If the interviewer's goal is to get us to weigh various sides of an ethical dilemma, then they need to come up with a hypothetical situation where there are various routes that one can legally choose to take. If I knew something was illegal, I would never sit there and seriously weigh the illegal choice as a viable option and I wouldn't recommend that other interviewees do so either lol.That's not the point of the question. Additionally, there are many states where a verbal statement of "I don't want X treatment because of my religion" does not supersede a physician's obligation to administer life-saving treatments. Another thing to think about is what if it's a situation, like in the ER, where you need to make a decision this instant but are unsure of the law? What do you do? For some it would be to respect the patient's decision, others make very compelling arguments that one should treat the patient anyway. Either way, you may inadvertently break the law, this is why good samaritan laws were initially implemented, to protect individuals who were legitimately trying to do what was best.
The original question posted wasn't a difficult question to answer. I'm not an idiot; obviously in an interview my response wouldn't be limited to "I would follow the law". Come on, now. But realistically, this original question didn't present an ethical dilemma. If the interviewer's goal is to get us to weigh various sides of an ethical dilemma, then they need to come up with a hypothetical situation where there are various routes that one can legally choose to take. If I knew something was illegal, I would never sit there and seriously weigh the illegal choice as a viable option and I wouldn't recommend that other interviewees do so either lol.
Twisting the situation to blur the legal lines is better because it actually sets me up to explain what I would do and why.
Fair enough, we don't really know the details of the question though, which is why i made a more specific one. If it's a basic procedure (ex. dequervain's release), where one would never be expected to need a transfusion, idk if those forms would have been signed in the first place unless the patient explicitly asked to sign them. I agree with you though that the legality aspects could be taken out to help the interviewer understand how they're supposed to answer.
Lol what is he giving away? He's supporting the point that a question about an ethical dilemma needs to actually present an ethical dilemma!Stagg....shhhhh!
Don't give it away! Let' 'em think for themselves!
😉
The doc was 100% correct and mehc012 summed it up nicely.
Just one more thing I'd like to reiterate, because it seems to be a pre-med urban legend. Once you interview, it's not a zero-sum game. You're not competing for a single seat against the other applicants, only against yourself.
Stagg....shhhhh!
Don't give it away! Let' 'em think for themselves!
😉
Oh don't worry, I won't lol. I just know the 'right' answer because a very, very similar case was presented to us in our bioethics class and our dean (a DO/JD) as well as both bioethics professors went pretty in depth on it. I won't give it away here without adcom permission though 😀
The original question posted wasn't a difficult question to answer. I'm not an idiot; obviously in an interview my response wouldn't be limited to "I would follow the law". Come on, now. But realistically, this original question didn't present an ethical dilemma. If the interviewer's goal is to get us to weigh various sides of an ethical dilemma, then they need to come up with a hypothetical situation where there are various routes that one can legally choose to take. If I knew something was illegal, I would never sit there and seriously weigh the illegal choice as a viable option and I wouldn't recommend that other interviewees do so either lol.
Twisting the situation to blur the legal lines is better because it actually sets me up to explain what I would do and why.
Agreed that perhaps it would behoove the interviewers to pose questions to which violation of law is not an issue (or at least not an obvious one), in order to best execute the purpose of these questions, which has to do with assessing who you are and how you think. One might even argue that the automatic "nixing" of all potentially illegal actions is quite revealing in and of itself (and are often coupled with certain other characteristics and approaches to authorities, not to mention idology, etc etc).
Just to throw a wrench in it, I would say my personal view is that while I would look for alternatives in which I would not knowingly commit a crime, I personally consider the legal system (and protocols etc) as prima facie, and something to which I would usually defer (after all, there must be a reason such precedents were set in the first place, at least one would like to think), but that they are not inherently ethical or the right thing to do. I would, under these rare instances, knowingly commit a crime if I could not convince myself deference is best (and, I will really REALLY give the law and other such systems the benefit of the doubt). The law is a means (to execute fairness, protection etc), but mor(al)es are an end. There is a critical difference.
(and now back to my boring life of paperwork)
I wouldn't argue with an interviewer, no lol. But I can have my own personal opinion about whether or not I was asked strong questions.@rachiie01, I'm actually trying to help....are you going to argue with the interviewer about what is and is not an ethical dilemma? And do you believe there are any scenarios where something is not legal but honoring what is legal may not be ethical?
We really don't ask ethics questions for which violation of the law is one of the options....give us some more credit than that. Even on physician-assisted suicide, we're trying to find out where you stand, not have you enter Law school.
Rather, if you're interviewing at, say U MI, and are asked "would you give a lethal dose of medication to a terminal cancer patient?'; the correct answer is NOT "I can't do that because it's against the law in MI".... the correct answer is either "yes, because..." or "no, because..."
I wouldn't argue with an interviewer, no lol. But I can have my own personal opinion about whether or not I was asked strong questions.
There are plenty of laws that I disagree with! The drinking age is a good example. That doesn't mean that I would break those laws or advocate for breaking them (not in an interview, at least 😛).
And if I'm asked what I think the law should be, I will respond accordingly! But I won't ever say in an interview that I would break a well-known law (especially one that I agree with, such as honoring withheld consent lol).Right, but the interviewer very well might want to hear your thoughts on why the age should be changed. I agree. I think it should be 19.
And if I'm asked what I think the law should be, I will respond accordingly! But I won't ever say in an interview that I would break a well-known law (especially one that I agree with, such as honoring withheld consent lol).
Exactly, which is why these hypothetical situations need to be better thought-out lol.I'm not sure physicians and physicians-to-be like swimming in the waters of ambiguity and ambivalence.
Exactly, which is why these hypothetical situations need to be better thought-out lol.
Stagg....shhhhh!
Don't give it away! Let' 'em think for themselves!
😉
Oh don't worry, I won't lol. I just know the 'right' answer because a very, very similar case was presented to us in our bioethics class and our dean (a DO/JD) as well as both bioethics professors went pretty in depth on it. I won't give it away here without adcom permission though 😀
Yup...we have insider knowledge.
You mad, bro?Just for your information, Gordo, I have seen ALL 11 seasons of Grey's Anatomy, so I know medicine is right for me - what I WAS BORN TO DO (@BornToBeASurgeon right?!).
I'm in my firts semster and I have a 4.0 already (Mom always did say I was smart LOL). I'm all jacked up on mountain dew and F'n #winning. And volunteering is for LOSERS; I will be out w/ hot chix and playing COD while burning throagh the hard sciences like it's my jobe, son.
EDIT: ORTHO HERE I CUM!
EDIT: GET IT? HAHAHAHAHHAHAH
Should I take a portfolio with me to an interview
With resumes and copies of application?
And paper to take notes. Is that too much?!
What about a mohawk. Like a really sweet one?I don't think it's really necessary (most schools provide a folder or something similar). Some students bring one, some don't, no one will judge you either way.
The interviewers will have already read/have your app information if it's an open file format.
I would not worry about it... unless you wanted to review your own app during a break period (though at this point, once you're at the interview, it's probably better to relax and collect yourself).
I've seen people doing this--if it's your thing go for it. Most schools provide writing implements if there's any to be done.
Only if it's dyed school colors!What about a mohawk. Like a really sweet one?
Gauss, this is completely irrelevant. Maybe you got post confused with the "schools looking for LGBT students thread"??
Your interviewers are going to be, for the most part, PhDs and/or MDs/DOs. Their gender is completely irrelevant. This is a professional setting and you act accordingly. You're not interviewing for a job...it's a career that starts at a professional school. The person you're talking to is not yet your peer.
And our Admissions Deans and staff aren't *****s, they have, at least at my school, placards or name tags for the interviewees. So if Jane comes in, and her tag says Jane, even though she started life as a John, I call her Jane.
I'm worried about you, Gauss. Have you taken the MCAT yet? Watch out for the VR section, especially reading comprehension and critical thinking.
Is it a bad thing if you get done with your interview and find out everyone else answered an ethics and/or state of healthcare question when you weren't even posed the question? Someone tell me I'm being neurotic.
Reading a book to have the 'right' answer for this question kinda seems to defeat the purpose of the question, no?So I was just doing a mock interview with a friend and she asked "What's the last book you've read that wasn't medical?"
I've been really into medical books lately (Atul Gawande etc), and the last stuff I've read that wasn't medical was Harry Potter (I read them all at least once a year, I know I'm weird). The books before that were the Divergent series, and before that the Hunger Games...
Should I interrupt my current books (Remedy and Reaction, Being Mortal) and read something non-medical? Or would answering Harry Potter be fine?
Is it a bad thing if you get done with your interview and find out everyone else answered an ethics and/or state of healthcare question when you weren't even posed the question? Someone tell me I'm being neurotic.
So I was just doing a mock interview with a friend and she asked "What's the last book you've read that wasn't medical?"
I've been really into medical books lately (Atul Gawande etc), and the last stuff I've read that wasn't medical was Harry Potter (I read them all at least once a year, I know I'm weird). The books before that were the Divergent series, and before that the Hunger Games...
Should I interrupt my current books (Remedy and Reaction, Being Mortal) and read something non-medical? Or would answering Harry Potter be fine?
Reading a book to have the 'right' answer for this question kinda seems to defeat the purpose of the question, no?
OK so if they do ask the question I'll just be honest.Even more hyperneurotic.
TX Xanax and therapy.
I was very focused on being myself until I discovered SDNIs it just me or is everyone more concerned about the "right answer" than being themselves and just telling the truth? I must be very naive...very curious to see how things will turn out
Remedy and Reaction is hardly a "medical book." It is a history book.So I was just doing a mock interview with a friend and she asked "What's the last book you've read that wasn't medical?"
I've been really into medical books lately (Atul Gawande etc), and the last stuff I've read that wasn't medical was Harry Potter (I read them all at least once a year, I know I'm weird). The books before that were the Divergent series, and before that the Hunger Games...
Should I interrupt my current books (Remedy and Reaction, Being Mortal) and read something non-medical? Or would answering Harry Potter be fine?
I LIVE on fiction meant for middle schoolers! And just fantasy in general 😛Remedy and Reaction is hardly a "medical book." It is a history book.
Most people would be impressed you found time and cared enough to trudge through such an academic book yourself
If I were asked the question, I would tell the truth and say that my Kindle is currently obsessed with a fiction series meant for middle schoolers. Artemis Fowl. Go read it everyone, you're welcome![]()
So I was just doing a mock interview with a friend and she asked "What's the last book you've read that wasn't medical?"
I've been really into medical books lately (Atul Gawande etc), and the last stuff I've read that wasn't medical was Harry Potter (I read them all at least once a year, I know I'm weird). The books before that were the Divergent series, and before that the Hunger Games...
Should I interrupt my current books (Remedy and Reaction, Being Mortal) and read something non-medical? Or would answering Harry Potter be fine?
Oh I love Artemis Fowl!Remedy and Reaction is hardly a "medical book." It is a history book.
Most people would be impressed you found time and cared enough to trudge through such an academic book yourself
If I were asked the question, I would tell the truth and say that my Kindle is currently obsessed with a fiction series meant for middle schoolers. Artemis Fowl. Go read it everyone, you're welcome![]()
Aurum est potestasOh I love Artemis Fowl!
Also, ender's game <3
Hi @Goro I really appreciate this thread and your insight. Is a first question of "Tell us about yourself?" the opportunity to explain why medicine, or should we speak more generally about ourselves and wait for the "Why medicine?" prompt?
Hi @Goro I really appreciate this thread and your insight. Is a first question of "Tell us about yourself?" the opportunity to explain why medicine, or should we speak more generally about ourselves and wait for the "Why medicine?" prompt?