- Joined
- Feb 13, 2003
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- 538
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I'm trying to decide finally between pediatrics and medicine. I like both, but what it comes down to is that while peds is less frustrating, I have a moral issue with doing extremely complicated interventions on children.
Here's an example:
2 y/o with congenital cranio-facial abnormalities here for 14th surgery to correct facial features and revise intraventricular shunt. Has feeding tube, tracheostomy; unsure if she will ever eat on her own, but may have ok mental functioning (can't talk now due to tracheostomy). Has older sister who has by default spent much of HER life in hospitals. Parents totally stressed out; mother quit job to take care of kid, father changed jobs to have more time at home.
My question is, is this the right thing to do?? She would have died about 1 mo after birth if there were no interventions. This kid has known nothing but surgery, hospitals, and pain, and her right to live is interfering with another child's well-being. There are lots of kids who can't get appointments for antibiotics, but we're spending millions of dollars on one child. On the other hand, children have the most to gain in terms of years of life, why shouldn't we do everything possible to "save" them? I KNOW if it were my kid I'd probably want everything possible done, just like these parents, but in the bigger picture I can't convince myself it's right. And, can you be a good pediatritian if you don't agree with all of this?
What do you think?
Here's an example:
2 y/o with congenital cranio-facial abnormalities here for 14th surgery to correct facial features and revise intraventricular shunt. Has feeding tube, tracheostomy; unsure if she will ever eat on her own, but may have ok mental functioning (can't talk now due to tracheostomy). Has older sister who has by default spent much of HER life in hospitals. Parents totally stressed out; mother quit job to take care of kid, father changed jobs to have more time at home.
My question is, is this the right thing to do?? She would have died about 1 mo after birth if there were no interventions. This kid has known nothing but surgery, hospitals, and pain, and her right to live is interfering with another child's well-being. There are lots of kids who can't get appointments for antibiotics, but we're spending millions of dollars on one child. On the other hand, children have the most to gain in terms of years of life, why shouldn't we do everything possible to "save" them? I KNOW if it were my kid I'd probably want everything possible done, just like these parents, but in the bigger picture I can't convince myself it's right. And, can you be a good pediatritian if you don't agree with all of this?
What do you think?