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Why would anyone want you to follow them around for weeks in a row? Wouldn't that just get annoying? Maybe some of us are too preoccupied with mission med school to consider being considerate.
Why would anyone want you to follow them around for weeks in a row? Wouldn't that just get annoying? Maybe some of us are too preoccupied with mission med school to consider being considerate.
Why would anyone want you to follow them around for weeks in a row? Wouldn't that just get annoying? Maybe some of us are too preoccupied with mission med school to consider being considerate.
It can be annoying. Imagine having a high-school student staring at you while you study. Now imagine that the high-school student is as revved-up as the typical pre-med. It can be pretty funny.
However, we were all in your shoes at some point, and the above poster is right, many of us do feel a desire to give back. Personally, I think it is very important for y'all to get an accurate portrayal in your heads of what medicine is all about, rather than some idealized mental picture fortified by Grey's Anatomy.
Many aspects of medicine are fairly tedious, so it can be nice to have someone new around to talk to. I think some people do it because their colleagues ask them and they can't really say no and not look like a jerk. Some people do it to stroke their egos and show off how much they know.
By the time you're a senior resident or fellow, you are used to being responsible for medical students and interns, and you grow accustomed to having someone following you around and asking questions all the time.
So don't be self-conscious about shadowing. They're used to it, even if it seems strange to you, and they wouldn't have let you do it if they truly despised the notion.
It can be annoying. Imagine having a high-school student staring at you while you study. Now imagine that the high-school student is as revved-up as the typical pre-med. It can be pretty funny.
However, we were all in your shoes at some point, and the above poster is right, many of us do feel a desire to give back. Personally, I think it is very important for y'all to get an accurate portrayal in your heads of what medicine is all about, rather than some idealized mental picture fortified by Grey's Anatomy.
Many aspects of medicine are fairly tedious, so it can be nice to have someone new around to talk to. I think some people do it because their colleagues ask them and they can't really say no and not look like a jerk. Some people do it to stroke their egos and show off how much they know.
By the time you're a senior resident or fellow, you are used to being responsible for medical students and interns, and you grow accustomed to having someone following you around and asking questions all the time.
So don't be self-conscious about shadowing. They're used to it, even if it seems strange to you, and they wouldn't have let you do it if they truly despised the notion.
I agree it's probably annoying to many docs, but it's a way of "giving back".
I think some doctors may get annoyed. But, most of them are interested in educating premed students.
It's because the docs you're shadowing now have also shadowed/followed a doc around for weeks in a row. They were once in your position, too.