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I figured I would just start a fun thread consisting of the weirdest questions you were asked at a med school interview.
Personally, mine was: If you could meet any three people (dead or otherwise) who would you choose and why?
This is actually a pretty common question, and for good reason.
You bombed this question. The question is asked to see if you have considered that there are downsides to a career in Medicine (which there are).
"What is one reason you may not want to go into medicine"
uhhhh....I am applying to medical schools because I want to go there...
MosesI figured I would just start a fun thread consisting of the weirdest questions you were asked at a med school interview.
Personally, mine was: If you could meet any three people (dead or otherwise) who would you choose and why?
This is actually a pretty common question, and for good reason.
You bombed this question. The question is asked to see if you have considered that there are downsides to a career in Medicine (which there are).
"What is one reason you may not want to go into medicine"
uhhhh....I am applying to medical schools because I want to go there...
Do you think your children will be a distraction for you?
ANSWER: Of course they will...do you have children?!? lol
This one stumped me a bit...only because I probably wasn't prepared for it as well as I should have:
What do you foresee as the biggest challenge for healthcare (or enter specialty) over the next 10 years? Unless you really are interested in healthcare politics...this is one that requires some premeditated thought.
Adcoms just mirin' your gains?"what steroids do you take?"
true story.
Whaaat??? lol Why is that even relevant to becoming a physician?"So... You're homosexual?"
Is that even legal to ask in an interview, unless you brought it up yourself?"So... You're homosexual?"
Is that even legal to ask in an interview, unless you brought it up yourself?
Adcoms just mirin' your gains?
I mentioned my sexuality in a diversity essay and the interviewer was essentially curious about how receptive my hometown was to it.Whaaat??? lol Why is that even relevant to becoming a physician?
I mentioned my sexuality in a diversity essay and the interviewer was essentially curious about how receptive my hometown was to it.
I ended up being accepted so I don't think he had bad intentions asking. It just shocked me for a second that it was something he wanted to discuss.
I got one: "What's your role in the family?"
My parents separated a couple of weeks ago, so I'm still trying to figure out the works of this new family unit. I found the question insensitive, especially since that bitch of an interviewer rolled her eyes when I told her I can't quite say at the moment - still navigating the maze.
This kind of stuff is really tough because as people who have had no formal medical ethics training, how are we expected to answer some of these questions?The toughest question I got was from a doctor who asked me, you have a patient come into the ER and tells you please leave me alone and let me die in peace. He asked me what I would do in such a situation.
This kind of stuff is really tough because as people who have had no formal medical ethics training, how are we expected to answer some of these questions?
Personally my gut would say "run a psych eval and contact some family. If the eval is clear and the family says those are his wishes then I would try to move him to hospice (if he is close to death) or try and get arrangements for him to die in peace back at his own home."
But of course, that is most likely wrong. I know I have personal bias that affected some of my ethical questions in interviews. The "correct" answer would probably be to try exhaustive measures or some crap like that. When in the end if people want to die and they are sane, just let em go?
Not when she asked the question, but she sure did after I answered it... And then the eye rolls at my answer.did they know your parents had just separated?
Maybe not necessarily this situation, but definitely plenty of others I ran in to that were insanely challenging... I am a normal human being who has experience working in a clinic so I understand how to help and interact with people. But even then with that experience, there are some constraints that interviewers have put us under that are just ridiculous. There is a difference between challenging and ridiculous. Not trying to harp too hard on the interview process, I guess just venting a little bit and wished that most interviews were more conversational and didnt give pimp questions with random ethical situations that even some physicians would struggle with.If patient refuses care and you still provide it, that is considered assault.
Maybe not necessarily this situation, but definitely plenty of others I ran in to that were insanely challenging... I am a normal human being who has experience working in a clinic so I understand how to help and interact with people. But even then with that experience, there are some constraints that interviewers have put us under that are just ridiculous. There is a difference between challenging and ridiculous. Not trying to harp too hard on the interview process, I guess just venting a little bit and wished that most interviews were more conversational and didnt give pimp questions with random ethical situations that even some physicians would struggle with.
ethics questions can be tricky. i think as long as you provide a somewhat well-formulated response which isn't completely irrational, then they will be okay with it. typically they are asking to see how you handle ethical situations and stress, not to get your precise view on a topic. but you definitely can't just give a wishy washy answer either.
i would say that my theology courses helped me develop an answer, but in some cases has actually made other decisions even harder.
From a legal standpoint, as long as the patient is mentally capable of making their own decisions, you cannot force care. When I see critical patients in the ER, the physician always asks them if they would want to be resuscitated if necessary. Going against the patient's wishes is disrespecting their autonomyThe toughest question I got was from a doctor who asked me, you have a patient come into the ER and tells you please leave me alone and let me die in peace. He asked me what I would do in such a situation.
From a legal standpoint, as long as the patient is mentally capable of making their own decisions, you cannot force care. When I see critical patients in the ER, the physician always asks them if they would want to be resuscitated if necessary. Going against the patient's wishes is disrespecting their autonomy
What animal would you like to become?
No, actually, it's not. That is the fact. Sometimes people get transported to the hospital who are unresponsive at the time they are picked up, and refuse further care upon regaining consciousness. Others are forced to come in by family members. If a patient says "I am a DNR" we CANNOT resuscitate. Plain and simple. Have you worked in the ER? People come in all the time then decide they want to leave AMA. But the fact remains you cannot force care upon peopleIf they did not want care, then why did they come to the hospital? Its a lot more complicated than that.
I thought the question was so ridiculous so I gave them a ridiculous answer. SLOTH! Because life is so hard already, why not be an animal that snoozes all day? lolSilverback gorilla!!!!
....oh rhetorical question
No, actually, it's not. That is the fact. Sometimes people get transported to the hospital who are unresponsive at the time they are picked up, and refuse further care upon regaining consciousness. Others are forced to come in by family members. If a patient says "I am a DNR" we CANNOT resuscitate. Plain and simple. Have you worked in the ER? People come in all the time then decide they want to leave AMA. But the fact remains you cannot force care upon people
Well if she is having suicidal ideation (which is indicated when someone states they wish to die) that is different. At that point they require a psychiatric eval (which is non-optional.) But if they say "I don't want treatment, I just want to die", we still can't do anything (draw labs, do imaging, procedures, etc) UNLESS psych states they require admission to the psych unit (then you can get away with a lab draw.) The only thing we can do is try to convince the patient to opt in for treatment and discuss risks of going without it. You can easily get sued for forcing treatment on a patient. You MUST have consent to treat.
What animal would you like to become?
Did you get autocorrected from squirrel, or am I just not getting the joke lolIs it weird that I am picturing an uptight interviewee answering this with ".....a red square!".
Did you get autocorrected from squirrel, or am I just not getting the joke lol
No, it's fine, I laughed regardless hahahaHAHAHA I guess the joke is the interviewee is so hyped up that even though they asked about an animal they happen to some reason think of a shape instead and blurt that out.
My jokes suck!
There are many reasons why someone would go to the hospital and then not want or no longer want care. Not everyone knows what the hospital can and will provide. At the end of the day some people expect magic, others simply want a sandwich.This doctor was describing a situation where someone came on their own will to the hospital, when it came time to actually see the doctor the patient said she did want to be treated and wished to die, and she was clearly emotional. Nothing is ever black and white.
There are many reasons why someone would go to the hospital and then not want or no longer want care. Not everyone knows what the hospital can and will provide. At the end of the day some people expect magic, others simply want a sandwich.
Perhaps this patient in particular had no one and wanted to be around others who would show compassion during her passing. You don't know what someone wants or expects unless you ask. Even then, there is no guarantee that you'll ever get an answer.
At the end of the day, you can't force care unless the patient isn't of sound mind, a harm to himself, herself, or others. But, that doesn't mean you can't be caring. There's always something to provide even if it's just kind words or a simple touch. Sometimes that's really all someone wants.
Does someone like that belong in the hospital? Perhaps not. But, he or she is there. The very least that can be done is to acknowledge him or her as a person.