Saturday, April 11, 2020

Sample Residency Essay For Family Medicine

Sample Residency Essay For Family MedicineHere is a sample residency essay for family medicine. It is written for a family physician, but you can probably adapt it to fit other doctors as well. If you have any questions or concerns, it would be nice to have someone else point them out to you.Family medicine is a great choice for the residency application because there are numerous family-oriented and physician-oriented schools. The reason for this is that family medicine is a field that has always made a connection with the family. It is also a field that is expected to accept families. There is also a requirement that the applicant's children are under the age of 18.Many of the medical schools offer undergraduate programs, although they may focus on certain health care practices. The programs also may have to be accredited by the National Commission for Certifying Agencies. As you will be entering an elite medical profession, this means you will need to show proof of your competency . You can do this by submitting scores from CLEP or American Medical Association.Typically, the medical schools that offer courses for family medicine are not highly ranked or academically respected, so it is important to choose the right school. You may want to consider the holistic approach or holistic education that some of the programs offer. It is also important to consider what kind of health care practices you may have in mind, as a family physician will likely be handling a number of different patients at the same time.You will need to submit more than one essay to your medical school, and the format must match the ones given to the other applicants. In general, you will need to explain why you want to enter medical school. For instance, are you hoping to become a family doctor? This will tell the admissions committee a lot about you.While you may be concerned about the competition in the residency program, you should think of it as an opportunity to make an investment in yo urself. A residency can open many doors for you, and you will be setting up a career path. In addition, getting a degree in family medicine opens many doors to travel, advanced training, and employment. The key is to pick a school that has the flexibility to allow you to experience all the comforts of a formal, four-year program while doing all the research and general education required to make a professional career in family medicine. Only after you have decided on which school to attend should you start looking at the details of the application.Having done the application process for your residency, you should now be ready to turn it into an official record. You will have to send in the application and anything else you have, along with the recommendation letter from your teaching or supervising physician. If you have any relatives who are also doctor candidates, you can add a letter of recommendation from them, too. These are just a few of the requirements.

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Spirit Catches You Essays - Anthropology Of Religion, Epilepsy

Spirit Catches You In the book "The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down" by Anne Fadiman, a child named Lia Lee is taken away from her parents by Child Protective Services and placed in foster care. Because they aren't giving her medication for epilepsy. Although resulting in some medical benefits those benefits were lost because of destructive psychological and emotional damage to Lia. Dr. Neil Ernst decided to call child protective services when Lia Lee's parents Nou Kou and Foua were reluctant to give her her medicine. Dr. Neil Ernst said: "I felt it was important for these Hmongs to understand that there were certain elements of medicine that we understood better than they did and that there were certain rules they had to follow with their kids' lives. I wanted the word to get out in the community that if they deviated from that, it was not acceptable behavior."(pg. 79 Fadiman). Dr. Ernst could have also been arrested for not reporting it. There were some alternatives to calling Child Protective Services such as my favorite one; having a nurse visit the Lees' three times daily to administer the medications, but this thought did not occur to Dr. Ernst and/or seemed unreasonable at the time. Although Fadiman does not mention what Dr. Ernst thought about this course of action, I can only suspect that it would have been too expensive to have a nurse visit three times a day. Also they shouldn't be rewarded for their noncompliance by having someone else administer their daughter's medication. It might have also provoked the Lees' to anger because they didn't like to give Lia the medicine because of how the medicine made her depressed and sullen. After Lia was taken away for a period of a few weeks, Nou Kou almost beat an interpreter named Sue Xiong who was interpreting for a CPS (#) social worker. Nou Kou said: "I was outside and Sue came inside and she called me and said, Come in here, you come in here. At that time I was ready to hit Sue, and I got a baseball bat right there. My son-in-law was with me, and he grabbed me and told me not to do it."(pg. 91 Fadiman), so you can see the Lees' were violent natured. The second reason the Nou Kou and Foua did not want to give their daughter the medicine was that they believed like other Hmongs that people with epilepsy are caught by a good or bad spirit which makes them fall to the ground (the Hmong word for epilepsy translates into: the spirit catches you and you fall down) and while their under siege they get messages from the gods. Many people in their culture with epilepsy become cultural healers or shamans. The plan of sending a nurse would have been my plan. It would have been allot of time and money though. And when the Hmong community is already draining our resources through welfare doesn't make much sense to spend more money on them. It also would not have said that"our medicine is better" as good either. Although Dr. Neil's plan of letting CPS handle it worked out for him it did not work out for Lia for she had more seizures at her foster home with the medicine than at home with missed and half dosses. The reason is because she did not want to be separated from her parents, and the emotional damage from the separation. Some people would say it was selfish and lazy that Dr. Ernst did not at least try to use a nurse to administer the medication. I believe if I was Him that I would try sending a nurse for Two weeks to see if it would work and then make a decision. But on the other hand I believe that these stubborn, ignorant people shouldn't be pampered when they are already helping themselves to so much (#) from the tax payers through welfare. Because of these two issues of Dr. Ernst's quickness to make a decision, and the Hmong community taking so much and giving nothing back, it is hard for me to make a decision and I feel myself "slipping" towards Dr. Ernst's decision. I don't blame Dr. Ernst for his decision which I think is the most logical choice and even if he tried my Two weeks idea it still wouldn't make sending a nurse any less expensive. All I am saying is that he should not have worried about teaching the Hmong