Saturday, September 17, 2011

Autumn days: Comfort & Company

The leaves have already turned their golden to coral hue -it's fall again, reminding me of another year past, and the beginning of the next. Days shorten like the cervix of a complicated pregnancy, preparing for the release of snow and ice, sooner than we'd like (okay, bad joke, but I can't help myself -it's all high risk obstetrics in Toronto now and then Ottawa, in a week)! Anyway, this city has been good to me, this time around, or perhaps despite the chill, I've been warming up to it a bit. Continuing to discover good eats (Sukothai, Gilead, Oliver & B's) and revisit the places I've enjoyed in the past (Red Lobster, Sushi Bar, Spring Rolls). This is a picture of the best dessert I've had in Toronto (post-lunch indulgence today): Sticky toffee pudding with Chantilly cream at Gilead, in Corktown... yummy! Meeting old and new friends, in various contexts (work & play). I saw a beautiful foreign film at the Film Festival, "Habibi", a modern Laila & Majnun set in Gaza -the poetry on the city walls was the best part really. I've met some lovely physicians and am generally enjoying this downtown hospital. Learning a lot about medicine, life, love, pacing and myself. It's a good place these days, this temple that is my body.

Before arriving here, I had the simultaneous fortune and misfortune of having a retinal tear discovered in my right eye. Right -that side with which we give, share and work. Misfortune in that I was scared out of my wits thinking about the possibility of retinal detachment, going blind in one eye, losing stereopsis, and perhaps not being able to become a surgeon one day. Fortune in that the tear was discovered before I had any symptoms, was incredibly rapidly diagnosed and treated with laser within 24 hours. The other blessing was that I got to re-experience what being a real patient is all about. Fitting for the end of my short palliative care elective -nothing like wearing the shoes yourself, you know.

First of all, can I just say that it is very difficult to be a medical student and a patient at the same time. See, we know what being the "good patient" is, and we understand that medicine makes no guarantees or promises and that there are enough risks in any given situation. Most physicians will tell you that doctors are the worst patients -always questioning, analyzing, etc in their awareness of all the risks. But then there are people like me, who like to be liked. Which means I have to be the "good patient" -smiling, being stoic / tough / courageous, asking a few questions but not too many, and above all, no whining, no complaining, no losing our cool, especially because we are medical students. And yet, despite the fact that the residents and fellows in opthalmology spoke to me and treated me as one of their own and I knew I was in good hands, I found I felt immensely alone in my state of just being a patient: worried, scared, wondering what the best decision for treatment would be, exhausted by having numerous dilating eye drops and many a bright light shone into my eyes for a total of just over 2 hours, feeling stressed and overwhelmed and entirely disrupted and unrooted from my life, even if only for 24 hours. The only moment where I felt myself relax and breathe momentarily again was after my eye had been repeatedly lasered, tears silently running down the sides of my face and temples (it hurt, but I was doing my best to just tough it and ignore the emotional and physical trauma of the whole ordeal) -the fellow put a hand on my shoulder, asking if I wanted a little break and then acknowledged that it couldn't be any fun, that he'd never had it done himself and would probably be a big baby if he was in my place. I was so relieved. I had been wondering whether those strong, brave patients we all love so much, actually never felt the pain that much or whether they just did a good job of hiding it, unlike my own body which betrayed humble suffering.

And so I had been patient, and as kind and empathetic as I could with my palliative care patients prior to that fated day, when in a sense, I became one of them. Not in their state of imminent death of course, but in sharing that heartache of being 'sick', having pain, seeking comfort, company and love. That is just the human condition. That's what I loved about palliative care -it was all about our humanity. Our physical, emotional, psychological and spiritual health, as patients, as their families, and as the interdisciplinary care team. Imagine a doctor walking into a patient's room and asking them how they are doing, how they are feeling, asking about their fears, their pain, their hopes. And then, turning to their anxious spouse, or niece, or young daughter and asking how they were doing, how they were coping and letting them know that all the support resources available to the patient were also available to them -psychologists, music therapists, massage therapists, the works. This is the model for all health care. And in an ideal world, all patients need and deserve it, as do their families.

Until then, I remain yours truly, doing the best that I can. My goal as a physician will be to make sure my patients feel supported and loved as we treat their physical ailments, and also to love and support my colleagues so that as a team, we can do better.