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I Regret Being A Medical Doctor - Career (2) - Nairaland

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Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by adewumiopeyemi(m): 7:29am On Mar 12, 2017
Someone sho sumarise dis don no were to start reading from cool
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Famocious(m): 7:30am On Mar 12, 2017
Seems Op doesn't want anyone to read his writeup...everything looks lopsided.
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Firstcitizen: 7:31am On Mar 12, 2017
I read like 20 lines and got very tired so abandoned it.

1 Like

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by ozo13(m): 7:31am On Mar 12, 2017
Jerryojozy:
I love my profession.


Genius J
hmmmm

1 Like

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Uwaomaokey(m): 7:32am On Mar 12, 2017
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by shaydeenamz(m): 7:32am On Mar 12, 2017
no regret in life bt only leasons.
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Jerryojozy(m): 7:34am On Mar 12, 2017
ozo13:
hmmmm
Why hmm? U don't like yours?

Genius J
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Eazybay(m): 7:35am On Mar 12, 2017
Well said op!! You also have to understand dat Nigeria is yet to fully understand d importance of a solid healthcare structure. Hence u have stereotypes like "doctors shouldn't b rich". There is no reason to regret tho, as wealth in dis profession seems to come from business acumen rather Dan medical proficiency.


Just be good at what you do!!!

1 Like

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by dhebo(m): 7:35am On Mar 12, 2017
if one do not take pride in ones job.no matter the yearly income the person won't be happy..

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Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Nobody: 7:36am On Mar 12, 2017
Too long. No strength to read all. Not now that Garri is 3cups/N200. Thunder fire buhari.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Meritocracy: 7:36am On Mar 12, 2017
Oga dokita, you cannot be rich as you want by working for somebody in an profession unless you do fraud. Please be innovative and invest in what you know best. Your problem is disease called certificate syndrome, have you ever seen rich professor without other business except teaching?

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Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Ehinmola(m): 7:40am On Mar 12, 2017
Being a medical doctor is a service to humanity. Your reward is in heaven doc.

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by nkemdi89(f): 7:40am On Mar 12, 2017
He is not far from the truth, my young doctor friend who unfortunately lives in same compound with yahoo boys always envy them, according to him, he said those boys stress less and made more cash while he has been wasting his life reading and working. I made him understand that with his job he will never go hungry, while those "boys" Will not "last". Unfortunately his mindset haven't changed, many people like us were not privileged to have parents who could train us through tertiary education, while some of us struggled to work and learn. I only see environmental, societal and economical factor as the cause for the sudden reversal behavior of most youth into this noble profession.

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Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Ibj50(m): 7:41am On Mar 12, 2017
Its a pity many didn't read the post..

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Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Ibj50(m): 7:43am On Mar 12, 2017
nkemdi89:
He is not far from the truth, my young doctor friend who unfortunately lives in same compound with yahoo boys always envy them, according to him, he said those boys stress less and made more cash while he has been wasting his life reading and working. I made him understand that with his job he will never go hungry, while those "boys" Will not "last". Unfortunately his mindset haven't changed, many people like us were not privileged to have parents who could train us through tertiary education, while some of us struggled to work and learn. I only see environmental, societal and economical factor as the cause for the sudden reversal behavior of most youth into this noble profession.
i totally agree with this
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Amarabae(f): 7:47am On Mar 12, 2017
Must Med.docs be treated specially? My dad as a Doctor hustled, got money and build his hospitals.. So go and hustle, govt. must not be pampering you all the time.
Every Profession is Important..
Even Apart From my Nursing Career, I am also into other business ventures!

1 Like

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Nobody: 7:52am On Mar 12, 2017
nkemdi89:
He is not far from the truth, my young doctor friend who unfortunately lives in same compound with yahoo boys always envy them, according to him, he said those boys stress less and made more cash while he has been wasting his life reading and working. I made him understand that with his job he will never go hungry, while those "boys" Will not "last". Unfortunately his mindset haven't changed, many people like us were not privileged to have parents who could train us through tertiary education, while some of us struggled to work and learn. I only see environmental, societal and economical factor as the cause for the sudden reversal behavior of most youth into this noble profession.
let him join the yahoo boys nah if he is so moved about riches ... You dont even need qualifications to become one...lol.
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Nobody: 7:55am On Mar 12, 2017
Amarabae:
Must Med.docs be treated specially? My dad as a Doctor hustled, got money and build his hospitals.. So go and hustle, govt. must not be pampering you all the time.
Every Profession is Important..
Even Apart From my Nursing Career, I am also into other business ventures!
One of the most important profession to me in Nigeria are the police. Those guys dey suffer and have lost many colleaugues to armed robbers, yet you wont here them complain.

7 Likes

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Nobody: 7:55am On Mar 12, 2017
Sharming95:
op wat are yhu trying 2 say cuz ayam not understanding
He themed his article on his regret as a Medical doctor, he discussed how his friend [ not him ] regreted being a Medical doctor. He concluded with the 'lofty' prestige and influence that come with being a Medical doctor.

2 Likes

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by reginaldchinna: 7:55am On Mar 12, 2017
divinelove:
Chai med/surg stds u need to see them as students they feel they r next to God. But most after practising for 20 yrs still live in rented apartments.

Anyway let's follow our passion no profession is better than the other we need everyone on board the shoe maker abo.ki is as important as a medical doctor.

Whatever u do make sure u make enough money for u and ur family to live a good life, money answers everything in life
You are just close to your grave..about 10 separate conditions can confuse you for malaria

I have nt consulted a doctor in nearly a decade, not when i kw almost all the drugs for malaria and typhoid grin grin grin I only see my lab man and pharmacy shop when needed
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by ezra1990: 7:56am On Mar 12, 2017
clems88:
If I read it make I lay egg angry
No need for that.....u are already an egg.....u started as an egg.....so I won't be surprised to see an egg laying eggs!!!

1 Like

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Nobody: 7:57am On Mar 12, 2017
mployer:


They professionals just like Teachers. Why do they want to be treated differently.


The write up is good but too long. Read but couldn't finish it.
1. 7+ x years of med school including strikes, failed exams, etc
2. Dealing with human lives, even 7 years isn't enough to know everything about the human body, even as a consultant meaning you have to spend at least 15 yrs in school, new diseases come up everyday and you have to keep reading.
3. We dont run semester courses, school is year in year out, 24 hrs, on sundays and during christmas. Yes we go to school at night and still find time to read and pass. Tell me any other non medical course that can boast of that.
4. We doctors know that our profession is noble that is why we raise our head high. Med school changes the way you think

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by nneh1(f): 7:58am On Mar 12, 2017
Sharming95:
op wat are yhu trying 2 say cuz ayam not understanding

You will never understand because you didn't read to understand rather you read to reply.

1 Like

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Syjibrin(f): 7:58am On Mar 12, 2017
Op in as much as am not disputing the fact that Nigeria is not taking the plight of medical doctor serious as you claim but don't forget that before a doctor is qualified to read a course in the university called medicine and surgery or what ever medical course in the university he or she was taught by someone from the primary school to secondary school but how was their own plight taking care of? Teachers are the only professional that received stipend in this country I think medical doctors salary is relatively okay please be contempted and enjoy a little bit of the popular saying that the reward of teacher is in the heaven. Since you save life do enjoy same slogan with teachers

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Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Amarabae(f): 7:59am On Mar 12, 2017
shinarambo1:

One of the most important profession to me in Nigeria are the police. Those guys dey suffer and have lost many colleaugues to armed robbers, yet you wont here them complain.
exactly! Every profession is important. Even as a Nurse, I know what we encounter in our jobs, the challenges and all that stuffs. Its not easy.
A teacher is important.
A lawyer is important.
A police is important
An Architect is important.
A computer scientist is important. Etc
Every profession/Career is important and should be taken care of by the government. Not only docs.
Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by reginaldchinna: 8:00am On Mar 12, 2017
divinelove:
Chai med/surg stds u need to see them as students they feel they r next to God. But most after practising for 20 yrs still live in rented apartments.

Anyway let's follow our passion no profession is better than the other we need everyone on board the shoe maker abo.ki is as important as a medical doctor.

Whatever u do make sure u make enough money for u and ur family to live a good life, money answers everything in life

I have nt consulted a doctor in nearly a decade, not when i kw almost all the drugs for malaria and typhoid grin grin grin I only see my lab man and pharmacy shop when needed
Continue bro ...You will be rushed to us when you are at your terminal stage illness and we will treat and collect all our money you feel you have been saving and probably lose you to the illness

11 Likes 2 Shares

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by megareal: 8:01am On Mar 12, 2017
I really have no pity for Nigerian Doctors because they have no pity for their patients. They milk you dry in private practices and abandon you to your fate in Govt. hospitals.

I've heard various tales of people who died due to the insenitivity of Drs. Some even disappear for hours during their call time and fail to be reached during crisis.

Agreed, the workman is worthy of his hire, but it seems the Nigerian case is about making money first.

If you have no love for humanity , you shouldn't be a Dr in the first place.

2 Likes

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Nobody: 8:01am On Mar 12, 2017
It's terrible and quite unfortunate that Nigerian youths find a short article too long to read.

and it indeed compliments the topic & content of the thread very well.
No one cares about professionalism anymore.
No one accords the right respect and dignity to a noble profession.
our Doctors get tired of all the nonsense, they go on strike and we say "their own too much na" "doctors are heartless"
They go abroad, we cry that we're losing the best hands.


It's all about money this days.


The same dumb fvvcks who find the article too long are the same ones who defend e-money, Churchill, etc when it is asked "how did they make their money?"

4 Likes 2 Shares

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Nobody: 8:02am On Mar 12, 2017
funmisticqueen:

1. 7+ x years of med school including strikes, failed exams, etc
2. Dealing with human lives, even 7 years isn't enough to know everything about the human body, even as a consultant meaning you have to spend at least 15 yrs in school, new diseases come up everyday and you have to keep reading.
3. We dont run semester courses, school is year in year out, 24 hrs, on sundays and during christmas. Yes we go to school at night and still find time to read and pass. Tell me any other non medical course that can boast of that.
4. We doctors know that our profession is noble that is why we raise our head high. Med school changes the way you think
Any other profession? Ha ha! Programmers, there u have it. These folks sit down all day staring at boring screens.

1 Like

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by hanslem(m): 8:03am On Mar 12, 2017
prof1999:
It was fashionable while I was growing up to see parents choose the career path of their children and wards. You’renot going to “amount to anything” if you’re seen reading a single honours course in the university. Parents boast about their children reading medicine, engineering and law; you’ll be forgiven as a young student if you think the university is all about these courses.But over time, things started changing when business administration and related courses started taking the front burner buoyed by the emergence of “wonder banks” and other fast means of making money. Suddenly values that we hold dear started eroding as “making money” became the norm. Nobody cares anymore how the moneywas made, all that matters is that you are rich.That was the beginning of the ‘demystification’ of medicine, engineering and law. Why bother spending years in the university when you’re not sure of what the future hold became pronounced. People started questioning whether reading these courses was worth all the troubles afterall.Last week I met a young medical doctorwho expressed regrets for studying medicine and qualifying as a doctor. “If I had a singing talent like Dr. Sid I wouldhave jettisoned my stethoscope for the music scene,” he said to my surprise. For the records, Sidney Onoriode Esiri, who goes by the stage name, Dr. Sid is aNigerian singer, songwriter and dentist.We discussed at length for more than an hour because this came as a shock to me especially as I have always held doctors in very high regard and would have loved to be one had I been a science student. This is because my lifestyle, comportment, deep reading culture and discipline correlate with what makes a good doctor.As I struggled to encourage this young doctor that he has nothing to regret, mymind went back almost fifteen years ago to a discussion I had with a doctor friend while I was still in the university. This doctor also expressed regrets at the poor human resources planning and structures, unsatisfactory working conditions, poor remuneration, and fewprofessional development opportunities back then. I am made to understand that this is even worse today.When he saw the “progress” his colleagues who read Economics and Business Administration were making during the banking “boom” of the Abacha era, he told me he was in “the wrong profession.” In my young mind then, I remembered telling him that all that was happening was a bubble that will burst someday. And true to my prediction, the bubble did burst and myolder friend said I should consider calling myself a prophet!During that period, 19 banks collapsed leading to the Failed Banks Decree promulgated by late General Sani Abacha which was decreed into law to teach Nigerian bankers who mess with depositors fund a lesson. Unfortunately, there were other bank failures later before the sanity we are now witnessing. When I related all these, the young man felt a bit relieved,especially as I pointed out that even thepresent day society does not see the doctor as “relevant” as they were up to the 90s.After much probing, I discovered that he truly love the profession even though the stress associated with it is not commensurate with the financial rewards. “As a medical doctor, it’s an endless journey of reading and personal development. There are new discoveries almost on a daily basis and if you do not keep track you’ll be left behind. Keeping track means you have to prepare and pass your professional examinations otherwise there’ll be no room for advancement,” he told me, “but one of my major problems is the way the society treats doctors.”I agreed with him. If you doubt that take a look around and see how the society is now obsessed with “celebrities” of various hues and shapes; some are even instant celebrities because they participate in ashow or event or feature in a movie. The society doesn’t even bother if an individual is an illiterate moneybag, corrupt public official or a person of dubious character. It is no longer a secret that this has been taken notches further when such individuals are awarded honorary doctorate degrees by our universities. These are the “doctors” our society recognises and adore!One stark reality about contemporary Nigeria is the dearth of reliable statistics for research and planning; thisreality permeates almost every facet of our national life. Take the doctor patient ratio for instance. Nigeria, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) currently posts a poor doctor-patient ratio of 1:3500 as against the standard of 1:600. It also said the entire medical schools graduate between 3,500 and 4,000 new doctors annually. Another statistics has 1:6500 doctor-patient ratios.One would expect a call to action irrespective of which ratio is used because we have a dare situation in ourhands, but that does not seem to be an issue here like in other things. It is the Ebola issue that seems to shake us out of our lethargy. The doctors showed their magnanimity by suspending their strike. I think this period should providethe opportunity for the government and the society to seriously look into some of the issues the doctors tabled before their strike action.Delivering a lecture titled “Medical Education in Nigeria: The Quest for World Standards and Local relevance,” held at Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH) in 2012, the Minister of Health, Professor Onyebuchi Chukwu said only 5 percent of applicants gainedadmission to read medicine. Of these, 2,701 trained in Nigeria left the country to other countries to work in the last four years prior to 2012.It is amazing that with this exodus of our doctors we don’t seem to get it. Dr. Amayo Adadavoh and other doctors who have remained and have now died as a result of Ebola are professionals who have spent years in training. The late Dr. Adadavoh was a consultant, and do we really know what it takes for a doctor to become a consultant? We have lost, and may still lose some of our finest professionals because of the way we treat them.It is not rocket science to understand why some of them are leaving as the working conditions is getting worse, thereby making other countries more attractive. Some of our doctors are presently working in the US, Britain, South Africa, Ireland, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Trinidad and Tobago and other neigbouring African countries that treat their medical personnel better.Whenever I encounter medical practitioners and I see the evident lack of rewards for people who save lives, I always feel pained. To compound issues, whenever they demand what should ordinarily be their entitlement after spending years in medical school and a longer period preparing for otherprofessional examinations, society is quick to condemn and remind them of their obligation to the same society thathas scant regards for their own plights.Recollect that prior to the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) suspending its strike, there appears to be nothing, either from the people in government or those of us outside, to show that we appreciate the fact that lives of ordinary Nigerians are already hanging in the balance as a result of the strike by doctors working in public health institutions across the country. But does it matter in a system so perverted that public officials now make it a culture that they are travelling abroad for simple medical check-up that can bedone in Nigeria?My advice to young Nigerian students who have the love of the profession at heart is this: Go ahead and read medicine in the university because it will always remain a noble and dignifiedprofession. You should not look up to society or the government for your fulfillment; just follow the conviction of your heart. Everything about life cannotbe viewed from the narrow prism of money. There are still things money cannever buy, and being a qualified medical doctor is one of such.

2 Likes

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by reginaldchinna: 8:03am On Mar 12, 2017
divinelove:
Chai med/surg stds u need to see them as students they feel they r next to God. But most after practising for 20 yrs still live in rented apartments.

Anyway let's follow our passion no profession is better than the other we need everyone on board the shoe maker abo.ki is as important as a medical doctor.

Whatever u do make sure u make enough money for u and ur family to live a good life, money answers everything in life

I have nt consulted a doctor in nearly a decade, not when i kw almost all the drugs for malaria and typhoid grin grin grin I only see my lab man and pharmacy shop when needed
Continue when you will be brought to hospital it may be at the end stage of your illness...then you realise the lab man and pharmacist can't help you

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: I Regret Being A Medical Doctor by Nobody: 8:04am On Mar 12, 2017
shinarambo1:

One of the most important profession to me in Nigeria are the police. Those guys dey suffer and have lost many colleaugues to armed robbers, yet you wont here them complain.
did they spend seven years in school, can they save lives. You are not making any point at all. Do you know how many colleagues doctors have lost to ebola, hepatits B, hiv becos they were treating infected people, some of you would say who sent us message but the truth is that if we dont do it no one else will. The only people that will regret being a doctor are those who practice in nigeria and those who were forced to do medicine because your mindset concerning us is appalling.

4 Likes

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