Wednesday, September 10, 2008

The Stress of a Doctor on Call


Nobody can understand the stress of a doctor on call, except another doctor on call. In private practice, the doctor on call is the front-line for all the problems and emergencies that occurs in the wards, and that which comes in through the Accident and Emergency (A&E) department.

The doctor lives in a state of apprehension from the time his or her call starts which is usually at 8am in the morning until 8am the next day. This means that anytime he or she will have to be ready to face anything that happens during the day. Such doctors live in fear of the ringing of the phones (used to be pagers). Many doctors have phone-phobia. A phone call may mean a minor consult about what medication a patient is to be given or that someone is dying in the A&E. In that case, the doctor has to ruch to the A&E as soon as possible to resuscitate the patient. Woe is the doctor if he or she is at home. It is then a mad dash to the hospital. Relatives and spouses expect doctors to perform miracles, even to bring back the dead.

There is no peace even when the doctor lays his or her head down to sleep. The mobile or phone lies next to the doctor. Expect a call from the A&E at 11.45pm because for some reasons, patients who are ill like to come to hospital at that hour. Sleep when it comes is restless. The worst calls are those in the early hours of the morning when one is roused from a deep sleep and have to rush to hospital to attend to a sick patient, and are expected to perform at one's best. The stress level only decrease in the early morning when the stress and call is passed onto the next doctor.

What, I am not on call today? Shucks, I thought I was. What a waste of a great stress.

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