Transcript
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    Why do you want to be a doctor?(link opens in new window)

    What is the format of a good team?

    Do you read any medical publications?

    Would you prescribe the oral contraceptive pill to a 14-year-old girl that is sleeping with her boyfriend?

    How do you see Britain's healthcare system in 20 years time?

    If you had 1 billion to spend on a certain aspect on healthcare, what would you spend it on?

    Tell me about any medical advances you have read about recently.

    What are the good and bad points about being a doctor?

    How would you balance your outside interests with studying a degree?

    What are the qualities of a good doctor?

    Which quality is the most important?

    What single healthcare intervention could change the health of the population the most?

    Name a sector of society which has poor access to healthcare?

    What have you gained from your work experience/hobbies/community work?

    What qualities do you have that mean that you will be a good doctor?

    How do you cope with stress?

    What are your best and worst qualities?

    When you graduate what will you be remembered for by your peers?What did you do in your year out?

    What areas of responsibility do you have?

    How would you deal with angry/distressed patients?

    Were you scared of doctors when you were young?

    What do you think about abortion/euthanasia etc?

    What qualities do you think colleagues appreciate in a doctor?

    How many hours do you think a junior doctor works?

    How is the NHS structured?

    What is the difference between primary and hospital care?

    Why is medical research important?

    What is the postcode lottery?

    What makes you angry?Can you describe a situation that has been stressful?

    How do you deal with stress?

    If complains were made about you as a doctor, how would you respond?

    Do you think that doctors need to ask for consent when taking organs from a dead person?

    Where would you draw the line?

    What if it was only a small blood sample?

    What do you think you will find most difficult about a career in medicine?

    Give an example of when you have worked in a team, and why is teamwork important Who works as part

    of a team with doctors?

    What have been the most significant advances in medicine over the past 10/20/50 years?

    Why don't you want to be a nurse?(link opens in new window)How have you found out that medicine is the correct career for you?

    What aspects of the course here appeal to you

    You've got the answer to "Why Medicine?" Medicine is a science and you like it!

    Doctoring is different. I'm in the fertile ground between being smashed by residents and being clueless.

    http://www.newmediamedicine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=11330http://www.newmediamedicine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=11330http://www.newmediamedicine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=14835http://www.newmediamedicine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=14835http://www.newmediamedicine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=14835http://www.newmediamedicine.com/forum/showthread.php?t=11330
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    Doctoring is about listening, is about hearing and translating what you hear into actions - and that my bescratching your Rx pad, but more frequently, it's telling someone they'll be okay. That they need toexcercise a muscle and showing them how. That "excercise" need only be 30 minutes of walking threetimes a week. The science is much easier compared to the things that people throw at you.

    Note: The point is doctoring - teaching. It's not a good point, it's the profession.__________________

    We want to work in healthcare because it's unlike any other field. It provides an opportunity to work with

    people, make people feel better or at least provide an explanation, it combines science with real

    interaction and outside/practical stressors, it provides unlimited educational/intellectual

    challenge/stimulus, and it's more than likely alwaysgoing to be a "booming" field.

    We want to be doctors because we want to lead, invent, make sense of things for people, be the direct

    line of communication frustrated or scared people are looking for, understand the ultimate "why" behind

    what we do, and we want to apply our technical know-how in a way that benefits people like ourselves

    before we knew ****.

    Iwant to be a doctor because I want to be dependable. Whether it's a scared patient, an unconscious or

    confused patient, an angry patient, or to teach a skill to a resident, student, volunteer, or patient. Because

    I know when I'm scared, I'm just looking for an explanation.

    Plus it pays well.

    This is actually hard to do, though, for many people who are just out of college or who haven't had many

    medical experiences. You need to get out there and DO the things you're passionate about so you can

    TALK passionately about them. That way you also know that medicine isn't some grand, brilliant world

    where things are rosy and patients are always grateful and lives are always saved and people do the right

    things all the time... You know the realistic side of medicine and STILL want to be a doctor.

    So... For me, the old, "I want to help people, and I want to study medicine with my life," is a fine answer--

    as long as you back it up with a little bit of good old fashioned honest enthusiasm and a realistic picture of

    what medicine actually is.

    Because I want the challenge of diagnosing - my reason for wanting to be a doctor I suppose is more a

    feeling than something i can put accurately into words. I am really stuck. I also enjoy the science of it

    and I'd love the opportunity to combine science with being with people and helping people.

    an innate yearn for a stethascope. i think it is probably influenced by the media portrayal as well. saying

    that you are interested in helping people is important as well. a love / amazement of biology and its

    relationship to disease. its a very personal thing. just being honest about why you want to do it is themost importnat thing.

    1. i love the idea of it being me agaist nature and being the one thing stopping. it being thecombination of my knowledge, instinct and practical skill that makes a difference. i want tobe able to be able to walk into any situation and be able to take control of it, like anaccident or something where you can tell someone to do something - phone for anambulance or something - and there is something inthe way that you say it that makes

    people feel able to do it no matter what else is going on around them.

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    i know that sounds really pretentious and smug but thats how i feel about it

    i want to be able to go home at the end of the day and think today i saved someones lifeor i helped someone, someone will remember me because i did something right.

    bert

    2.In March 03 right after my 17th birthday my grandfather had his first heart attack. He actuallyhad the heart attack six days before he said anything to anyone and by the time he went intohospital 70% of the heart tissue was dead.

    He had a stent put in and was sent home on fifteen different tablets which he was told he would

    be on for the rest of his days.

    He had to be re-admitted twice after this and on the second time he was given a pacemaker.

    He has since been back in hospital four times, had his medication changed four times, the most

    recent being two weeks ago.

    He has been told that there is nothing more that can be done for him as too much of the heartwas damaged from the original attack.

    What really pisses me off is that he is only sixty-three having had the first attack when he was

    sixty-one. He never smoked, rarely drank and was extremely fit, refereeing at least twoschoolboy football matches a week.If someone like that can get to the point where he won't actually call an ambulance because hedoesn't want to go to hospital anymore and is actually hoping that his next admission would behis last than I want to try everything I can to prevent other people and their familes from going

    through the same hell of waiting and wondering as my family and I are.

    I don't think I would actually say all that in an interview because the thought of using that assome sort of excuse to use in an interview is a little disgusting to me but that is my reason forwanting to get into medicine.

    3. I used patients expectations as my 'why a doctor'. I said patients often present with anexpectation of how ill they are, and the job of a doctor is to narrow that expectation. You as themedical practitioner understand how ill they are and your role is to narrow these expectations.Sounds weird but worked for me lol

    4. Stable employment, I mentioned that... but the money doesn't interest me. If I wanted to be amillionaire I'll study investment banking (which I nearly made the mistake of doing).

    My reason was that you are given an awesome responsibility as a doctor. Not everyone can

    handle such a demanding profession and I believe I have the determination and skills needed tosucceed. I also owe a debt to my community which I intend to fully repay - to squander theunique chances that I have been given would be a disservice not only to myself but also tosociety.

    Finally I said that you never choose medicine, in a funny way it chooses you!

    10.I wanna die satisfied that i have achived something for myself!!!!!!

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    The best thing to say is that you have a passion for people and want to be in a environment that involves

    the care of fellow human beings. You feel u have the commitment, intelligence, and passion for a career

    in medicine. I specifically want to be a doctor because i feel that i would like to be involved in the entire

    process of assessment, planning, diagnosis, and implementation of patient care and have the key skills

    required to effectively communicate with people from all walks of life. I work well under pressure and

    am committed to a life long learning process.

    Why medicine?

    I already do a job where I help people and make a difference, every day. I am part of the medical

    continuum, and the social one. I see how medicine and health makes a difference, not just in the acute

    setting, but in the community. How obesity affects women in pregnancy. The implications of drug abuse,

    poor nutrition, smoking, mental health. How clients and patients (there IS a distinction) use services

    successfully or are ill-treated by the system. How sometimes the NHS is inefficient, and Trusts and PCTs

    are short-termist in their thinking. I don't just want to be 'a doctor'. I want to be an Obstetrician, caring

    for women who have additional care needs to those who can be seen by midwives, with the aim being to

    reduce morbidity and mortality (and most importantly the section rate!) by basing my practice on bestevidence and not on outdated studies, or 'the way we've always done it'. The only way we are going to

    make the NHS workable for the future is by investing in public health and in services for women and

    children; there is so much evidence out there to show that the way a baby develops and is born affects

    its future health prospects, and at the moment we are sitting on a time bomb with the section rate at

    28%, as the younger generations get iller and the elderly live longer. We will not be able to shoulder that

    burden as things are at present.

    Its so hard to come up with something original to say when, you are just genuinly interested in all

    sciences but also want a purposfull career (rarther than using your science skills to trade shares) which

    also is social/involves people and helps them out. For me Its like when your on the street and someone

    colapses I want to be able to help them using the best of currently known procedures. But no, I don'twant to be a paramedic because that career has a limit and once you've reached it thats it, i want to get

    to the edge of current knowledge. Simialry being a nurse although you help people in the career its not

    technical or interlectually challenging enough as a doctors career and all the people who get into

    medicine would not be fufilling their full potential in a health career if they didn't apply for the highest

    career path.

    Thats what i think, hmmmmm.

    Couple of reasons for wanting to be a doctor - I deal with 7 point mutations in one protein, which is an

    incredibly narrow focus, so an attraction of medicine is that you deal with whole humans for whom a

    number of things could be awry when they walk through the door and you get to see a lot more of the

    interplay between different physiological, psychological and sociological systems. There is the challengeof dealing with people and with scientific concepts simultaneously and coming up with a diagnosis. Also

    as I've got older I've become more and more envious of people who are at med school or work as

    doctors (although I'm not sure that I can admit to this in an interview!). Something that is also appealing

    to me is the ongoing educational part of being a doctor - I think that this is because I love learning new

    things and so the fact that cutting edge research and new techniques are continually changing healthcare

    is appealing to me, but I may just be odd

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    1. 1. job security, and therefore financial security (to a certain extent) - NOT SURE I WOULDMENTION THIS IN AN INTERVIEW, THOUGH...WHAT WILL THEY THINK?! LOL...CANANYONE HELP ME? WOULD YOU MENTION THIS IN AN INTERVIEW?

    2. i think that it is important to choose a career that i am interested in, and i will enjoydoing, because it is something that will stay with me for the rest of my life...and i love

    biology and i am really interested in knowing how the body works...therefore i found it themost suitable career for me.

    3. i enjoy talking to, and working with, people...the idea of helping other people via

    medicine appeals to me...i can do two things that i love at the same time! lol

    4. being a doctor is a humbling profession...you can use your skills to help lots ofpeople...of course, sometimes there is nothing you can do to help people, but i think thatgoing out there and meeting new and different people, talking to them and learning abouttheir lifestyle and problems, and discovering so many people's lives and playing a part intheir lives (and hopefully helping them to get a better life) is something that would mean alot to me. i will learn a lot from being a doctor, so i can thrive to be a better person than i

    am the previous day (yes KINDA cheesy lol...but also true )

    5. (this is similar to point 4 but...)i would love to be a doctor so that i can help the people

    less fortunate than myself, especially in the third world countries. medical care issomething so basic that i think every human being should have the right to, and to be a

    part of the medical profession would make me personally feel contented that i am doingsomething with my life to help those who need and deserve the respect and help -SHOULD I SAY THIS OR NOT? AS SOMEONE ALREADY MENTIONED, IT MAY NOT LOOK

    GOOD TO TALK ABOUT LEAVING THE UK WHEN YOU WILL BE GETTING UR EDUCATIONIN THE UK...what say??

    and finally...

    6. as some people say, it is honestly a gut instinct that that is what you really want tobecome, and something that you are willing to put in a lot of hard work and money for... iwill be following my gut instinct, which is that i really want to become a doctor, and livingmy life independently and the way i want to...which of course will make me feel satisified

    with myself

    a question: if you say that you are really interested in sciences, and you're actually onlyinterested in biology and you have taken only chemistry and biology for a levels, would

    they actually ask you why you didn't take a physics A level if you were that interested inthe sciences??

    and also, if they ask you whether you have considered any other career options beforethinking about medicine, and you were very seriously thinking about ICT, would you

    actually mention that or would you just say "no not really.... i have always wanted to be adoctor" to 'impress' the judges, even though it is not true??

    2. I remember initially wanting to go into medicine for all of the usual reaons, such as wanting tocombine science and helping people, and because I am a compassionate person, which are allvalid (if fairly generic) reasons. However, I can remember seeing one clinical case which

    cemented things for me, and this happened when I did saome work exp. at a GPs surgery. Dr. Xsaw all of the patients on the list that day, and then he took my on his rounds. I noticed that thenext man to be seen was a 49y.o man named Mr Y! Mr Y l lived in a 24-hour care home for those

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    with sever disabilities, and was profoundly affectted by down's syndrome. When I first saw Mr Y,

    it was clear that he was almost unable to breathe, and had even begun to show slight blueishtinges in some areas. After some talking, it was decided that Mr Y had acquired severe

    pneumonia, and was admitted to hospital by Dr X, and was given some drugs to ease thesymptoms. What I saw in that home that day seriously scared me and made me question ifmedicine was right for me. People were screaming and shouting like animals and grabbing us- it

    was a scary experience for most people.

    On the following Monday, I went to my usual work placement on the emergency assessmentward at the local hospital, and looked at the whiteboard showing the patients that had beenclerked that day. It was then that I noticed the name Mr Y again. I went to the bed thatcorresponded, and saw Mr Y laughing and walking around, able to breathe almost normally. Ifound this moment totally amazing. I knew then that I wanted a job where I could makesomeones quality of life noticably better, and although Mr Y still had the down's syndrome, Dr Xhad given him a new lease of life, and did the best for him. I also loved the chance I got to seehow the medicine that Mr Y had been given had affected him, and realised then also what awonderful thing drugs themselves could be.

    These are my reasons and they are completely true.

    1. I rode a bike for 200 miles and climbed the highest mountain in america: interpretation, I have amazing

    endurance skills.

    2. I learned new language, lived in 4 different states, 2 different countries: interpretation: adaptability and

    culturally aware.

    3. Supported myself through college: interpretation, self dependability.

    4. Majored in chemical engineering: interpretation, strong problem solving and analytical skills.

    5. Starcraft champion: interpretation, amazing dexterity

    6. Saved company $200,000 in cost savings; interpretation, badass

    7. Boss of 2 people; interpretation, leadership skills.

    In any interview when you are asked "why should we accept you?" what they are really asking is "Whathave you done to prepare yourself for medical school?"

    You should answer with all of the activities, personal experiences, and professional experiences thatapply to that question. You need to let them know you are ready to step up to the challenge. That you areprepared and well informed about what is ahead of you. You need to tell them specific things about whyyou are ready for medical school. Don't fall into the cliche of "I want to help people."

    I don't have any idea how to make myself sound special or worthy of an admit for any school. I had areally bad high school GPA, did bad on the ACT, started off bad in college (major improvement in mygrades junior and senior year), couldn't get a normal job for several months after college. I've beenbroken down in almost every way possible that a human can be broken down. I know I have morelimitations than strengths. I know I'm not smart, I just work hard.

    All I could accomplish in collge was working full-time (auditor, pt. chart prep, secruity guard, etc),voluntership, and took courses. I didn't start some new program or recieve any academic praise. Heck, Ihad two professors question my ability to memorize anything....even though all I did was memorize the

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    whole immuno book to get an A.

    Interviewer: What makes you speical?

    Me: Well, I'm not a special person. I'm not a genius, I'm not brill iant minded, I don't have a wealthy family,I grew up on a farm, I have always been poor, I have always driven a used car, etc. All I can assure you isthat you will never meet another person that works as hard as me (go into all of the blah blah I did incollege and before college). When I gradauted from college, I couldn't get a job. Thus, I started my owncompany (X2) and work an entry level chemist job during the 3rd shift.

    Give me a cours packet and I will do what I can to get an A. But you shouldn't expect a nobel prize out ofme.

    You might be asked the same type question when you actually apply for a real job too. This is not justpharmacy school specific.

    If you are gonna say you are "smart" you need to explain why and give examples.If you are going to say you are disciplined you need to explain why and give examples.If there is something that has occured in your life that might be unusual and you feel you can relate it topharmacy or being a student you can use it.Heck if you were on the debate team and did well it means that you are a very goodcommunicator.....AND listener (an important aspect of being a pharmacist)Heck if you like to fix motors and are very good at it, it likely means that you have a strong attention todetail.....otherwise the silly engine would not start.

    There are usually many things that can make you stand out. You just have to find it and be able toeffectively communicate this to the Adcom.


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