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Residency Match Personal Statement Makeover Rewrite Emergency Medicine Part 1

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The Fool Takes Essays from Flatline to Normal Sinus!

The Fool Takes Essays from Flatline to Normal Sinus!
 

  
BEFORE (Unedited)- Pulseless [Next Page]

I can’t remember exactly when I decided I wanted to be a doctor or even when I first became interested in medicine. There was no single defining moment which propelled my decision to apply to medical school. It was a decision I arrived at logically after much deliberation. However, I can clearly remember the experience that sparked my interest in emergency medicine.

It was the summer following my college graduation and I had just completed my medical school application. I wanted to be as far away from the world of MCATs and personal statements as I could get. So I opted to lead a six week cross country bus trip for 50 high school students with 4 other college students.
Throughout the course of the summer I worked many long days and nights with little sleep. Between planning activities, teaching classes, and ensuring there was always food prepared; little time was left for anything else. As a staff we quickly learned to work well together playing to each others strengths and minimizing our weaknesses. The other staff members heard of my interest in medicine and therefore I was appointed to be the counselor in charge of all of the campers’ medical issues. After a little while I began to feel more comfortable dealing with campers who complained about being sick. I quickly discovered that many of their symptoms were not due to pathophysiology (a subject I came to learn much about in medical school). Instead these students simply desired some extra attention from their friends or counselor. I realized just a few minutes of time and genuine concern can often make a significant difference to the patient. The challenging part became discerning those who needed to be seen by a doctor from the others. 

Before seeing emergency physicians in action during the course of the summer I often thought that they would be too busy to for that extra little bit of time. I was pleasantly surprised however, with every emergency department visit I made. With 50 active high school students who naturally played too much and ate and slept too little, I made numerous trips to emergency departments across the country. I was continuously impressed by the doctors and other medical staff with whom I interacted. They handled many different situations simultaneously yet still managed to make me feel that my student was being taken care of well. The physicians in the various emergency departments all displayed leadership ability in the way they managed their patients and also in the manner they directed the rest of the emergency staff. All of the staff members of the emergency department clearly worked together as a team in the delivery of health care.
After this experience, emergency medicine became the specialty to which I compared all others. There were parts of every specialty I encountered during my third year which I enjoyed but there was not a single one I envisioned myself practicing exclusively. I want to have a career which encompasses many parts of medical practice. After my first few shifts in the emergency department I knew emergency medicine was the specialty I wanted to pursue. It was by far the most enjoyable and interesting rotation I had during my medical school education. 

I enjoy the opportunity to make diagnoses and perform procedures. I also want to be a physician who feels comfortable handling any situation that may roll though the door. Every patient presents a new problem and question; no two are the same. This diversity is part of what excites me about emergency medicine. 
During my undergraduate years and throughout my medical school education I sought various opportunities to give back to my university and community for the education it has provided me. These endeavors helped shape my abilities to interact with patients and colleagues. Additionally, these experiences helped me hone my capabilities as a leader. Through these activities I realized both the added joy and sometimes challenge of accomplishing goals as a part of a team. 
While treating patients in an emergency department is in its own right a necessary service in any community, I hope my connection to my community will go beyond the hospital. The structure of emergency medicine practice will allow me time for involvement outside of the emergency department itself. I see myself using this time to guide my group in private practice or to perhaps try to effect policy change at higher governmental levels. I would like to pursue some post residency training to prepare me for either practice management or heath policy involvement. I look forward to joining an emergency department team as a resident where I am able to advance my training in both emergency medicine and leadership.

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