Why do you want to be a doctor?
What’s your biggest weakness?
What’s your biggest strength?
why southampton?
-curriculum based around clinical learning and self-directed study. This is how medical career would be.
- i like the similar approach you have to PBL. But as well as providing case information on paper, i like that you provide videos or actual patients as this will developed information extraction and general soft skills.
- i like that year 4 contains a psychiatry module in the form of a placement as i plan to specialise in this.
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does euthanasia have a place in modern medicine?
Do you agree with abortion?
I agree under the right conditions.
There are obviously a lot of complex considerations like foetal rights, mothers rights, fathers rights, the sanctity of life.
To me a large part of the decision is sentience. A line has to be drawn between embryo and foetus. This is a very difficult line to draw though. Neuroanatomical apparatus necessary to feel pain or sensation isn’t complete until around week 26 of pregnancy.
I know that in the uk we have 24 week abortion limit. Most reports I’ve read state that babies born before this stage have very low chances of survival and will almost always have disabilities.
I know most women have abortions by the 12 week stage, however it’s important to keep the limit at 24 weeks because reports state that some women struggle to be seen and this is the upper limit for where vulnerable women can be treated.
After this stage, it’s harder to argue that we’re not taking away a life as babies are much more likely to survive a premature birth at this age and are therefore more easy to see as autonomous beings.
Another consideration is beneficence and non-maleficence to the mother. We have a law in the uk that I agree with which states that abortions can only be carried out if they present less risk to the mother than continuing the pregnancy would. We have to consider the long term mental health effects that can arise from a terminated pregnancy.
Bodily rights of woman.
Women are disproportionately affected by pregnancy and gender equality is a consideration here. Not only do pregnant women have to carry baby to birth, they will have to care for it for at least 18 years afterwards. Men don’t ‘have’ to have the same responsibility.
We have to consider cases like rape. Forcing a woman to raise a child of their attacker will likely cause severe psychological issues. They will face cognitive dissonance over the combination of loving their child and it sharing genes with a rapist.
We do have to consider the pressure that partners may put on women to make this decision. As such it’s important that women considering abortion are asked appropriate questions by medical staff and are seen to be making an autonomous decision free from external pressure.
Life may begin at conception, but personhood is different. Fertilised eggs produced for IVF are routinely thrown away and this would consistute mass murder if they were all considered living humans.
Although adoption is available, this isn’t an alternative. The attachment a women develops to her baby is likely to grow over time and by childbirth a women is far less likely to give up a baby for adoption than they would have been to go through with abortion, and yet the same economic and social challenges are likely still present. In fact in countries where healthcare is private, the act of childbirth may have exacerbated a woman’s economic difficulties.
A patient refuses treatment for a life-threatening condition. Discuss the ethical issues involved
A 14 year old asks her GP for the pill, discuss the ethical issues
A patient diagnosed with HIV reveals to their GP that they haven’t discussed this with their partner
you notice a fellow medical student putting equipment in their bag. when you ask them they say they want to practice clinical skills and that you shouldn’t tell anyone. what should you do?
What does patient confidentiality mean? when would it be appropriate to breach this?
A 13 year old patient reveals to you that they are sexually active and that their parents don’t know, what would you do as a doctor in this situation?
A depressed patient who has mentioned having suicidal thoughts has refused treatment and you’re concerned about his wellbeing, discuss ethical issues.
Do you think the NHS should fund treatment for smokers?
What would you do if you saw a colleague making a mistake with a patients medicine?
Is it ever ethically acceptable for NHS doctors to go on strike?
You are a GP and a patient confides in you that they are using illicit drugs, what should you do?
Should vaccination of children be mandatory?
How much does a mountain weigh?
how different would the world be if the wheel wasn’t invented?
How many words are there in an average book?
To what extent do you think fear is beneficial?
why do we wear shoes?
if you were stranded in a remote rainforest and trying to escape, who is one person you would want to accompany you and why?