Glimpses of the year ahead and a look at the things that make practicing medicine worthwhile
Months before our first copy of Forbes India hit the stands, our rigorous editorial team was slicing through my sample columns. We all felt that we could make it work, but a regular column by a doctor in a journal where the most popular punctuation is a comma found in the middle of long rows of numbers was not obvious. For me it was a familiar unlike position. I was the engineer in medicine, the doctor who built a software company, and the pathologist running a hospital for pain relief.
I tried too hard at first. My piece on neuroeconomics in which I studied John Stuart Mill and concepts such as hyperbolic discounting did not work. The piece on electronic cigarettes would not appeal to enough of our readers. That was good news. Ultimately the invisible editorial hand guided me to pick up on a passing notion in one of my trial stories. A study on behavioural economics showed that the cuddle hormone, oxytocin, induced trust between strangers. It clicked. We called my first column “The Doctor Will Hug You Now”.
The sad truth is that few doctors do hug you now. We want to change that. This coming year we are going to add more pieces that give glimpses of that special doctor-patient relationship, or how it should be. The stories will be my own or of contributing physicians out there.
Here is the first instalment, an excerpt of a true story by my father, a maverick neurosurgeon:
Mommy, don’t cry. I will be fine,” she said ever so sweetly. “Where I am going there are no needles, no hurt. It is so pretty out there. Father John told me that. I will have so many games to play and my friends will come and play with me.”
It was not easy to keep oneself composed hearing this precious six-year-old overflow with love and innocence.
Two years ago this beautiful child with golden hair fell while running. At an emergency room the doctors discovered an innocuous looking lump in her belly. The lab results came as somewhat abnormal but her mom didn’t think much of the incident and went about her routine. It was when Sarah said, “Mom, I feel hot and like I am going to throw up,” that her mother Mary became alarmed.
(This story appears in the 04 June, 2010 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)