Louisville Medicine Volume 64, Issue 2 | Page 24

PHYSICIAN-IN-TRAINING/MEDICAL STUDENT CATEGORY 2016 RICHARD SPEAR, MD, MEMORIAL ESSAY CONTEST The urge to browse returns still again when wondering about that fellowship. Alternatively, information can be gathered from anonymous bloggers of most specialties who willingly write about their lives with varying degrees of depth on public blogs, some even sponsored by their own residency institutions. Depending on the author’s level of anonymity, we may find ourselves reading on any number of topics, ranging from the superficial - like dress and professionalism - to the more personal, which can feel like modernized snippets from The House of God. Speaking of blogs and The House of God, after we land that coveted residency position and start developing a little cynicism of our own, there’s always gomerblog.com for much needed comic relief. co-residents one-on-one, not from what boils down to a computer screen, which houses news-feeds we flip through endlessly. Therefore, let’s share the funny and the not-so-funny with each other, face-to-face. In the end, we may just find ourselves experiencing more of the positive side of medicine, gathering a more abundant supply of knowledge, humor, and most importantly, gaining compassion for both patients and ourselves. Kara Curry, DO, is a third year psychiatry resident at the University of Louisville Hospital. Conversely, the blogs KevinMD.com and mommd.com, which both have many different physician contributors, take a more serious look at some of the most pressing issues in medicine and how others, of varying levels of experience in the field, have dealt with these. That’s the beauty of social media—learning viewpoints of others from a diverse array of backgrounds and experiences, which may have never been expressed or accessible outside of the virtual world to which we have all grown accustomed. Some of the most painful subjects are discussed there as well. These are ones mistakenly still kept secret amongst colleagues, such as physician burnout and suicide. In November 2015, KevinMD.com posted the article, “We lose a medical school full of physicians every year to suicide: An interview with Dr. Pamela Wible.” The post explored the continued need for supportive training environments and what was speculated to be the current state of affairs. So, in effect, a social media platform reminded us of what it cannot provide—the emotional reactivity and human connection we gather from listening and talking with colleagues, in person. A sort of emotional reciprocity can only be gathered from sharing our own unique stories with advisors and The Richard Spear, MD, Memorial Essay Contest is a yearly writing competition hosted by the Greater Louisville Medical Society. Dr. Richard Spear, a respected Louisville general surgeon, passed away in 2007 and left GLMS a bequest to fund an annual essay contest. To view the Richard Spear, MD, Memorial Essay Contest archives, visit members.kyma.org/scripts/4disapi.dll/4DCGI/cms/review.html?Action=CMS_Document&DocID=336&MenuKey=glms. 22 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE