Aspiring Docs Diaries

Summer Research and Reflection

It has only been two weeks.

Two days.

Okay, more like two mornings.

And yet, on a Friday night, I cannot stop thinking about the patients I have recently met. The glimpses into the intimate stories of betrayal, violence, compassion, and great resilience they graciously let me receive are reverberating in my thoughts. Some of these women are pioneers—one is among the first women who joined the U.S. Marines in the early seventies and paving the way for others after them. Another endured years of separation from her lover due to a homophobic immigration legal code in the U.S. There is the woman surrounded by devastating illness in her family, one of which is consuming her former abuser who is now dependent on her care, and still, she mustered the strength to enter the room with a jubilant gait and wide smile on her face. Then there is the woman who was sexually assaulted since her teenage years and throughout her military career—the assailants being her supposed comrades—and her body transmuting years of emotional agony into great physical pain.

These are just some of the women I saw being interviewed by a psychiatrist at the VA hospital. I am doing summer research with two VA physicians and crossed paths with a psychiatrist on the same floor as one of my PIs (Principal Investigator – one of two I will be working with closely this summer) during one of my first days; he is truly becoming like a mentor to me. Similar to him, psychiatry was not on my mind as a potential career option when I entered medical school. However, just these couple of hours of shadowing and conversations with him have compelled me to begin thinking seriously about psychiatry.

This professor has taken the time to recommend several readings to me, with some directly related to psychiatry and others that address the nourishment of the individual psyche such as religious texts, by actually handing me hard copies after describing the relevance of each one. I currently have a pretty big hefty stack on my desk and am fervently trying to get through them as I excitedly strive to absorb this new field. Just today, he lent me a DVD of Saving Private Ryan. It’s been a while since I have last seen that movie and he suggested I try watching it before next week’s shadowing session as the patient’s traumatic experiences would be similar to the protagonist’s in the movie.

Needless to say, I am really looking forward to spending the rest of this summer getting knee deep into my research and exploring medical fields outside of the role I may have precociously carved for myself. I had spent several months meeting with various faculty members to learn more about their research and how I could feasibly fulfill my own niche. It took some time to finally decide on the research group I would end up working with for the summer, but it was very well worth the effort. Only in a matter of weeks, I already recognize that I am fortunate to be surrounded by brilliant and caring individuals who will undoubtedly impact the serious introspection I intend to engage in. Here’s to my last free summer!

Meet the author:

Tehreem Rehman

Resident

Tehreem Rehman is an M.D./M.P.H. candidate at Yale/Hopkins. As Co-Founder of Columbia University’s Public Service Initiative, she was selected to be a People for the American Way Foundation’s Young People For (YP4) Fellow for the 2012-13 academic year in order to expand the program. Previously, she served as the National Chair of the American Medical Student Association’s Race, Ethnicity, and Culture in Health committee and as a National Editorial Advisor for the New Physician Magazine. Tehreem hopes to have a career in psychiatry with a focus on health justice work. You can follow her on twitter @tehreem_rehman and check out her blog at https://tehreemrehman.wordpress.com/.

Comments

  1. Elizabeth "Liza" Karlin says:

    Thanks for sharing the good work coming out of the VA. Such stories are needed now more than ever. The AAMC’s journal, Academic Medicine, has 2 online collections that also highlight the contributions of the VA: Joining Forces (http://journals.lww.com/academicmedicine/Pages/collectiondetails.aspx?TopicalCollectionId=33) and Academic Medicine and the Department of Veterans Affairs (http://journals.lww.com/academicmedicine/pages/collectiondetails.aspx?TopicalCollectionId=42). Thanks again, Tehreem, for the inspiring story!

Your email address will not be published. All fields are required. All comments are reviewed before appearing on this page.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *