By
Lissa
When
I was training to become a physician, the rules of the broken, outdated,
patriarchal medical system were made clear to me. They went something like
this.
The
Old Medicine
As
your doctor, I will sacrifice everything in my personal life in order to fix
what is broken in you. I will stay awake when I’m exhausted, cross my legs when
I have to pee, ignore my stomach when it growls, neglect my partner and
children when they need me, allow my health to decline, and read all my medical
journals so I can stay up to date on the latest in modern science. I will show
up sick to work, endure unspeakable traumas in order to learn what I need to
know to be an excellent physician, and I will prioritize medicine over
everything else in my life. I will study what my forefathers have learned,
attend lectures, consult with other physicians, practice my skills, follow the
Hippocratic Oath, and vow to first do no harm, and then, hopefully, to do some
good.
I
will ask you questions, take notes when you talk, interpret your vital signs,
and listen to the rhythms of your most crucial organs. I will order laboratory
tests and X-rays to figure out what’s wrong, write prescriptions to treat you,
refer you to a specialist (if I can’t figure out what’s going on), operate when
needed, and cover up or cut out any symptom that threatens to disable or
destroy you.