Welcome to the start of an exciting adventure.
As a medical student in the United Kingdom, I have the opportunity
to undertake a period of study called ‘the medical elective’. From day one of
medical school we all know it’s coming our way….one day…..sometime way in the
future…...when we’re much older, much wiser, feeling like we’re only a small
step away from becoming a doctor. And for me, the time has finally come. Am I
wise? Old? Ready to become a doctor? Well…...I’m certainly older.
For students at the University of Liverpool, such as myself,
the elective takes place in the summer vacation prior to our final year of
study and is a requirement for completion of our medical degree.
Its purpose is to “encourage students to spend a period of
further education outside the [North West] region, encourage study in a different
cultural and environmental sphere and to broaden the student’s education”. So
it leaves the door gapingly open to interpretation! And all the decisions
really are up to you - the world is your oyster…..free reign to see any aspect
of medicine anywhere on the globe….no limitations…..total freedom to carve your
own experience. What an opportunity! But, how do you possibly begin to narrow
down the choice?
For me, through the junior years of med school, I found a
few criteria emerged:
- Abroad, if possible
- Not Africa
- Minimal language barrier
Expecting I would be travelling on my
elective by myself, I felt it would be helpful to stick to countries where
English is commonly spoken. Being away from home for a long time can be tough
enough by yourself, but to be further isolated due to a language barrier might
be one step too far.
- A low resourced hospital
I’ve spent a lot of medical school
following people round and observing (which has taught me a lot of medicine,
don’t get me wrong). But after nearly 4 years of med school, I want to do more. Going to a
westernised/modern hospital, the likelihood is that it would be a similar set
up to the UK – there’ll always be a more skilled staff member around to do the
job whilst you watch (this is usually the safest way to practice medicine). By
aiming for a more basic hospital, I hope to be a greatly needed extra pair of
hands, a valuable addition to the medical team whereby I’ll get thrown into
lots of situations where I’ll have to be resourceful, intuitive and (hopefully)
very useful.
- Finally, if at all possible, somewhere a bit whacky, that people would think – “woah, how neat!”
With these criteria, and an interest in the Indo-Pacific
waters following watching tv series The
Pacific during my earlier uni days (the show portrays an insightful account
of military life in the region during the Second World War), I settled on
looking into the Pacific Islands and Polynesian areas.
That was 6 months ago.
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