If you have trained for years to be competent at your job,
it is very rewarding when you eventually get the opportunity to utilize all of
your training to carry out your job. I feel that the terms passed at university
have proven to be entirely worthwhile given that I am doing work which I know
is a good thing for the community.
I love my job, but I need a holiday occasionally to take
time out from the pressures of life. I don’t need to travel abroad, simply off
into the sticks to enjoy a spot of hill walking. I adore being in the Lake
District, far away from the hustle and bustle of the metropolis, just relaxing
in the landscape. I don’t often have the opportunity to simply chill out;
therefore I invariably switch off the phone in order that I am able to truly be
free of the modern world. I have worked as a GP for 7 years, so I think I have
seen it all.
You’ll get people that are in the surgery every few days,
certain that they are going to drop dead of some terrible illness, and it does
not make any difference how often you tell them they’ve got nothing serious,
they simply won’t believe you. Also I’ve got the patients that I rarely meet,
but will come along with an obviously serious problem and when I point out that
they need an urgent intervention they will say they haven’t got any free days
and want to know why I can’t simply chuck them some tablets to make them feel
well again. Plus, needless to say, there are those people who come in requiring
male impotence treatments, or possibly more seriously, Chlamydia treatment,
however they can’t get the courage up to say it out loud thus they maybe pop in
several times before the reality eventually appears. It’s quite a job.
Before now I had to take the car to work, and it was
tremendously irritating when I wound up stuck in traffic for ages in the
morning. That was an utter waste of time. As a result I elected to put my house
on the market and move in to an apartment near to the surgery. It proved to be
a great decision, because nowadays I merely walk in to the clinic in the
mornings: it takes under fifteen minutes.
medicine for early discharge problem |
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