23 July 2009

Medlink and Bizarre Phone Calls


Medlink


As many medicine applicants will know, any prior experience or courses you go on will help with getting onto a Medicine course. There are quite a few courses available which provide tasters on medicine, university life, how to apply, what the courses are like and things you will be studying.
A well known type of this course is Medlink.
Based in Nottingham, Medlink provides 4 day residential courses for AS or A2 students who are serious about studying Medicine.
It looks like an amazing thing to go on, really useful, however it does require forking out quite a bit of cash :/ which is sehr annoying.
Ah well I'm sure I'll be able to pay back my Mum some how :D

So I had a rather strange phone conversation with a woman who works there a few days back...
I didn't appear to understand what she was saying, and she appeared to have no understanding of who I was or what I wanted 0_0.

Probably went something like this:
Woman - "Hello blahblahblah Office"
Me- "Hi, I'm 16 and I was wondering if accommodation is provided on the Medlink course??"
(It is btw, I am just clearly useless at finding information on websites)
Woman - "Well it's like a university experience... we try to make it like that you see"
Me - "okay, but about accommodation..."
Woman *continuing rambling* "and you see they wanted to make it like that, you see"
Me - "Right, well um I was just wondering that really"
Woman - *clearly deciding she didn't want to explain* "Do you want a brochure?? It explains things"
Me - "Oh yes please"
Woman - *Silence*
Me - *Silence*
Me - "Um so..."
Woman - "Address??"

And then just my details, I wonder if I'm incredibly unclear on the phone, I seem to have a lot of conversations like this, where we are replying to different things and long silences where clearly each one of us is waiting for the other speak :S

Anyways I know have the brochure and shall spend an undoubtedly happy 5 minutes filling in my details I already told the woman, I do love form filling.

Bye peeps! And remember in Medicine experiance is Gold,
even if it costs £250.

16 July 2009

Getting Started - Hospital Volunteering

Anyone thinking about doing Medicine at University should know that Voluntary Work in a hospital or care home and shadowing of a GP or Consultant is basically compulsory to apply.
It shows universities about your dedication to Medicine, and also that you have some understanding of what the career entails, and if you really want to pursue it. However this can be difficult to arrange, and everyone advises you arrange it for during your AS's. Also it gives you something to put on your personal statement and something to talk about in that dreaded medicine interview :).

So today I rang up my local NHS Trust to ask about volunteering, and it turns out they have a very good programme for 16-25 year olds which starts recruiting from the first week of September.
I'm actually quite excited about this, and really hoping I get a place. It should give me a lot more experience on the wards and of the sorts of things I might have to become use to if I become a Doctor, such as people facing depression and death and very difficult social situations.
I often find with hospitals that the people you see there are always at their most vulnerable... or perhaps their most defensive, and that hospitals contain every emotion on the spectrum. This takes some getting use too, and I think any experience you can get is invaluable.
There are different posts you can apply for, some working with patients with cancer and with the palliative care team. Others include helping with busy outpatient clinics and organising Admin etc. Some are more care based, such as helping patients with eating and befriending them if they are lonely. All very good work :). I wonder if I'll get that sense of satisfaction from helping people that everyone talks about.
Another opportunity I found was to work with the "League of Friends" (I don't live near Oxford, they just have a description of their work), however they mainly work in the cafes and pushing trolleys round the wards and as I want more medical based experience I decided it wasn't for me, even though the kind woman down the phone tried a good job at convincing me to join.

So now it's just waiting till September!!

15 July 2009

Hello!

Hi, I'm 16 (very nearly 17) and aspiring to be a Doctor!
I've had this career path chosen for a while now, and want to document my progress and see how I get along achieving it.
Anyways, hopefully this will be successful.
Bye!