Volume 68, Issue 2 Louisville Medicine | Page 30

DOCTORS' LOUNGE DOCTORS' LOUNGE WHITE COATS FOR BLACK LIVES IN THE INTEREST OF ENCOURAGING HONEST AND OPEN DIALOGUE ON THE HIGHLY VOLATILE NATIONAL PROTESTS GOING ON ACROSS AMERICA, GLMS MEMBERS OFFER THEIR UNIQUE PERSPECTIVE AND PERSONAL OPINIONS ON THIS IMPORTANT TOPIC. IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO SUBMIT YOUR OPINION, PLEASE SEND TO [email protected]. SPEAK YOUR MIND If you would like to respond to an article in this issue, please submit an article or letter to the editor. Contributions may be sent to [email protected]. The GLMS Editorial Board reserves the right to choose what will be published. Please note that the views expressed in Doctors’ Lounge or any other article in this publication are not those of the Greater Louisville Medical Society or Louisville Medicine. Immunity must nearly always be earned. As babies, we must survive nine months inside and then spend three months with our mothers’ protection, but all the time we are growing and getting our immune systems in gear. We survive exposure after exposure, and gain vaccine after vaccine. Our immune systems process billions of foreign-to-us molecules, and until we catch a cold, or break out in hives, we barely notice. In our racist society, White people going about our daily rounds are generally immune to brutal, capricious police ambush. That is not earned. It’s simply an accident of birth. Most of us law-abiders only encounter the police if we speed, wreck or get drunk. Speeding while White is unlikely to end with us arrested, slammed to the ground or shot. I was taught to ask the police for help when in trouble, and I’ve had the freedom to ask without fear. As doctors, we have more training in human relationships than nearly everybody. We learn early and often that every single patient requires the best of us, every single patient must be respected and heard, every single patient is more important than we are. We treat them for things we are not immune to. We serve close to combat and in remote missions and in our everyday offices. When we are called, we answer. We have to understand where our patients are 28 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE IMMUNITY INEQUALITY AUTHOR Mary Barry, MD coming from, what informs their complaint, and what barriers to diagnosis, much less treatment, block their way. And yet, we make mistakes, from hurrying, not listening, not looking it up, not calling a consultant. We fail to know the patient. We fail to examine the patient. We open a bleeder or get inadequate exposure. We brush off that jolt of alarm, instead of acting on it. We are not immune to being wrong, not immune to being rude, not immune to making assumptions, and certainly not immune to clicking the wrong box because it is simply the seventeen-thousandth click of the day. We are therefore not immune to harming patients. When that happens, we can get sued. “Not Getting Sued” is a powerful motivator over many, many years. Your conscience speaks to you, and then this voice inside nudges you. “Hey! - Why aren’t you calling him back?” “Are you sure in your heart this isn’t meningitis?” “I KNOW, how many times do we have to go through this…but is this a blood clot and not just swelling? Come on…get it right…” That is the voice of “Not Getting Sued.” That is the extra check and balance that helps keep doctors sharp, helps us not get careless, helps us remember that we are accountable not just to the patient but to everyone who loves her, everyone she will one day help,