Nope.
I'm still finding my job challenging and satisfying. Because of the way medicine is advancing in leaps and bounds, there's always something new to learn.
Hell, I went to London last year and did my first heart transplant. I was a nervous wreck beforehand and afterwards (never let a patient know that or they immediately lose confidence in you and worry more), but I did it successfully (supervised, of course), and the patient is alive and well.
I believe that, in medicine, as in most occupations, you have to have a passion for it or you need to find something new.
I'm still finding my job challenging and satisfying. Because of the way medicine is advancing in leaps and bounds, there's always something new to learn.
Hell, I went to London last year and did my first heart transplant. I was a nervous wreck beforehand and afterwards (never let a patient know that or they immediately lose confidence in you and worry more), but I did it successfully (supervised, of course), and the patient is alive and well.
I believe that, in medicine, as in most occupations, you have to have a passion for it or you need to find something new.
Playing Cluedo with my mum while I was at Uni:
"You did WHAT? With WHO? WHERE???"