"This series of images is a reflection on the physical exam in repetition and a possible patient’s perspective. This is also how medical students learn. The images are meant to use humor to arrive at the deeper reality of patients’ and students’ interactions."
This photographic essay recently received the distinction of Honorable Mention in the 2008 Creative Excellence Award Contest, sponsored by the Interdisciplinary Cluster on Health and Human Values.
Dr. DeSilva received his M.D. degree from the University of Rochester School of Medicine & Dentistry on May 16.
He will continue post-graduate studies in Surgery at URMC this coming year.
This experience reminded me of the power we, in medicine, hold over our patients. In four years of medical school, I have become accustomed to expect my patients to simply comply with almost anything I request, however humiliating, personal, invasive, or uncomfortable it might be. Virtually every patient consented to whatever I wanted without giving it a second thought.
This photo essay was born out of my above reflections. The idea was to look at ourselves as budding physicians with the same critical eye we view patients, to expose ourselves as they have to us, to remind us that what we’ve been trained to view as routine and mundane is anything but that to our patients. After all, we’re human too.”
Dr. Davis is a 2008 graduate of the University of Rochester School of Medicine & Dentistry. He is currently a first-year adult psychiatry resident at the Cambridge Health Alliance/Harvard Medical School in Cambridge, MA.
For more information: Matthew_Davis@urmc.rochester.edu; Ravi_DeSilva@urmc.rochester.edu
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POSTED 9/9/08
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From the series, "See One, Do One, Teach Many," by Ravi DeSilva
For more information on this, or other exhibits, contact ph. 585.275.3363
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