Ten Ways To Nail Your Next Medical Procedure And Hammer Down Pain

Ten Ways To Nail Your Next Medical Procedure And Hammer Down Pain

Report for the procedure wearing clean underwear and trying hard to appear cool. Fasting is such a nasty business. Strip down. Suit up. Did she say this clown-gown ties in the front or the back? It’s a joke to call this faded elephant bib a “gown.” When did all my spider veins join up to become a Brooklyn street map!?

“Follow me, please.” I feel as if I’m six and being led to the principal’s office.  Turn right, then left, through these double doors, a right and another left. I will never find my clothes again. Enter Room B. where masked men hover and mumble in tongues. . . Greek, Latin, Klingon? Not one of them can be a day over 16. Shudda gone to the bathroom. “Remove your glasses, please.” So now I’m shivering, starving, cranky and blind.

I have skillfully (yes, brilliantly on occasion) sailed the treacherous shoals of the corporate world without so much as breaking a sweat, but then I wasn’t wearing paper slippers, a dust-rag dress and absolutely no underwear. Can caffeine withdrawal cause permanent brain damage?

Sit down/stand up/roll over/shoulders back/chest out/don’t breathe or move/drink all this down at once/this will only hurt a bit/try to hold it in till you get to the bathroom. Woops. What is this! Obedience school? How did I end up in a Gary Larsen cartoon?

It is well within your power to complete every medical challenge successfully and gracefully.

Rehearse

Once the details of a procedure have been explained to you, set aside time to prepare. Think through the procedure several times (in as much detail as possible) as if you were watching a movie. Keep it simple. You don’t have to administer this procedure. You simply have to endure it. Picture the desired outcome. As you watch your mind-movie, keep your eyes closed, your body completely relaxed and (most important) your breathing deep, slow and steady. A couple repetitions will usually do the trick. When it is time for the actual test, commit to this same slow-paced breathing.

Relax

Mental and physical tension creates and magnifies discomfort. If the procedure brings on brief and unavoidable pain, relax into it. Breathe into it rather than fighting against it. Tension sets up a vicious cycle: the more it hurts, the tighter you get and the tighter you get, the more it hurts. Break this cycle by keeping your muscles relaxed and your breathing steady.

Remember

The medical staff works for you. All their attention is focused on completing your procedure perfectly the very first time. Their preoccupation may make you feel invisible and insignificant but it is difficult for them to do their best job and be warm and fuzzy at the same time. This is not the time to engage them in conversation about how insensitive your mother-in-law was about the turkey stuffing.

Know that even the most sophisticated and experienced adults (yes, doctors, nurses and SWAT cops) feel vulnerable under these circumstances. Apprehension about test results and loss of control can make anyone feel like a private in boot camp instead of a general. This is not boot camp and you are still the general in charge of your own mind and body.

Research

Do your homework. Don’t be shy about discussing with your doctor the details of your test, your condition and how to interpret the results. There are wonderful medical reference books and online sites that explain your procedure in detail so you will know in advance exactly what to expect.

If you don’t own a computer, go to the library and use the computer there. A patient, experienced, understanding librarian will assist if you need guidance. Online sites are rich with valuable information that can ease your concerns. However, online medical sites do not grant you a medical degree but do help you become a wiser patient. You will find clear answers to logical questions. Why and how is this test performed? What should I do to prepare and what follow-up information should I expect? Are there questions I should bring up to the doctor or nurse? What are the risks? How will the test feel?  Take the mystery out of the situation.

Rein in your imagination

Don’t bite off more than you can chew. “My cousin’s neighbor’s son-in-law’s boss had this exact same procedure and he dropped dead as a doornail within the hour. DEAD!”  This kind of creative fiction is rarely accurate and is always counterproductive. Stay focused on what is necessary to get you through the next five minutes.

Record

Prepare in advance a concise and detailed list of your allergies, your current medications, and the symptoms that led to this procedure. Don’t assume that the technicians will have an up-to-date list or that your memory will be reliable.

Rejoice

You have easy access to medical tests, procedures and shared information that doctors in other countries can only dream about. Unlike your parents and grandparents you have the opportunity to find a problem while it is still small instead of simply waiting for the dreaded symptoms. You have access to techniques and equipment that will almost always put the odds in your favor. Best of all, you are born into an era when prevention is as important as treatment. You are part of a new generation of doctors who have been trained to include the patient as a valued part of the medical team.

Request

Request a printed detailed copy of all test results. There is always a minute-by-minute log describing your surgery and most lab reports come with a definition of each test and the normal range for each. Order your own copies of important X-rays. Label medical files carefully. Inform your family where the files are kept.

Reward

Set a land speed record for the nearest giant cheeseburger and double latte. Back to your former glory – worldly, confident, and wearing underwear.

Revenge

Vow to correct everything possible in your life that could have led to the need for this concern. Always schedule an annual checkup and never avoid a procedure that could improve or even save your life.

Watch the video related to medical degree

swimming with sahamu sort of in shamu stadiums medicine pool with camp seaworld the water is absolutley freezing just about 52 degrees! i couldnt feel my hands, and the pool is 8 ft deep but the show tank is 36ft deep song used : hold on by the jonas brothers

Help answer the question about medical degree


About Author

Diane Neuman founded The Yoga Workshop in San Francisco where for 11 years where she taught students of all ages and backgrounds. Neuman wrote and illustrated HOW TO GET THE DRAGONS OUT OF YOUR TEMPLE (Celestial Arts). Currently Neuman writes and illustrates a health blog that draws on her 50 years of study and teaching yoga, advanced breathing techniques, stress management and relaxation exercises. To find her blog and learn a new breathing lesson every week, check into Breathing Deep Exercises

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11 Responses to “Ten Ways To Nail Your Next Medical Procedure And Hammer Down Pain”

  1. PhobiaGuy says:

    exposure is painful, longwinded and mostly dropped by phobics due to the painfull approach. Also this apprach has put off sooo many people from getting help!
    CBT ok if you’ve got a spare 6 months and a tollerance for pain, I do phobias in minutes, move over CBT you’re outdated.
    If anybody out there needs real help, contact me, it’s free to youtubers

  2. devarsi says:

    a wonderful relaxation technique to help is Yoga Nidra, it helps with all sorts of nervousness, fear and stress related problems. Its always available on ebay, look for the title
    “Yoga Nidra total relaxation no more tension”

  3. fateonlytakesyousofar says:

    Do you want to be an M.D. The word 'doctor' applies to many diffrent situations….you can be a Chirop and be a Doctor but you and not an M.D. {medical doctor]. You can be a History Professor with a Phd and you are a Doctor [but not a Medical Doctor}. You can be Podiatric Doctor but you are not an M.D.

    You need to get a Bachelors Degree, basically in one of the sciences….you need to have the right kind of courses to get the Bachelor in Science so stick to that…dont go around, there is not way around it.

    Get good grades, its not easy to get in, and harder to stay.

    Good luck

  4. Pyro says:

    You need to go to

    A 4-year Degree School and get a Barchellors Degree
    Then you need to go 4-years into Medicine School
    Then after that you need to specialize in Pathology or similar background

    Then You must become an Intern working under a Medical Examiner who will teach and have an eye on your job performance

  5. Blinded by Nostalgia says:

    Which group of medical schools is better:

    Dartmouth, Brown and Cornell versus U of Pittsburgh, Washington University, and University of Washington?

    If you said the former group, you place too much emphasis on the Ivy League.The answer is yes,but you will have to take some competency examinations and prove your are capable of speaking the language in a clinical setting (assuming Germany or another non-english country). I recommend that you get rid of all of your debt before you move, you make a lot less as a doctor in Europe.

  6. Jermey says:

    If you want to avoid math, sounds like nursing would be best for you. However, you have to attend a college with a nursing school, and it can often be difficult to get into the nursing major if you weren't accepted into it – for example, my university takes about 4,000 new freshman each year but only accepts 35 into the nursing program.

    If you want to be a doctor, med schools require you take math through pre-calculus, and most through calculus, as well as the premed classes in bio, chem, physics, and English. You don't have to pick a particular concentration or specialty until at least halfway through med school (6 years from now) or even after (residency).

  7. sarah says:

    They often go to an "underserved" State or Canadian Province where the standards are lower. Saskatchewan, in Canada, used to be notorious for taking physicians who failed elsewhere.

  8. Kelsie says:

    It does but you have to take qualifying exams the same as a foreign doctor who wants to practice in the US.

  9. johns1517 j says:

    Well, first of all – those are two completely different kinds of educational levels. A dialysis technician doesn't necessarily have to have a degree – you would be working under the supervision of a dialysis nurse, who follows the orders of a physician. A biomedical scientist would definitely need a degree, and you would be working in research and fabrication.

    An MBA is a master's degree in business administration. That would most likely be something you would complete AFTER you got your bachelor's degree in the sciences.

  10. sugandha12_libra says:

    4 years undergrad, 4 years in med school, 1 or 2 years internship, 1 or 2 years residency.

  11. Tootsie says:

    Health jobs in Canada do not pay well. The huge brain drain is from nurses and doctors heading to USA for better paid jobs.

    You would need to have some medically related qualification.

    Perhaps medical administration or pharmacology or something.

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