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Transitions Magazine

Transitions is published bi-monthly for members of the APhA New Practitioner Network. The online newsletter contains information focused on life inside and outside pharmacy practice, providing guidance on various areas of professional, personal, and practice development. Each issue includes in-depth articles on such topics as personal financial management, innovative practice sites, career profiles, career development tools, residency and postgraduate programs, and more.

A change in perspective
Jamila Negatu
/ Categories: Student Magazine

A change in perspective

Amanda Cavness and parents at her Chemo Graduation.

In March 2016, as I was preparing to graduate from The University of Tennessee (UT) College of Pharmacy, I thought that the biggest challenges in my life were behind me. I had survived a tough curriculum at UT and rigorous rotations, and I was excited to finally step into my new role as a clinician and discover what the future held. While I had cast myself as a pharmacist, it turned out life had prepared a different script, and I would simultaneously be playing the patient. I had Stage II breast cancer. 
 
After I received my diagnosis, people initially asked what I was going to do about school. I quickly—and firmly—informed them that I would finish my rotations, graduate, and go to work just like everyone else! I had come too far to quit now. Besides, receiving chemotherapy medications was the best oncology board review I could get, right? So, Friday after Friday, for nearly 3 months, my RxPrep book and I went to the clinic for chemo.  

 

Anxious patient then

When my hair started falling out, I told my parents and my preceptors that I was afraid patients wouldn’t see me as a part of the team that was there to take care of them. “I’m pale and bald with a scarf on my head. They’re going to look at me like I’m sick, too!” In my head, the patient group and the clinician group were mutually exclusive. I couldn’t be a part of both. What if patients thought I couldn’t be a good health provider if I was also a patient? 
 
I will be the first to admit that health professionals probably make the worst patients. There is a fine line between being a well-informed patient and being an over-informed/new practitioner/bundle-of-anxiety patient, and I started my journey on the anxiety side of the line. I would lie awake at night worrying my blood counts wouldn’t recover quickly enough for my next treatment or scared that I had a fever. I annoyed nurses about the exact doses of my drugs and asked for print-outs of my lab values. My oncologist caught me on the computer in the exam room reviewing my own chart at one appointment, and on another visit, I was busted listening outside the door while he discussed my case with some residents. Luckily, I am treated at an academic facility and my physician has a sense of humor! 
 
My anxiety decreased as my treatment progressed, but my experiences early on brought a new found perspective. If something as small as a piece of paper showing I am not neutropenic can grant me worry-free sleep, how many simple, yet effective, things could I do for my patients every day? Instead of pharmacists viewing themselves as part of a separate and elite practitioner group, what if we all saw ourselves as patients who are now providers? I believe it would change the way we practice. 
 

Better pharmacist now

Now a resident at a children’s hospital, being a patient and provider simultaneously has become one of my greatest strengths. The most meaningful patient interaction I have had thus far in residency might never have happened if I hadn’t recently been a patient myself. I was observing the intrathecal administration of a newly FDA-approved drug. Parents weren’t able to be in the room for the procedure, and my patient was scared. I leaned down and whispered that I had a special port, too, and working in a hospital didn’t mean that I didn’t get scared. He calmed down, held my hand, and we sang along with the radio during the entire procedure. I have never been happier that I allowed myself to be seen as another patient as I was in that moment. 
 
My life has changed immensely since that spring day nearly 2 years ago and I will be forever grateful. Not for the struggles, stress, and exhaustion, but for the change in perspective. When I care for patients now, I always seem to see some part of myself, another active life battling an unexpected blip on their radar. Instead of only being part of their medical team, I am also part of their cheering section. 
 
My experience as an oncology patient gave me insight into patients’ daily battles, and it has been incredibly rewarding to provide a higher level of care because of this understanding. If I am certain of anything, it is that being a patient has made me a better pharmacist. 
 
 

 

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